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		<title><![CDATA[Wisconsin Cheese Masters: Latest News]]></title>
		<link>https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com</link>
		<description><![CDATA[The latest news from Wisconsin Cheese Masters.]]></description>
		<pubDate>Sat, 02 May 2026 10:23:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<isc:store_title><![CDATA[Wisconsin Cheese Masters]]></isc:store_title>
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			<title><![CDATA[Valentines Day Cheeseboard!]]></title>
			<link>https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/valentines-day-cheeseboard/</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 26 Jan 2023 11:26:25 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/valentines-day-cheeseboard/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p><img src="/product_images/uploaded_images/valentines-day-cheese-board.jpg" style="width: 373px;"></p><h2>Ingredients</h2><ul><li><label>Carr Valley Caso Bolo Mellage cheese</label>
</li><li><label>Marieke's Golden (Raw Milk) Gouda/Parmesan cheese</label>
</li><li><label>Sartori Classic Parmesan cheese</label>
</li><li><label>Carr Valley Boozin' Ewe Sheep Milk cheese soaked in Port Wine</label></li><li><label>Dark chocolate sea salt caramels</label>
</li><li><label>Chocolate-covered coffee beans</label>
</li><li><label>Thinly sliced Finocchio (fennel) salami</label>
</li><li><label>Pomegranate seeds</label>
</li><li><label>Chocolate toffee pieces- we sell an amazing one in store from Door County Toffee</label></li><li><label>Candied pecans</label>
</li><li><label>Chocolate-covered strawberries</label>
</li><li><label>Assorted crackers</label></li></ul><h2>Instructions</h2><h2>
<ol><li>Arrange the Caso Bolo Mellage, gouda, Parmesan and red wine cheese on a serving board. Fill in board with caramels, coffee beans, salami, pomegranate seeds, toffee, pecans, strawberries and crackers.</li><li>A cheese and chocolate pairing is simply sensational. Cheese is typically soft or crumbly; pairing it with chocolate-covered coffee beans and toffee adds crunch as well as sweetness.</li></ol></h2>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="/product_images/uploaded_images/valentines-day-cheese-board.jpg" style="width: 373px;"></p><h2>Ingredients</h2><ul><li><label>Carr Valley Caso Bolo Mellage cheese</label>
</li><li><label>Marieke's Golden (Raw Milk) Gouda/Parmesan cheese</label>
</li><li><label>Sartori Classic Parmesan cheese</label>
</li><li><label>Carr Valley Boozin' Ewe Sheep Milk cheese soaked in Port Wine</label></li><li><label>Dark chocolate sea salt caramels</label>
</li><li><label>Chocolate-covered coffee beans</label>
</li><li><label>Thinly sliced Finocchio (fennel) salami</label>
</li><li><label>Pomegranate seeds</label>
</li><li><label>Chocolate toffee pieces- we sell an amazing one in store from Door County Toffee</label></li><li><label>Candied pecans</label>
</li><li><label>Chocolate-covered strawberries</label>
</li><li><label>Assorted crackers</label></li></ul><h2>Instructions</h2><h2>
<ol><li>Arrange the Caso Bolo Mellage, gouda, Parmesan and red wine cheese on a serving board. Fill in board with caramels, coffee beans, salami, pomegranate seeds, toffee, pecans, strawberries and crackers.</li><li>A cheese and chocolate pairing is simply sensational. Cheese is typically soft or crumbly; pairing it with chocolate-covered coffee beans and toffee adds crunch as well as sweetness.</li></ol></h2>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title><![CDATA[Game day cheesy Football!]]></title>
			<link>https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/game-day-cheesy-football/</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 06 Jan 2023 13:32:17 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/game-day-cheesy-football/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>What a way to celebrate your favorite team as we head into Football Playoff season!</p><p><img src="/product_images/uploaded_images/football.jpg"></p><p>Ingredients</p><ul><ul><li>2 pkg. (8 oz. each) cream cheese, softened</li><li>(8 oz.) shredded sharp cheddar cheese</li><li>1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese</li><li>1/2 cup reduced-fat mayonnaise</li><li>1/4 tsp. pepper</li><li>2 green onions, chopped</li><li>1 cup chopped pecans</li><li>2 Tbsp. pimento strips</li><li> RITZ Crackers</li></ul>
</ul><h5>Preparation</h5><ul><li>Beat first 5 ingredients with mixer until blended. Stir in onions.</li><li>Refrigerate several hours.</li><li>Form into football shape; coat with nuts. Add pimento strips for the football laces.</li><li>Serve with the crackers.</li></ul>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What a way to celebrate your favorite team as we head into Football Playoff season!</p><p><img src="/product_images/uploaded_images/football.jpg"></p><p>Ingredients</p><ul><ul><li>2 pkg. (8 oz. each) cream cheese, softened</li><li>(8 oz.) shredded sharp cheddar cheese</li><li>1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese</li><li>1/2 cup reduced-fat mayonnaise</li><li>1/4 tsp. pepper</li><li>2 green onions, chopped</li><li>1 cup chopped pecans</li><li>2 Tbsp. pimento strips</li><li> RITZ Crackers</li></ul>
</ul><h5>Preparation</h5><ul><li>Beat first 5 ingredients with mixer until blended. Stir in onions.</li><li>Refrigerate several hours.</li><li>Form into football shape; coat with nuts. Add pimento strips for the football laces.</li><li>Serve with the crackers.</li></ul>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title><![CDATA[Christmas CharcuteTREE Board! ]]></title>
			<link>https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/christmas-charcutetree-board-/</link>
			<pubDate>Mon, 05 Dec 2022 13:31:55 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/christmas-charcutetree-board-/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p><img src="/product_images/uploaded_images/christmas-tree-cheese-board.jpeg" style="width: 237px;"></p><p>Aside from being a total crowd-pleaser and the perfect
centerpiece for cocktail hour, this Christmas tree cheese board is also:</p><p>Quick &amp; Easy – You only need about 15 minutes of prep
time to make this yummy edible tree. So simple!</p><p>Completely Customizable – Feel free to use your own favorite
fruits, veggies, meats, and cheeses to make the perfect charcuteTREE board for your party. From choosing the colors to fit your decorations to opting for
your favorite flavors, you have complete control over this party-ready snack!</p><p>Make-Ahead!</p><p>INGREDIENTS &amp; SUBSTITUTIONS</p><p>This tasty charcuterie tree comes together with just a few
basic elements. Feel free to pick and choose from the ideas below to create
your very own masterpiece!</p><p>Cheese – Feel free to choose your favorites. We like to
choose a variety of colors including a 5 or 7 year cheddar, a Gouda (we think
the Summerfields is a fun one to add a touch of Rosemary flavor but any of our
Goudas will do,) and an Italian Style for variety. </p><p>Pretzels, Fruits &amp; Veggies – Use a stalk of celery to
act as the tree trunk. or pretzel sticks as an option! This recipe  uses seedless green, red, and black grapes,
green kiwi, yellow star fruit, and fresh cranberries or sugared cranberries as
ornaments.  Feel free to choose whatever
you like best and use different shapes. Round grapes, star-shaped starfruit,
and square cubes of cheese gives you 3 different looks. You can even cut the
fruits and veggies to help give your charcuterie platter some extra visual interest!</p><p>Nuts – Add some crunch to your cheese plate with the
addition of some toasted nuts. </p><p>Meat – Prosciutto, salami, deli meats, and sliced sausages
are all great options. </p><p>Greenery –Cypress sprigs are beautiful, but any evergreen
will work or even fresh herbs like rosemary, thyme or sage.</p><p>Crackers –use a fun variety of shapes and textures and we
like to also include oval-shaped slices of soft baguette.</p><p>Step 1: Make The Outline. Place greenery/sprigs in the shape
of a tree on a wooden tray, platter, or cutting board to resemble a Christmas
tree shape. Place celery or pretzel sticks at the bottom for the tree trunk.</p><p>Step 2: Arrange cheese cubes, grapes, and kiwi in rows on
top of the greenery.</p><p>Step 3: Garnish with fresh herbs between the fruits and
cheeses to create a 3D effect.</p><p>Step 4: Fill out the tree shape by tucking additional
