Cottage cheese is a curdled milk product with a mild flavor and a creamy, non-homogeneous, soupy texture. It is made from skimmed milk, by draining curds — retaining some of the whey and keeping the curds loose. An important step in the manufacturing process distinguishing cottage cheese from other fresh cheeses is the adding of a "dressing" to the curd grains, usually cream, which is largely responsible for the taste of the product. Cottage cheese is not aged.
Cottage cheese can be
low in calories compared to other types of cheese, making it popular
among dieters and some health devotees, similar to yogurt. It can be used
with a wide variety of foods such as yogurt, fruit, toast, granola, in salads,
as a dip, and as a replacement for mayonnaise.
It is also known
as curds and whey.
History
Origin
A popular story on the
origin of cheese was taken from Homer's Odyssey, in which the poet
describes how the Cyclops Polyphemus made cheese by storing milk in
animal stomachs. The enzymes from the
stomach would have induced a coagulation process separating the curds from the
milk.
Cheese is thought to
have occurred in the Middle East around 5,000 BC, but archaeological
remains believed to be of cheese-making date to before that in parts of Europe.
Evidence of cheese can be found in a
band of carvings on the walls of an ancient Mesopotamian temple that date back
to 3,000 BC. The ancient carvings show the process in which the civilization
created a cheese-like substance, using salt and milk to create a salty sour
curd mixture believed to be somewhat similar to today's cottage cheese. As
Rome expanded its empire, they spread the knowledge of cheese, discovering many
new forms of it.
Popularization
In late 19th
century Minnesota, when milk went sour, farmers sometimes made something
they called "Dutch cheese", which is said to have been similar to
modern industrial cottage cheese, in order not to waste the bad milk. In
the early 20th century farmers in northeastern British Columbia made
something they called "homesteader's cheese", which is said to have
been similar to modern industrial cottage cheese (a "Dutch cheese"
also existed there at the time, but this was something else). The
term cottage cheese first began to be used for such simple
homemade cheese in America in the mid-19th century.
The first American
cheese factory opened in 1868, beginning the wholesale cheese industry in the
United States. Popularity in the United
States of industrial cheese in general increased greatly at the end of the 19th
century; by the turn of the century, farm production of cheese had become
significant.
Cottage cheese was
widely promoted in America during the First World War, along with other
dairy products, to save meat for infantry rations. This promotion was shown in many war posters,
including one which claimed that one pound of cottage cheese contains more
protein than a pound of lamb, pork, beef, or chicken. After the war, cottage
cheese quickly became more popular. Thirty million pounds (14,000 t) of
cottage cheese were produced in 1919 (out of 418,000,000 pounds
(190,000 t) of cheese in general in 1920), but by 1928, 87,000,000
pounds (39,000 t) were manufactured. Consumption peaked in the
United States in the 1970s when dieting became popular and some $1.3 billion of
it was sold per year, but in the 1980s yogurt became more popular and sales
dropped considerably further in the 2000s.
In 2016, a Wall Street
Journal article theorized that cottage cheese might be ready for a
resurgence following the popularity of Greek yogurt due to its high levels of
protein and low levels of sugar.
Manufacture
Since the 1930s,
industrial cottage cheese has been manufactured using pasteurized skim
milk, or in more modern processes using concentrated nonfat milk or
reconstituted nonfat dry milk. A bacterial culture that produces lactic
acid (Lactococcus lactis ssp. lactis or L.
lactis ssp. cremoris strains such as are usually
used) and rennet, which allows the milk to curdle and parts to solidify, added
to skim milk is heated until reaches 90 °F (32 °C), after which is
maintain 90 °F (32 °C) for 8 hours or more. The solids, known
as curd, form a gelatinous skin over the liquid (known as whey) in
the vat, which is cut into cubes with wires, allowing more whey to drain from
the curds. The curds are then reheated to 120 °F (49 °C) for one or
two hours. In Iowa in the early 1930s, hot water was poured into the
vat, which further firms the curds. Once the curds have been drained and are
mostly dry the mass is pressed to further dry the curds. The curds are then
rinsed in water. Finally, salt and a "dressing" of cream is
added, and the final product is packaged and shipped for consumption. Some
smaller modern luxury creameries omit the first heating step but allow the milk
to curdle much longer with bacteria to produce the curds, or use crème
fraîche as dressing.
Cottage cheese made
with a food-grade acid must be labelled as "Direct Acid set".
Usually, a small amount
of low CO2-producing citrate-fermenting lactococci or leuconostoc bacterial
strains are added to the starter mix for the production of diacetyl for
added buttery or creamy flavors. Producers must be careful that the final
product contains approximately 2 ppm diacetyl, and that the ratio of
diacetyl to acetaldehyde is 3–5 to 1, to achieve the typical cottage
cheese flavor. Too small a ratio and the
product tastes grassy, too much and the taste becomes harsh.
Cottage cheese is
naturally a yellow colour due to the cream dressing, but to increase consumer
acceptance and appeal of the final product titanium dioxide is
usually added to the dressing to make it a brilliant white colour and enhance
marketability of the finished product. In the United States, the FDA allows the
additive in many dairy products (not whole milk) up to 1% of total volume by
weight, but it must be labelled in the ingredient list. It may also be used in
Canada and the European Union. Relatively recently, producers have added this
ingredient in nanoparticle form. In the US, the FDA does not restrict
nanoparticle technology usage in food, but in Europe, it must be first
submitted for approval as a food ingredient. According to the Project on
Emerging Nanotechnologies, it is found in hundreds of products, not always
labelled as such, including many organic products, however a number of
large US producers have denied using it.
Cottage cheese may be
marketed as a small-curd (<4 mm diameter) or large-curd (>8 mm
diameter).
Nutrition
Cottage cheese is
popular among dieters and some health food devotees. It is also relatively popular among bodybuilders and athletes for
its high content of casein protein while being relatively low in fat.
Cottage cheese is also safe to eat during pregnancy, in contrast to some
cheese products that are not recommended.
The sour taste of the
product is due to lactic acid, which is present at 124–452 mg/kg. Formic, acetic, propionic and butyric
acid contribute to the aroma.
Consumption
In the United States
and Canada, cottage cheese is popular in many culinary dishes. It can be
combined with fruit and sugar, salt and pepper,
fruit purée, tomatoes, or granola and cinnamon. It can be eaten on toast, in salads,
as a chip dip, as a replacement for mayonnaise in tuna salad,
and as an ingredient in recipes such as jello salad and various desserts.
Cottage cheese is also popular with
fruit, such as pineapple, pears, peaches, or mandarin
oranges.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cottage_cheese
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