Food Science & Nutrition (Feb 2023)

Determination of the microbial community of traditional Mongolian cheese by using culture‐dependent and independent methods

  • Liang Guo,
  • Wei‐Liang Xu,
  • Chun‐Dong Li,
  • Fu‐Chao Wang,
  • Yuan‐Sheng Guo,
  • Mei Ya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.3117
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
pp. 828 – 837

Abstract

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Abstract Mongolian cheese is not only a requisite source of food for the nomadic Mongolian but also follows a unique Mongolian dairy artisanal method of production, possessing high nutritional value and long shelf‐life. In this study, the ancient technique for the production of Mongolian cheese was investigated. The nutritional value of Mongolian cheese was characterized by its high‐protein content (30.13 ± 2.99%) and low‐fat content (9.66 ± 3.36%). Lactobacillus, Lactococcus, and Dipodascus were the predominant bacterial and fungal genera, and Lactobacillus helveticus, Lactococcus piscium, and Dipodascus geotrichum were the predominant species in the Mongolian cheese. The microbiota of products from different cheese factories varies significantly. The high‐temperature (85°C–90°C) kneading of coagulated curds could eliminate most of the thermosensitive microorganisms for extending the shelf‐life of cheese. The indigenous spore‐forming microbes, which included yeasts, belonging to Pichia and Candida genera, and molds, belonging to Mucor and Penicillium genera, which originated from the surroundings during the process of cooling, drying, demolding, and vacuum packaging could survive and cause the package to swell and the cheese to grow mold. The investigation of production technology, nutrition, microbiota, and viable microbes related to shelf‐life contributes to the protection of traditional technologies, extraction of highlights (nutritional profiles and curd scalding) for merchandise marketing, and standardization of Mongolian cheese production, including culture starters and aseptic technique.

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