greenery sprigs under the ingredients as needed.</p><p>Step 5: Decorate using star shapes on top of the ingredients
and top off the tree. Sprinkle with fresh cranberries.</p><p>ENJOY!  And don’t
forget to send us photos to <a href="mailto:wisconsincheesemasters@gmail.com">wisconsincheesemasters@gmail.com</a>
to be entered in our CharcuteTREE contest!</p><p>INGREDIENTS</p><p>▢evergreen or cypress sprigs</p><p>▢1 stalk celery or pretzel sticks</p><p>▢4 ounces cheddar cheese, cut into 3/4-inch cubes</p><p>▢4 ounces Gouda, cut into 3/4-inch cubes</p><p>▢1/2 pound Italian Style, cut into fingers</p><p>▢seedless green, red, and black grapes</p><p>▢1 kiwi, sliced</p><p>▢fresh herbs such as thyme, rosemary, and sage</p><p>▢1 star fruit slices or persimmon or cheese slices,
shaped with a star cookie cutter</p><p>▢fresh cranberries</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="/product_images/uploaded_images/christmas-tree-cheese-board.jpeg" style="width: 237px;"></p><p>Aside from being a total crowd-pleaser and the perfect
centerpiece for cocktail hour, this Christmas tree cheese board is also:</p><p>Quick &amp; Easy – You only need about 15 minutes of prep
time to make this yummy edible tree. So simple!</p><p>Completely Customizable – Feel free to use your own favorite
fruits, veggies, meats, and cheeses to make the perfect charcuteTREE board for your party. From choosing the colors to fit your decorations to opting for
your favorite flavors, you have complete control over this party-ready snack!</p><p>Make-Ahead!</p><p>INGREDIENTS &amp; SUBSTITUTIONS</p><p>This tasty charcuterie tree comes together with just a few
basic elements. Feel free to pick and choose from the ideas below to create
your very own masterpiece!</p><p>Cheese – Feel free to choose your favorites. We like to
choose a variety of colors including a 5 or 7 year cheddar, a Gouda (we think
the Summerfields is a fun one to add a touch of Rosemary flavor but any of our
Goudas will do,) and an Italian Style for variety. </p><p>Pretzels, Fruits &amp; Veggies – Use a stalk of celery to
act as the tree trunk. or pretzel sticks as an option! This recipe  uses seedless green, red, and black grapes,
green kiwi, yellow star fruit, and fresh cranberries or sugared cranberries as
ornaments.  Feel free to choose whatever
you like best and use different shapes. Round grapes, star-shaped starfruit,
and square cubes of cheese gives you 3 different looks. You can even cut the
fruits and veggies to help give your charcuterie platter some extra visual interest!</p><p>Nuts – Add some crunch to your cheese plate with the
addition of some toasted nuts. </p><p>Meat – Prosciutto, salami, deli meats, and sliced sausages
are all great options. </p><p>Greenery –Cypress sprigs are beautiful, but any evergreen
will work or even fresh herbs like rosemary, thyme or sage.</p><p>Crackers –use a fun variety of shapes and textures and we
like to also include oval-shaped slices of soft baguette.</p><p>Step 1: Make The Outline. Place greenery/sprigs in the shape
of a tree on a wooden tray, platter, or cutting board to resemble a Christmas
tree shape. Place celery or pretzel sticks at the bottom for the tree trunk.</p><p>Step 2: Arrange cheese cubes, grapes, and kiwi in rows on
top of the greenery.</p><p>Step 3: Garnish with fresh herbs between the fruits and
cheeses to create a 3D effect.</p><p>Step 4: Fill out the tree shape by tucking additional
greenery sprigs under the ingredients as needed.</p><p>Step 5: Decorate using star shapes on top of the ingredients
and top off the tree. Sprinkle with fresh cranberries.</p><p>ENJOY!  And don’t
forget to send us photos to <a href="mailto:wisconsincheesemasters@gmail.com">wisconsincheesemasters@gmail.com</a>
to be entered in our CharcuteTREE contest!</p><p>INGREDIENTS</p><p>▢evergreen or cypress sprigs</p><p>▢1 stalk celery or pretzel sticks</p><p>▢4 ounces cheddar cheese, cut into 3/4-inch cubes</p><p>▢4 ounces Gouda, cut into 3/4-inch cubes</p><p>▢1/2 pound Italian Style, cut into fingers</p><p>▢seedless green, red, and black grapes</p><p>▢1 kiwi, sliced</p><p>▢fresh herbs such as thyme, rosemary, and sage</p><p>▢1 star fruit slices or persimmon or cheese slices,
shaped with a star cookie cutter</p><p>▢fresh cranberries</p>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title><![CDATA[Black Friday (Spicy!) Mango Fire and Turkey Sandwich]]></title>
			<link>https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/black-friday-spicy-mango-fire-and-turkey-sandwich/</link>
			<pubDate>Mon, 31 Oct 2022 13:12:26 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/black-friday-spicy-mango-fire-and-turkey-sandwich/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Everyone knows this is what we've been waiting for: the deliciousness of the leftover turkey sandwich! Rev up the heat and flavor with our spicy Mango Fire Cheddar Cheese and it's a whole new game.&nbsp;</p><p>(Makes one sandwich)</p><p>2 slices good white bread, one side spread with&nbsp;<a href="https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/door-county-sweet-and-spicy-mustard/">Door County Mustard</a></p><p>Thinly sliced leftover turkey, pile as high as you care on the mustard side of one of the bread slices</p><p>Top turkey with 1/4 cup shredded Mango Fire Cheddar Cheese</p><p>Top turkey with a handful of spinach leaves</p><p>Cover with the mustard side down of second bread slice</p><p>Heat a pan with one tablespoon butter, medium heat.</p><p>Add sandwich when butter is melted, press lightly and grill until cheese begins to melt. Flip sandwich and grill until golden brown and cheese is melted. Cut sandwich in half (on the diagonal only, please!) and enjoy!</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Everyone knows this is what we've been waiting for: the deliciousness of the leftover turkey sandwich! Rev up the heat and flavor with our spicy Mango Fire Cheddar Cheese and it's a whole new game.&nbsp;</p><p>(Makes one sandwich)</p><p>2 slices good white bread, one side spread with&nbsp;<a href="https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/door-county-sweet-and-spicy-mustard/">Door County Mustard</a></p><p>Thinly sliced leftover turkey, pile as high as you care on the mustard side of one of the bread slices</p><p>Top turkey with 1/4 cup shredded Mango Fire Cheddar Cheese</p><p>Top turkey with a handful of spinach leaves</p><p>Cover with the mustard side down of second bread slice</p><p>Heat a pan with one tablespoon butter, medium heat.</p><p>Add sandwich when butter is melted, press lightly and grill until cheese begins to melt. Flip sandwich and grill until golden brown and cheese is melted. Cut sandwich in half (on the diagonal only, please!) and enjoy!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title><![CDATA[ "Warm" temperature storage and Shipping Cheese]]></title>
			<link>https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/-warm-temperature-storage-and-shipping-cheese/</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 12 Dec 2020 19:26:14 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/-warm-temperature-storage-and-shipping-cheese/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style="font-size: 18px;"><span style=""><span style="">We have found that many people have questions about the storage of their cheese. As we ship more and more cheese each year these questions have expanded to include the safety of cheese shipped in "warm" temperatures.</span></span></span></span></p><p><span style=""><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 242, 202);"><span style=""><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style="font-size: 18px;"><span style=""><span style=""><span style="">Research by leaders in the dairy industry have concluded, "the inherent characteristics</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p><p><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 242, 202);"><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">of
