The finished,
packaged processed cheese should be stored, as far as possible, at temperatures
between 5 and 10 °C. Once again it is necessary to emphasized that the
processed cheese must not be held at temperatures below 0°C, as freezing can upset
its structure. In addition, when the boxes are removed from the cold room,condensation
can occur quickly, leading to early spoilage.
When cooling has
not been completed, quite often the processed cheese is exposed for a time to
temperatures above 20 °C in hot countries as high as 30 °C. This can occur
during transport or storage. There is unfortunately a prevailing belief that processed
cheese possesses an unlimited keeping quality it often happens that little importance
is attached to the storage of processed cheese at higher temperatures.Is
processed cheese really absolutely sterile? If a sterilizing process has been
used during manufacture, whether by means of a short period ultra high
temperature procedure or by means of an autoclave, one can assume that the
final product is sterile, so long as a very conscientious and painstakingly
clean working operation has been carried out. Unfortunately, the use of a short
high temperature processing machine is no guarantee for the production of
sterile products. A large number of processing factories still use conventional
cookers reaching a temperature between 85 and 95 °C or perhaps slightly higher,
so that the possibility of the presence of Clostridia and, in addition, vegetative
organisms must always be born into mind.
These organisms,
including the Clostridia, will, of course, most certainly continue to multiply
and develop with lengthy storage at temperatures around 25-30 °C and eventually
cause spoilage and deterioration in the cheese. Therefore, one must avoid
storage of processed cheese for long periods at temperatures above 20 °C.Storing
sterile processed cheese at higher temperatures is also not advisable because the
protein structure and the flavour are detrimentally altered, even though no bacteriological
change takes place. In addition, certain defects, which are not evident at
normal cold storage, are intensified at temperatures around 30 °C. An example of
this is the occurrence of sandiness, which is mostly caused by the formation of
fine or course crystals of calcium diphosphate (calcium pyrophosphate). Regular
checks are made in most well organized factories by storing representative
samples of processed cheese at various temperatures for a certain length of
time, e.g., at 10,20,30, and 37°C. From the results obtained after the
organoleptic examination of samples stored at 30 and 37 °C, conclusions can be
drawn as to possible changes in the products at a later date
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