How is cheese made?

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How is cheese made?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

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Anonymous 0 Comments

It is mined from the moon. This is why there is such a rush worldwide to get to space.

But in all honestly, it is made from milk and bacteria, synthetic bacteria, vinegar or possibly many other ways. As the fat solids are separated from the milk, these fat solids are pressed together, squeezing out the extra moisture called *whey* from it. This ball of milk fats and solids are typically then aged from days up to years depending upon the cheese desired.
Different bacterias and processes creates different cheeses.

Anonymous 0 Comments

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Milk is mostly water, but the stuff that makes it milk is a mixture of fat and proteins. If you heat up the milk and/or add an acid (like vinegar or lemon juice) the milk curdles. All the proteins start grabbing up the fat, making little lumps of it. The milk thus separates into these lumps of fat and protein (curds) and water with a little bit of milky stuff left (whey). Next you scoop out the curds and press as much whey out as you can.

At that point, you have already have cheese (specifically a “fresh” cheese). Most cheeses go further than this. They’re either aged, cultured, or both. Aging is just letting the cheese sit around for a while. This dries it out even further and makes the result harder. Culturing is allowing specially selected bacteria or molds to grow in the cheese, which can give it unique flavors.