most cheeses create a hostile environment for bacterial pathogens.</span>"<span style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);">&nbsp; <span style="font-size: 18px;">(If you would like to read</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p><p><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 242, 202);"><span style=""><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);"><span style="font-size: 18px;"> the entire research report, it is included below.)</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p><p><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style="font-size: 18px;"><span style=""><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 242, 202);"><span style=""><br></span></span></span></span></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">We cut our cheese by hand just before shipping. We wrap it in plastic to eliminate any air.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">We pack it, without ice to avoid wet cheese, and store it at 40 degrees until it is shipped.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">We have followed these policies since we started in 2008.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;"><br></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">When we ship our cheese, we must rely on shippers. We use USPS because they have proven&nbsp;</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">to be the most reliable shipper. However, we cannot guarantee the performance of a third&nbsp;</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">party. And, like every other shippers of perishables, we cannot accept returns or cancellations</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">when the cheese has already been shipped.&nbsp;</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;"><br></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">We are extremely confident that the cheeses we ship will arrive in good condition. If you have</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">any questions, please email us and we will be glad to help.</span></p><p style="text-align: center;"><span style=""><span style=""><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style=""><span style=""><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 0);"><span style="font-size: 20px;">Research Report on Cheese Storage Temperatures</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p><p><span style=""><span style=""><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;"></span></span></span></span></span></span></p><p><strong>Storage Temperatures
Necessary to Maintain
Cheese Safety</strong>
JAY RUSSELL BISHOP and MARIANNE SMUKOWSKI*
Wisconsin Center for Dairy Research, University of Wisconsin
1605 Linden Drive, Madison, WI 53706-1565, USA
SUMMARY
Available information on bacterial pathogen growth, stasis, and
death in cheeses was reviewed and evaluated to determine storage
temperatures necessary to maintain product safety. In view of the
variety and large volume of cheeses consumed throughout the world,
the incidence of foodborne outbreaks associated with cheeses is
extremely low. Research revealed that the inherent characteristics of
most cheeses create a hostile environment for bacterial pathogens,
especially at elevated ripening and storage temperatures. Therefore,
it is recommended that the following cheeses, manufactured in the
United States with pasteurized or heat treated (&gt; 63°C for &gt;16
seconds) milk, should be exempt from refrigeration requirements
during ripening, storage, shipping, and display: Asiago (medium and
old), Cheddar, Colby, Feta, Monterey Jack, Muenster, Parmesan,
Pasteurized process, Provolone, Romano, and Swiss/Emmentaler. It
must be stressed that the manufacture of these cheeses must be
done under the proper conditions of Good Hygiene Practices, Good
Manufacturing Practices, and HACCP principles, and according to CFR
requirements. In addition, the natural cheeses must include active
cultures, and the storage and display temperatures must not exceed
30°C.
INTRODUCTION
Temperature-dependent storage of
most foods has three major roles – to
allow for curing/ripening of foods that
contain added active starter cultures and
enzymes, to prevent quality defects, and
to control pathogen growth. In making
decisions on whether a food requires
time/temperature control for safety, the
properties of the food itself must be considered (3). The role of temperaturedependent aging and storage is similar for
cheese and for other foods, but the targets differ significantly because of unique
inherent characteristics of the finished
food product.
Transformation of chalky, acid-tasting curd into ductile, full-flavored cheese
is accomplished during ripening through
the action of milk enzymes, rennet, and
various organisms in the cheese, including those in the starter culture. The biochemical changes that occur during
cheese ripening are complex and involve
fermentation of the carbohydrate; hydrolysis of fats and proteins with subsequent
decarboxylation, deamination, and/or
hydrogenation; and production of carbonyls, nitrogenous compounds, fatty acids,
and sulfur compounds, all of which contribute to the overall body, texture, and
flavor of the final product (63). These inherent characteristics also create a hostile
environment for pathogens (25). This re-
OCTOBER 2006 | FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS 715
view of scientific information on pathogen death and growth in cheeses at various storage temperatures will determine
parameters necessary to ensure safety of
cheeses in the marketplace. The United
States cheese industry advocates the use
of a science-based approach for assessing the risk posed by ready-to-eat foods
for possible transmission of pathogens in
the food supply (24). Applying HACCP
principles enhances the manufacture of
safe cheese (35).
In view of the variety and large volume of cheese consumed throughout the
world, the incidence of outbreaks of food
poisoning and foodborne disease associated with cheese are extremely low (36).
Epidemiology studies of cheese-related
outbreaks in the United States, Canada,
and Europe have found no outbreaks
linked to hard Italian varieties, e.g.,
Parmesan, Romano, and Provolone. Varieties such as Cheddar and Swiss were
infrequently involved (38). In general,
very few documented illness outbreaks
have been linked to consumption of properly ripened hard cheese. Therefore, time/
temperature control of hard cheese is primarily needed not for safety reasons, but
to maintain the organoleptic quality of
cheese (3).
INHERENT CHARACTERISTICS OF SAFE DAIRY
FOODS
Numerous researchers have reported
bactericidal and/or bacteriostatic effects
on pathogenic bacteria in foods because
of reduced moisture, low water activity,
low pH as the result of organic acid production, salt, heat treatment, competing
flora, biochemical metabolites, bacteriocins, and ripening, either singly or as part
of hurdle technology (1, 3, 5, 6, 10, 11,
13, 15, 17, 22, 25, 26, 29, 34, 36, 37, 38,
39, 40, 43, 45, 48, 49, 51, 58, 59, 64, 65,
66, 68, 69, 70, 76). Refrigeration cannot
be depended upon to reduce the number of pathogens, as it has been proven
that Listeria monocytogenes (L. monocytogenes) and other psychrotrophic
pathogens are capable of growth at these
temperatures. Therefore, other factors,
such as diligence with regard to good
hygiene practices by the food industry,
must be responsible for the lack of pathogen growth in fermented dairy foods.
Results also confirm the low frequency
of contamination by L. monocytogenes of
pasteurized fluid milk products sold in the
United States (24).
INHERENT CHARACTERISTICS OF CHEESE
Cheeses are one of the oldest types
of prepared foods. Cheesemaking provided human kind with a means of concentrating and preserving milk at a time
when refrigeration was unknown and
principles of food preservation were
vague empirical concepts at best (52).
The vast majority of cheese manufactured in the United States is made from
pasteurized or heat-treated milk, which
renders the product free of most pathogens (38, 39, 40). The inherent characteristics of cheeses made with starter culture addition provide multiple hurdles that
inhibit pathogen growth (3, 47). A multiplicity of practices other than pasteurization or heat-treatment also contribute significantly to the microbiological safety of
cheese (10, 11, 38). Some practices, such
as milk quality management, lactic culture protocols, pH control, salt addition,
and controlled curing conditions, are established technologies (38). Other factors
may include natural inhibitory substances
(e.g., lysozyme), starter metabolites and
fermentation by-products (e.g., nisin), including organic acids (e.g., lactic, acetic,
propionic, and formic). Water activity/
moisture content imposes additional detrimental effects on foodborne pathogens
during the manufacturing and ripening of
cheese (10, 11, 38, 66).
During the manufacture of semi-soft,
hard, and very hard cheeses, the cheese
is subjected to relatively long exposure
to ideal incubation temperatures for bacteria. For example, Cheddar and related
varieties are maintained at 31–39°C during manufacture and are formed or
hooped at temperatures in the 32–37°C
range. Many Cheddar-type cheeses are
cured or aged at temperatures up to
15.6°C. Swiss cheese is held for a period
of 4–8 weeks at a temperature of 22.2–
23.3°C to develop the characteristic eyes
and flavor. If storage of Cheddar and Swiss
cheese at room temperature had any inherent detrimental effect on safety of
these cheeses, then neither would be safe
to consume (51).
Specifically for L. monocytogenes,
numerous studies suggest that the composition of cheese, ripening and storage
conditions, lactic acid cultures, pH, salt,
and moisture concentration influence its
survival and growth (15, 29, 39, 40, 43).
The fate of L. monocytogenes and other
foodborne pathogens during cheese ripening is determined by the microbiological, biochemical, and physical properties
of the particular cheese (43, 64). Thus,
cheese is a very complex system, with
the following factors acting simultaneously
to determine the behavior of L. monocytogenes during ripening: (a) type,
amount, and activity of starter culture; (b)
pH as determined by concentrations of
lactic, acetic, formic, and other acids; (c)
presence of hydrogen peroxide, diacetyl,
and various antimicrobial agents (Nisin,
diplococcin, and other bacteriocins); (d)
levels of nutrients, salt, moisture, and
oxygen; and (e) the cheese ripening temperature (64).
Fermentation is an age-old food preservation method used to inhibit the growth
and survival of pathogenic bacteria (48).
Lactic acid bacteria commonly used to
produce fermented dairy products are
antagonistic to foodborne pathogens and
will either inhibit their growth or inactivate them (5, 13, 36, 59, 66, 70). In addition, research has shown that some starter
cultures are detrimental to food spoilage
organisms as well as various pathogens
in these products (1, 17, 22, 51, 58, 69,
76). Responsible for this action are metabolites such as lactic and other acids,
diacetyl, hydrogen peroxide, and various
antibiotic-like substances produced by
lactic acid bacteria, which are probably
synergistic (34, 36, 37, 45, 49, 66).
Examples of pathogens that are susceptible to inactivation or growth inhibition by metabolites of lactic acid bacteria
include Salmonella Typhimurium, enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, and L. monocytogenes (66).
Growth of L. monocytogenes is always
inhibited appreciably in lactic acid cultured product when compared to that of
the control, no matter how high the final
pH of the fermented milk. Even when
the final pH dropped only to 5.99, growth
of the pathogen was inhibited by 84%
relative to the control (65). This suggests
that factors other than the hydrogen
ion concentration are involved in the
inhibition of L. monocytogenes by lactic
acid bacteria (65). These observations
have been documented by other researchers, who noted that lactic cultures inhibited pathogens such as salmonellae and
staphylococci, even when pH was controlled at 6.6 (26). Modern lactic culture
technology for cheese manufacturers
has virtually eliminated Staphylococcuscaused outbreaks involving cheese (40).
Vigorous starter growth should protect fermented milk products against the growth
of pathogens and the formation of staphylococcal enterotoxin (36). Mathew
and Ryser (48) reported increased injury
of healthy L. monocytogenes cells during
716 FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS | OCTOBER 2006
fermentation; at the end of the
24-h fermentation period, &gt; 90% of the
healthy L. monocytogenes cells were injured. Additionally, at the end of the
product’s shelf life, &gt; 99% of the initial
population was injured, and no significant decrease in the percentage of injury
was observed. It was also discovered that
the presence of L. monocytogenes did not
adversely affect the growth of the starter
culture at any inoculation level (48).
Gengeorgis et al. (25) demonstrated that
non-soft cheeses made with the use of
starter cultures and pH values of &lt; 5.5, as
well as processed cheeses, will not support growth of L. monocytogenes at 4 to
30°C if the cheeses are contaminated from
raw foods after the consumers open packages. Rapid acid production is the principal factor responsible for the elimination
of pathogens from semi-hard cheese. The
use of an effective starter culture is not
only critical for preventing growth of
pathogens, but also essential for the production of good quality cheese (6). The
preservative effect of lactic acid bacteria
can be attributed partly to the activation
of the lactoperoxidase system and partly
to bacteriocins (4).
Temperatures of curd cooking and
aging/curing/ripening/storage have an
impact on pathogen growth and survival
in cheese. In hard cheese types with
higher curd cooking temperatures, growth
is slight (68). There is considerable evidence showing that certain cheeses do
not support growth of pathogens during
the aging process and subsequent storage (11). A review of the literature related to the potential for growth of pathogens in hard cheeses that are aged for at
least 60 days shows that such growth is
not likely to occur because of factors inherent to these cheeses (31). Pathogens
that survive the manufacturing process decrease faster at higher storage temperatures (14). The death rate of Salmonella
in Samsoe cheese was slower at 10–12°C
than at 16–20°C (36). It has been concluded that, for traditionally made hard
cheeses, time/temperature control for
safety is not required (3).
In most cheese varieties, salt concentrations attain levels of 1.6–3.0% of the
total weight of the cheese, which would
not affect most of the pathogenic bacteria in cheese. But it must be realized that
salt is dissolved in the aqueous phase of
the cheese only, the actual site of bacterial growth. Given the respective calculated values, salt concentrations in the
aqueous phase reach levels of 2.2–6.5%
or higher and will, in fact, at least slow
down the growth rate of most bacteria
and even have a detrimental effect on the
more sensitive ones (68).
Where scientific data do not exist,
all the inherent characteristics of cheese
can serve as criteria in determining potential growth of pathogens by the use of
mathematical modeling (16, 72, 79, 83).
When two or more of these criteria are
combined, the resultant effect is an additional hurdle to the outgrowth of pathogens of concern. It is this effect that makes
it possible to store certain cheeses safely
beyond either one of the two Food Code
criteria for date marking and refrigeration
(i.e., 7 days at 5°C or 4 days at 7.2°C).
This led the US Food and Drug Administration to issue, on December 15, 1999
(11), a letter suggesting that regulatory
agencies use their discretionary
authority and defer enforcement action
regarding date marking aged hard
cheeses. In that letter, FDA granted a formal interpretation to the Food Code that
hard and semisoft aged cheeses and pasteurized process cheese, each manufactured according to 21 CFR 133 as specifically cited above and maintained under
refrigeration, are exempt from the Food
Code’s date marking provision related to
refrigerated, ready-to-eat, potentially hazardous food. This interpretation has subsequently been incorporated into state
statutes, such as Wisconsin’s (2). Feta
cheese was later added to this exemption
list by FDA (in the case of Iowa Dept.
Health vs. Shullsburg Creamery).
TABLE 1. Model L. monocytogenes exposure of cheese (2001)
 Home
 Contamination Retail Home storage storage
Cheese Frequency Contamination Growth rate Time
Cheddar Low Low Low Long
Colby Low Low Low Long
Feta Moderate Moderate Low Long
Monterey Jack Low Low Low Long
Mozzarella Low Low Moderate Long
Parmesan Low Low Low Long
Processed Low Low Moderate Long
Provolone Low Low Low Long
Swiss Low Low Low Long
The evaluation revealed that there was a very low risk for listeriosis by Feta cheese, heat-treated natural
and process cheeses, and aged cheeses (77).
Obtaining more information from research, industry, and regulatory experience, FDA/USDA (78) updated their
L. monocytogenes risk analysis in 2003 with the following results (Table 2).
OCTOBER 2006 | FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS 717
SPECIFIC CHEESES
AND THEIR INHERENT
CHACTERISTICS
Cheeses are typically categorized
according to their moisture content:
Soft &gt; 50%
Semi-soft &gt; 39 – &lt; 50%
Hard &lt; 39% (4, 22)
Hard and semi-soft cheeses are the
focus of this research review.
Research by Gengeorgis and colleagues (25) has yielded results indicative of those obtained by other researchers, which prove death of pathogens in
nonsoft cheeses stored at various temperatures. In this study, 49 market cheeses representing 24 varieties were purchased
commercially. Cheeses were inoculated
with 104
 cells of L. monocytogenes per
square cm. The inoculum was a cocktail
of 5 strains — Scott A, V7, RM-1, VPH1,
VPH2. Inoculated cheeses were stored at
4, 8 and 30°C for up to 36 hours. Certain
cheeses (Queso Fresco, Panela Ranchero,
Ricotta, Teleme, Brie, Camembert, and
Cottage) supported Listeria growth in
cheese at one of the storage temperatures.
Cheeses not supporting growth but causing gradual death at all temperatures included Cotija, cream, blue, Cheddar,
Monterey Jack, Swiss, Colby, string, Provolone, Muenster, Feta, and Kasseri with
pH values of 4.3–5.6; process cheese (pH
5.7–6.4); and Limburger cheese (pH 7.2).
Overall, this study demonstrated that
nonsoft cheeses made with the use of
starter cultures and at pH values of
&lt; 5.6, as well as processed cheeses, will
not support growth of L. monocytogenes
at 4–30°C if contaminated from raw foods
(meat, poultry, fish, vegetables) after the
opening of the packages by consumers.
In all cheeses that caused gradual death
(Cotija, cream, Blue, Cheddar, Monterey
Jack, Swiss, Colby, Provolone, Muenster,
Feta, Kasseri, Process, Limburger), death
at 30°C was greater than or equal to death
at 4°C.
Asiago (medium and old)
Medium and old Asiago (aged at least
6 months and 12 months, respectively)
are hard cheeses with characteristics very
similar to those of Parmesan. FDA has previously exempted these cheeses from
date-marking (11) and stated that hard
cheeses aged at least 60 days are not likely
to support pathogen growth (31).
Bachman and Spahr (6) found that Swisstype hard cheeses are hygienically safe
and that the technology used in manufacturing these cheeses does not support
growth of pathogens and leads to a more
rapid rate of death.
Cheddar
Cheddar is a hard cheese that does
not support L. monocytogenes growth and
that causes gradual death at all temperatures (25). This finding is confirmed by
an FDA correspondence (11) and also
agrees with work by Ryser and Marth (61),
who reported that growth of L. monocytogenes during Cheddar cheese manufacture appeared to be inhibited by proper
acid development resulting from an active starter culture. Behavior of other
pathogens during Cheddar manufacture
and ripening show similar results. With
normal starter activity, inoculated Staphylococcus aureus died rapidly (60), as did
Yersinia enterocolitica (67). Norholt (54)
illustrated die-off of Salmonella spp. after
2 weeks. Wood et al. (84) found that, of
11 vats of Salmonella-contaminated Cheddar cheese curd, only 2 remained positive in the finished cheese immediately
after manufacture. In 1 and 4 months,
TABLE 2. Model L. monocytogenes exposure of cheese (2003)
 Home
 Contamination Retail Home storage storage
Cheese Frequency Contamination Growth rate Time
Cheddar Low Low Low Long
Colby Low Low Low Long
Feta Moderate Moderate Low Long
Monterey Jack Low Low Low Long
Mozzarella Low Low Moderate Long
Muenster Moderate Low Low Long
Parmesan Low Low Low Long
The FDA/USDA evaluation classified cheeses as follows:
Fresh soft – Queso fresco, Queso de Crema, Queso de Puna
Soft unripened (&gt; 50% moisture) – Cottage, cream, Ricotta
Soft ripened (&gt; 50% moisture) – Brie, Camembert, Feta, Mozzarella
Semi-soft (&gt;39–50% moisture) – Blue, Brick, Monterey Jack, Muenster, Provolone
Hard (&lt; 39% moisture) – Cheddar, Colby, Parmesan, Processed
718 FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS | OCTOBER 2006
these 2 vats were clear of the inoculated
Salmonella. This result is supported by
studies of Goepfert et al. (28) and
Hargrove et al. (32) in artificially inoculated Cheddar. Both groups found a 75–
80% reduction in Salmonella after hooping and pressing during manufacture.
Numerous researchers have reported
kill of pathogens at higher ripening and
storage temperatures. Salmonella spp.
survived longer when Cheddar cheese
was stored at 4.5°C rather than 10°C (82).
In general, a low pH and a high ripening
temperature result in a higher inactivation rate for pathogenic organisms (61).
Using stirred-curd Cheddar cheese,
Goepfert et al. (28) showed that the number of S. Typhimurium decreased by a factor of 10,000 during 10–12 weeks of ripening at 13°C, whereas a similar decrease
required 14–16 weeks at 7.5°C. Park et
al. (58) reported that salmonellae survived
during ripening of Cheddar cheese for up
to 7 months at 13°C and 10 months at
7°C. Ryser and Marth (61) reported an
inactivation rate of L. monocytogenes 0.9
logs less at 6°C than at 13°C. International
Dairy Federation researchers demonstrated that the decrease in numbers of
staphylococci in Cheddar was greater at
higher temperatures (10°C and 13°C) than
at 7°C (36).
Colby
Colby is a hard to semi-soft cheese
that does not support L. monocytogenes
growth and causes gradual death at all
temperatures (25), a finding confirmed by
an FDA correspondence (11). Various
researchers studying the behavior of inoculated pathogens during Colby cheese
manufacture and ripening determined that
E. coli generally decreased over a period
of weeks and was not detected after 4–6
weeks (41) and that numbers of Y. enterocolitica generally decreased over a period of weeks at 3°C (51). Yousef and
Marth (85) found that, early in storage of
Colby cheese, numbers of Listeria in the
cheese remained relatively constant for a
time that depended on the strain used.
Numbers of Listeria in cheese decreased
steadily thereafter at a rate that depended
mainly on composition of the cheese. It
should be noted that 2 of the 6 lots of
cheese manufactured in this study had
moisture levels higher than CFR specifications. IDF researchers demonstrated that
the decrease in numbers of staphylococci
in Colby was greater at the higher temperatures (10°C and 13°C) than at 7°C
(36).
Feta
The Greek regulatory standard for
Feta cheese stipulates that it cannot contain more than 56% moisture and less than
43% FDM. No standard exists for the
amount of salt, but the salting procedure
is described in this regulation. Commercial Feta produced in Greece normally
contains about 2.5% salt (75). Currently,
there is no US standard of identity for Feta,
a soft ripened cheese that does not support L. monocytogenes growth and that
causes gradual death at all temperatures
(25, 55). Other experiments have shown
that Listeria not only failed to grow in Feta
but was gradually inactivated in whey and
skim milk brine containing 12% salt (NaCl)
(57). Papageorgiou and Marth (55) observed that the pH value of 2-day old Feta
cheese decreased to 4.6, after which the
growth of L. monocytogenes ceased.
Monterey Jack
Monterey Jack is a hard to semi-soft
cheese which does not support L. monocytogenes growth and causes gradual
death at all temperatures (25). Other than
this referenced study, there exists little
published research with this cheese. However, it is very similar, with regard to pH,
aqueous NaCl, and moisture, to other
cheeses that have been heavily studied
and proven not to support pathogen
growth.
Mozzarella
Mozzarella is a soft to semi-soft
cheese that has a manufacturing protocol
detrimental to bacteria. Buazzi et al. (9)
found that the typical cooking of Mozzarella curd at 40°C for 30 min caused a
38% decrease of L. monocytogenes, compared to numbers of the pathogen in curd
after cutting. Placing of curd in hot water
(77°C) and stretching for 3–4 min caused
complete demise of the pathogen. The
curd temperature during stretching was
58–65°C. In conclusion, no L. monocytogenes was found in the cheese at the
end of stretching, start of brining, and end
of storage. The heat treatment given to
the curd freed the product of L. monocytogenes, even though the curd initially
contained approximately 6.2 × 104 cells
of the pathogen per g. Ryser and Marth
(64) reported that the heat treatment given
to Mozzarella cheese curd is clearly sufficient to inactivate small numbers of
L. monocytogenes that might be present.
Villani et al. (81) found similar results
during manufacture of traditional Mozzarella cheese from buffalo milk.
Stecchini et al. (71) addressed the
issue of post-process contamination by
inoculating the surface and packaging fluid of Mozzarella cheese with
L. monocytogenes and then storing the
product at 5°C for 21 days. Under these
conditions, numbers of L. monocytogenes
increased about 10,000-fold. Mozzarella
was implicated in an outbreak of salmonellosis in 1984. Post-processing contamination was thought to have caused the
outbreak (19).
Muenster
Muenster is a semi-soft cheese that
does not support L. monocytogenes
growth and causes a gradual death at all
temperatures (25). Other than this referenced study, there exists little published
research with this cheese. However, it is
very similar in pH, aqueous NaCl, and
moisture, to other cheeses that have been
heavily studied and proven not to support pathogen growth.
Parmesan
Parmesan is a hard cheese ripened
at 12.8°C for 10 months, which does not
support L. monocytogenes growth and
which causes gradual death at all temperatures. No outbreaks in the United
States have implicated any Italian-type
hard cheeses, including Parmesan. This
unblemished safety record may reflect
conditions during manufacture and curing that inhibit or destroy pathogens (40).
Yousef and Marth (86) observed that,
during Parmesan cheese ripening, numbers of L. monocytogenes decreased almost linearly and faster than reported for
other hard cheeses. L. monocytogenes
was not detected in cheese after 2–16
weeks of ripening, depending on the
strain of the pathogen and the lot of
cheese. Parmesan made in this study was
not a favorable medium for survival of
L. monocytogenes. Decreased viability of
the pathogen in Parmesan is probably
related to a combination of factors, including (a) action of lipase added to the milk;
(b) heat treatment that the curd receives
during cheesemaking; and (c) lower moisture content and water activity of the fully
ripened cheese.
Parmesan is more acidic than other
cheeses, with a much lower water activity that inhibits microbial growth (35, 44).
Pathogenic bacteria vary just as widely as
the cheeses they contaminate, and their
survival characteristics are equally varied.
For example, Brie stored under refrigeration will support the growth of L. monocytogenes, while Parmesan stored at nearambient temperature will not (35).
OCTOBER 2006 | FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS 719
Pasteurized Process
(21CFR133.169)
Pasteurized process cheese is a soft
to semi-soft cheese that does not support
L. monocytogenes growth and that causes
gradual death at all temperatures (25, 27).
Pasteurized processed cheese and related
products have an excellent safety record
in the United States (39). During the past
50 years, very few disease outbreaks have
been attributed to contaminated pasteurized process cheese products (27). The
combined effects of pH, moisture, and salt
in standardized process cheese may inhibit vegetative pathogen growth in a way
similar to the mechanism of inhibition for
Clostridium botulinum (73, 74). If a pasteurized processed cheese is intended for
use at ambient temperature, pH, water
activity (aW), moisture content, and antimicrobials should be appropriately adjusted to inhibit botulinal toxin formation
(3). During manufacture, the product is
heated for &gt; 30 s at a temperature of
&gt; 65.6°C; this is sufficient to eliminate vegetative organisms but not the spores of
Clostridium botulinum. As a formulated
safe product with regard to C. botulinum,
the combinations of moisture, salt, and
pH act as multiple hurdles to inhibit botulinal growth and toxin production (42, 73).
While studying pathogen survival in
pasteurized process cheese slices, Glass
et al. (27) reported that populations of
Salmonella serotypes and E. coli O157:H7
decreased by an average of 1.3 and 2.1
log CFU/g, respectively, by 36 h. Salmonella serotypes decreased an additional
0.6 log CFU/g during the remaining 60 h.
Populations of L. monocytogenes also decreased, although to a lesser extent, exhibiting approximately 0.6 log CFU/g reduction in 96 h. S. aureus levels remained
relatively constant during the testing period and were below levels that support
detectable enterotoxin production. At
30°C, the pasteurized process cheese slices
TABLE 3. Summary of data on cheeses reviewed, and compositional calculations (21, 68, 75)
 * A/S Temp =&gt; Increased pathogen kill at elevated aging/storage temperatures.
 ** %FDM=&gt; Percent fat in dry matter.
+ Ah – Aeromonas hydrophils, Cj – Campylobacter jejuni, Clb – Clostridium botulinum, Ec – Escherichia coli O157:H7,
Lm – L. monocytogenes,
 P – Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Sa – Salmonella sp., Sta – Staphylococcus aureus, Ye – Yersinia enterocolitica.
720 FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS | OCTOBER 2006
allowed survival but did not support
growth of S. aureus, whereas populations
of L. monocytogenes, E. coli O157:H7, and
Salmonella serotypes decreased during
the 96 h storage. Water activity appears
to contribute significantly to the inhibition of pathogen growth in these cheese
slices. The aW of the tested formulations
(0.92–0.93) was at or below the minimum
required for growth of most foodborne
pathogens. Although low aW may inhibit
pathogen growth in these formulations,
the synergistic effect of moisture, salts, and
pH, or another factor such as sorbate, may
also contribute to the safety of the product. The results suggest that properly formulated pasteurized process cheese could
be exempt from the potentially hazardous food category because it does not support the rapid and progressive growth of
pathogens tested. The results of the study
suggested that unopened packages of
properly formulated pasteurized process
cheese can be safely stored unrefrigerated
for certain time periods (53). In fact, reducing storage temperatures has been
reported to actually enhance survival of
E. coli O157:H7 in acidified media, apple
cider, and mayonnaise (33, 50, 87).
Provolone
Provolone is a semi-soft cheese that
does not support L. monocytogenes
growth and that causes gradual death at
all temperatures (25). No outbreaks that
implicated any Italian-type cheese, including Provolone (40), have been found in
the United States. Other than this referenced study, little published research with
this cheese exists. However, with regard
to pH, aqueous NaCl, and moisture, it is
very similar to other cheeses that have
been heavily studied and proven not to
support pathogen growth.
Romano
Romano is a hard cheese that does
not appear to support L. monocytogenes
growth. In the United States, no outbreaks
have been found that implicated any Italian-type cheeses, including Romano (40).
Other than this referenced study, there
exists little published research with this
cheese. However, it is very similar to other
cheeses with regard to pH, aqueous NaCl,
and moisture, which have been heavily
studied and proven not to support pathogen growth.
Swiss / Emmentaler
Swiss/Emmentaler is a hard to
semi-soft cheese that does not support
L. monocytogenes growth and that causes
gradual death at all temperatures (25).
This finding is confirmed by an FDA correspondence (11). The ripening temperature of Swiss cheese is comparatively high
(22°C). Buazzi et al. (10) reported a sharp
decrease in numbers of L. monocytogenes
during brining of Swiss blocks (7°C for
30 h). The population of L. monocytogenes
continues to decrease during cheese ripening. Listeria was not detected after 80,
77, and 66 days of ripening of Swiss
cheese made from inoculated milk.
Bachmann and Spahr (6) discovered none
of the inoculated potentially pathogenic
bacteria, except for low numbers of
S. aureus, could be found in the experimental Swiss cheese 1 day after manufacturing. All subsequent determinations
showed that the cheese was free from
potentially pathogenic bacteria and
toxins. Baumgartner et al. (8) previously
reported the same behavior of S. aureus
in Emmentaler cheese. Bachmann and
Spahr (6) also found that even in poor
quality cheese that had been inoculated
with E. coli and was exhibiting early blowing, no E. coli could be detected at the
end of ripening. Additionally, results
showed that 1 week after manufacturing,
the inoculated pathogens (Aeromonas
hydrophils, Campylobacter jejuni, E. coli,
L. monocytogenes, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella spp., S. aureus, and
Y. enterocolitica) could no longer be
detected.
El-Shenawy and Marth (18) suggested that production of propionate by
eye-forming bacteria may have contributed to the demise of L. monocytogenes
in Swiss cheese. In other work, &lt; 2,000
ppm of sodium propionate inhibited
growth of L. monocytogenes at pH 5.0
(10). At pH 5.0 and 3,000 ppm sodium
propionate, the Listeria population decreased 1,000-fold during 67 days of incubation at 35°C and disappeared after
78 days. A 60-day-old Swiss cheese typically contains 3,750 ppm propionic acid
(46). Acetate may also play a major role
in inactivating L. monocytogenes in Swiss
cheese (10); more lactate is fermented to
acetate and CO2 than to propionate (12).
The rapid decrease of the redox potential
of Swiss cheese probably supports the inhibitory effect on pathogenic bacteria
(54).
Generally, manufacturing technology
of Swiss cheese does not support the
growth of pathogenic bacteria (6, 10).
Because of the synergistic effect of active
antimicrobial enzyme systems in fresh raw
milk, antagonistic starter culture flora, fast
acidification, antimicrobial effect of lactic
acid, and high curd cooking temperatures,
potentially pathogenic bacteria do not
survive the manufacturing of Swiss cheese
produced under good manufacturing
practices. In addition, intense brining and
ripening at elevated temperatures for at
least 2 months eliminate the occurrence
of the tested strains. Pathogens that may
survive the manufacturing process decrease faster at higher storage temperatures (14). Swiss cheese appears to pose
a very low risk for transmission of
foodborne diseases (40).
Brick
Brick is a semi-soft cheese. In studies of the behavior of pathogens during
Brick cheese manufacture and ripening,
L. monocytogenes numbers decreased during 20–22 weeks of curing at 10°C (67),
and E. coli grew during manufacture and
then died off during curing (23).
Blue
Blue is considered a semi-soft cheese
that has been proven to not support
L. monocytogenes growth and that causes
gradual death at all temperatures (25).
Papageorgiou and Marth (59) reported
that growth of L. monocytogenes ceased
when the pH of blue cheese dropped below 5.0. Populations of L. monocytogenes
decreased significantly (P &lt; 0.005) during the first 50 days of ripening, by an
average of 2.6 logs CFU/g compared to
populations of 1-day old cheese. The high
salt content in blue cheese is likely the
main reason for the lack of growth of Listeria. Productions of fatty acids and methyl ketones derived from fatty acids via
the beta-oxidation pathway, and their corresponding secondary alcohols, may contribute to the unfavorable environment for
L. monocytogenes (32). Blue cheese on
the market has a pH &gt;5.0; therefore, conclusive pathogen death is not verified.
Soft / Hispanic
This category includes Queso
Blanco, Queso Fresco, Ricotta, Teleme,
Brie, Camembert, Panela, Ranchero,
cream, and cottage. Gengeorgis et al. (25)
evaluated the fate of Listeria as a postprocessing contaminant and found that
Listeria growth was primarily confined to
high-moisture varieties, including Brie,
Camembert, Ricotta, and the soft Hispanic
cheeses, all of which had a pH &gt; 6.0 and
low to moderate levels of salt in the
moisture phase. Back et al. (7) noted that
L. monocytogenes survived, and under
most conditions multiplied, when inoculated directly into the cheese milk of laboratory-made Camembert cheese.
OCTOBER 2006 | FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS 721
REGULATORY EVALUATION
In a series of correspondences, in a
letter form as an inclusion to the US FDA
Program Information Manual on retail
Food Safety and in a subsequent correspondence (11, 31), FDA exempted the
following cheeses from the date marking
mandate within the US Food Code:
Asiago Limburger
Blue Monterey Jack
Brick Muenster
Cheddar Parmesan
Colby (&lt; 40% Pasteurized
moisture) process
Edam Provolone
Feta Reggiano
Gorgonzola Romano
Gouda Sapsago
Gruyere Swiss/Emmentaler
In 2001, FDA/USDA (77) conducted
a risk analysis of foodborne outbreaks of
L. monocytogenes from ready-to-eat foods
(Table 1).
The evaluation revealed that there
was a very low risk for listeriosis by Feta
cheese, heat-treated natural and process
cheeses, and aged cheeses (77).
Obtaining more information from
research, industry, and regulatory experience, FDA/USDA (78) updated their
L. monocytogenes risk analysis in 2003
with the following results (Table 2).
 Utilizing a cluster analysis of predicted risk that takes into account the relative risk of listeriosis for the total population on a per serving and per annum basis, the following risk categories were developed for cheese:
• High risk – soft unripened
cheeses (cottage, cream)
• Moderate risk – fresh soft cheeses
(Queso Fresco) soft ripened
cheeses (Brie, Camembert, Feta,
Mozzarella)semi-soft cheese
(Blue, Brick, Monterey Jack)
• Very low risk – hard cheeses
(Cheddar, Swiss, Parmesan)
• Process cheeses
FDA/USDA actually decreased the
predicted risk of soft ripened and certain
semi-soft cheeses to “Moderate” due to
increased use of pasteurized or otherwise
heat-treated milk, and effective food safety
control programs.
The very low risk cheeses have similar characteristics of being subjected to
bactericidal treatment, having very low
contamination rates, and possessing an
inherent characteristic (or two) that either
inactivates L. monocytogenes (hard
cheese) or prevents its growth (process
cheese). As can be noted from this review, many more cheeses fit this category
than recognized by USDA. The relative
risk indices used may not give a clear picture of the range of risk potential that
exists. The differential between per-serving risks associated with deli meats (relative risk rank of 1) and hard cheeses (relative risk rank of 23) is almost 10,000,000-
fold (78).
CONCLUSIONS
Science-based data presented herein
adequately illustrate the fact that most
cheeses containing &lt; 50% moisture (or
more, in the case of Feta) and active lactic acid starter cultures, along with traditional levels of salt, pH, fat, etc., do not
allow the growth of pathogens at temperatures between 4 and 30°C. In fact, in
the vast majority of the cheeses, a higher
temperature during ripening/aging and
storage leads to significant bactericidal
activity. A summary of the reviewed science and data is available in Table 3.
Mathematical models were generated
using the USDA Pathogen Modeling Program, but given that this system is in nutrient broth, not in a limited moisture solid
food (cheese), growth/death curves generated were meaningless. No other models reviewed were found to be appropriate.
