Journal of Dairy Science (May 2022)

Gas production by Paucilactobacillus wasatchensis WDCO4 is increased in Cheddar cheese containing sodium gluconate

  • D.J. McMahon,
  • K.M. Sorensen,
  • M.J. Domek,
  • X. Dai,
  • P. Sharma,
  • T.S. Oberg,
  • C.J. Oberg

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 105, no. 5
pp. 3896 – 3910

Abstract

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ABSTRACT: Paucilactobacillus wasatchensis can use gluconate (GLCN) as well as galactose as an energy source and because sodium GLCN can be added during salting of Cheddar cheese to reduce calcium lactate crystal formation, our primary objective was to determine if the presence of GLCN in cheese is another risk factor for unwanted gas production leading to slits in cheese. A secondary objective was to calculate the amount of CO2 produced during storage and to relate this to the amount of gas-forming substrate that was utilized. Ribose was added to promote growth of Pa. wasatchensis WDC04 (P.waWDC04) to high numbers during storage. Cheddar cheese was made with lactococcal starter culture with addition of P.waWDC04 on 3 separate occasions. After milling, the curd was divided into six 10-kg portions. To the curd was added (A) salt, or salt plus (B) 0.5% galactose + 0.5% ribose (similar to previous studies), (C) 1% sodium GLCN, (D) 1% sodium GLCN + 0.5% ribose, (E) 2% sodium GLCN, (F) 2% sodium GLCN + 0.5% ribose. A vat of cheese without added P.waWDC04 was made using the same milk and a block of cheese used as an additional control. Cheeses were cut into 900-g pieces, vacuum packaged and stored at 12°C for 16 wk. Each month the bags were examined for gas production and cheese sampled and tested for lactose, galactose and GLCN content, and microbial numbers. In the control cheese, P.waWDC04 remained undetected (i.e., <104 cfu/g), whereas in cheeses A, C, and E it increased to 107 cfu/g, and when ribose was included with salting (cheeses B, D, and F) increased to 108 cfu/g. The amount of gas (measured as headspace height or calculated as mmoles of CO2) during 16 wk storage was increased by adding P.waWDC04 into the milk, and by adding galactose or GLCN to the curd. Galactose levels in cheese B were depleted by 12 wk while no other cheeses had residual galactose. Except for cheese D, the other cheeses with GLCN added (C, E and F) showed little decline in GLCN levels until wk 12, even though gas was being produced starting at wk 4. Based on calculations of CO2 in headspace plus CO2 dissolved in cheese, galactose and GLCN added to cheese curd only accounted for about half of total gas production. It is proposed that CO2 was also produced by decarboxylation of amino acids. Although P.waWDC04 does not have all the genes for complete conversion and decarboxylation of the amino acids in cheese, this can be achieved in conjunction with starter culture lactococcal. Adding GLCN to curd can now be considered another confirmed risk factor for unwanted gas production during storage of Cheddar cheese that can lead to slits and cracks in cheese. Putative risk factors now include having a community of bacteria in cheese leading to decarboxylation of amino acids and release of CO2 as well autolysis of the starter culture that would provide a supply of ribose that can promote growth of Pa. wasatchensis.

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