Litcius/Paper detail

Composition, Succession, and Source Tracking of Microbial Communities throughout the Traditional Production of a Farmstead Cheese

Lang Sun, Dennis J. D’Amico

2021mSystems53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Throughout the 20th century, especially in the United States, sanitation practices, pasteurization of milk, and the use of commercial defined-strain starter cultures have enhanced the safety and consistency of cheese. However, these practices can reduce cheese microbial diversity. The rapid growth of the artisanal cheese industry in the United States has renewed interest in recapturing the diversity of dairy products and the microbes involved in their production. Here, we demonstrate the essential role of the environment, including the use of wooden tools and cheesemaking equipment, as sources of dominant microbes that shape the fermentation and ripening processes of a traditional farmstead cheese produced without the addition of starter cultures or direct inoculation of any other bacteria or fungi. These data enrich our understanding of the microbial interactions between products and the environment and identify taxa that contribute to the microbial diversity of cheese and cheese production.

Topics & Concepts

PasteurizationStarterEcological successionSanitationDiversity (politics)Food scienceComposition (language)Production (economics)Farmer cheeseBiotechnologyBiologyEnvironmental scienceEcologyMilk productsEnvironmental engineeringSociologyAnthropologyLinguisticsEconomicsMacroeconomicsPhilosophyProbiotics and Fermented FoodsGut microbiota and healthMilk Quality and Mastitis in Dairy Cows