RECOMMENDATIONS
For cheeses manufactured in the
United States with pasteurized or heattreated (&gt; 63°C for &gt; 16 s) milk, under
hygienic conditions outlined in Good
Hygienic Practices, Good Manufacturing
Practices, and HACCP systems, using active lactic acid cultures, and according to
CFR specifications, the following cheese
should be considered by regulatory agencies (FDA, USDA, state, local, etc.) exempt from any and all refrigeration requirements for aging, storage, shipping,
and retail display, with a maximum temperature of 30°C:
Asiago (medium and old)
Cheddar
Colby
Feta
Monterey Jack
Muenster
Parmesan
Pasteurized process cheese
Provolone
Romano
Swiss / Emmentaler
If this exemption would apply only
to pre-packaged cheeses, Parmesan and
Romano, and possibly medium and old
Asiago — because of their inherent characteristics — would not have to be prepackaged for this refrigeration exemption.
Soft/fresh Asiago, Blue, Brick, cream and
Mozzarella require further investigation
before a recommendation for exemption
could be made.
There is one common thread among
all the ripened cheeses evaluated (this
would exclude Mozzarella); the curing/
ripening/aging step is detrimental to bacterial pathogens, especially at elevated
temperatures up to 30°C. Therefore, for
safety purposes, refrigerated storage of the
cheeses would appear to be unnecessary
and possibly counterproductive.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are grateful to Dr. Kathy Glass of
the Food Research Institute for providing
valuable input into this paper. We are
grateful to Charlie Guan, Kristen Houck
and Karen Paulus of the Wisconsin Center for Dairy Research for their assistance.
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style="font-size: 18px;"><span style=""><span style="">We have found that many people have questions about the storage of their cheese. As we ship more and more cheese each year these questions have expanded to include the safety of cheese shipped in "warm" temperatures.</span></span></span></span></p><p><span style=""><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 242, 202);"><span style=""><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style="font-size: 18px;"><span style=""><span style=""><span style="">Research by leaders in the dairy industry have concluded, "the inherent characteristics</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p><p><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 242, 202);"><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">of
most cheeses create a hostile environment for bacterial pathogens.</span>"<span style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);">&nbsp; <span style="font-size: 18px;">(If you would like to read</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p><p><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style=""><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 242, 202);"><span style=""><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);"><span style="font-size: 18px;"> the entire research report, it is included below.)</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p><p><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style="font-size: 18px;"><span style=""><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 242, 202);"><span style=""><br></span></span></span></span></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">We cut our cheese by hand just before shipping. We wrap it in plastic to eliminate any air.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">We pack it, without ice to avoid wet cheese, and store it at 40 degrees until it is shipped.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">We have followed these policies since we started in 2008.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;"><br></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">When we ship our cheese, we must rely on shippers. We use USPS because they have proven&nbsp;</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">to be the most reliable shipper. However, we cannot guarantee the performance of a third&nbsp;</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">party. And, like every other shippers of perishables, we cannot accept returns or cancellations</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">when the cheese has already been shipped.&nbsp;</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;"><br></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">We are extremely confident that the cheeses we ship will arrive in good condition. If you have</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 18px;">any questions, please email us and we will be glad to help.</span></p><p style="text-align: center;"><span style=""><span style=""><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style=""><span style=""><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 0);"><span style="font-size: 20px;">Research Report on Cheese Storage Temperatures</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p><p><span style=""><span style=""><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style="font-family: Arial;"><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;"></span></span></span></span></span></span></p><p><strong>Storage Temperatures
Necessary to Maintain
Cheese Safety</strong>
JAY RUSSELL BISHOP and MARIANNE SMUKOWSKI*
Wisconsin Center for Dairy Research, University of Wisconsin
1605 Linden Drive, Madison, WI 53706-1565, USA
SUMMARY
Available information on bacterial pathogen growth, stasis, and
death in cheeses was reviewed and evaluated to determine storage
temperatures necessary to maintain product safety. In view of the
variety and large volume of cheeses consumed throughout the world,
the incidence of foodborne outbreaks associated with cheeses is
extremely low. Research revealed that the inherent characteristics of
most cheeses create a hostile environment for bacterial pathogens,
especially at elevated ripening and storage temperatures. Therefore,
it is recommended that the following cheeses, manufactured in the
United States with pasteurized or heat treated (&gt; 63°C for &gt;16
seconds) milk, should be exempt from refrigeration requirements
during ripening, storage, shipping, and display: Asiago (medium and
old), Cheddar, Colby, Feta, Monterey Jack, Muenster, Parmesan,
Pasteurized process, Provolone, Romano, and Swiss/Emmentaler. It
must be stressed that the manufacture of these cheeses must be
done under the proper conditions of Good Hygiene Practices, Good
Manufacturing Practices, and HACCP principles, and according to CFR
requirements. In addition, the natural cheeses must include active
cultures, and the storage and display temperatures must not exceed
30°C.
INTRODUCTION
Temperature-dependent storage of
most foods has three major roles – to
allow for curing/ripening of foods that
contain added active starter cultures and
enzymes, to prevent quality defects, and
to control pathogen growth. In making
decisions on whether a food requires
time/temperature control for safety, the
properties of the food itself must be considered (3). The role of temperaturedependent aging and storage is similar for
cheese and for other foods, but the targets differ significantly because of unique
inherent characteristics of the finished
food product.
Transformation of chalky, acid-tasting curd into ductile, full-flavored cheese
is accomplished during ripening through
the action of milk enzymes, rennet, and
various organisms in the cheese, including those in the starter culture. The biochemical changes that occur during
cheese ripening are complex and involve
fermentation of the carbohydrate; hydrolysis of fats and proteins with subsequent
decarboxylation, deamination, and/or
hydrogenation; and production of carbonyls, nitrogenous compounds, fatty acids,
and sulfur compounds, all of which contribute to the overall body, texture, and
flavor of the final product (63). These inherent characteristics also create a hostile
environment for pathogens (25). This re-
OCTOBER 2006 | FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS 715
view of scientific information on pathogen death and growth in cheeses at various storage temperatures will determine
parameters necessary to ensure safety of
cheeses in the marketplace. The United
States cheese industry advocates the use
of a science-based approach for assessing the risk posed by ready-to-eat foods
for possible transmission of pathogens in
the food supply (24). Applying HACCP
principles enhances the manufacture of
safe cheese (35).
In view of the variety and large volume of cheese consumed throughout the
world, the incidence of outbreaks of food
poisoning and foodborne disease associated with cheese are extremely low (36).
Epidemiology studies of cheese-related
outbreaks in the United States, Canada,
and Europe have found no outbreaks
linked to hard Italian varieties, e.g.,
Parmesan, Romano, and Provolone. Varieties such as Cheddar and Swiss were
infrequently involved (38). In general,
very few documented illness outbreaks
have been linked to consumption of properly ripened hard cheese. Therefore, time/
temperature control of hard cheese is primarily needed not for safety reasons, but
to maintain the organoleptic quality of
cheese (3).
INHERENT CHARACTERISTICS OF SAFE DAIRY
FOODS
Numerous researchers have reported
bactericidal and/or bacteriostatic effects
on pathogenic bacteria in foods because
of reduced moisture, low water activity,
low pH as the result of organic acid production, salt, heat treatment, competing
flora, biochemical metabolites, bacteriocins, and ripening, either singly or as part
of hurdle technology (1, 3, 5, 6, 10, 11,
13, 15, 17, 22, 25, 26, 29, 34, 36, 37, 38,
39, 40, 43, 45, 48, 49, 51, 58, 59, 64, 65,
66, 68, 69, 70, 76). