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Cheeses made entirely, or significantly, from cow's milk. ... Pages in category "Cow's-milk cheeses" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of ...
Époisses is a pungent soft-paste cow's-milk cheese. Smear-ripened, "washed rind" (washed in brine and Marc de Bourgogne, the local pomace brandy), it is circular at around either 10 cm (4 in) or 18 cm (7 in) in diameter, with a distinctive soft red-orange color. It is made either from raw or pasteurized milk. [1] The rind is edible. [2]
It is made from unpasteurized cow's milk called "crude" or raw milk, from the above-described zone d'appellation contrôlée. This soft white cheese is formed into flat cylinders, with two common dimensions: little Munster gérômé has a 7–12 cm (2.8–4.7 in) diameter; big Munster gérômé (commonly just called Munster) has a 13–19 cm (5 ...
Comté (French pronunciation:) is a French cheese made from unpasteurized cow's milk in the Franche-Comté region of eastern France bordering Switzerland and sharing much of its cuisine. Comté has the highest production of all French Appellation d'origine contrôlée (AOC) cheeses, at around 65,000 tonnes (72,000 short tons) annually. [1]
The cheese is made by inoculating warmed cow milk with mesophilic bacteria, then adding rennet and allowing the mixture to coagulate. The curd is then cut into roughly 1 cm (1/2 inch) cubes, salted, and transferred to low cylindrical camembert molds. [ 2 ]
Queso añejo cheese is traditionally made with goat milk, but in the modern era is generally made with cow's milk. [9] Cheeses are also labeled based on the added fat content of the milk from which they are produced. Double cream cheeses are soft cheeses of cows' milk enriched with cream so that their fat in dry matter (FDM or FiDM) content is ...
Industrialized Saint-Nectaire cheese can be made of mixed milks, or thermised or pasteurised milks. 13 to 14 L (3.4 to 3.7 US gal) of milk are necessary to the elaboration of a single cheese. After each milking, and once the milk is pasteurised, rennet is added to the milk and renneted for a period of 30 to 40 minutes, whether it is an ...
Chhena (Hindustani: [ˈtʃʰeːna]) or chhana (Bengali:) is a kind of acid-set cheese originating in the Indian subcontinent that is made from water buffalo [1] [2] or cow [2] milk by adding food acids such as lemon juice and calcium lactate instead of rennet and straining out the whey.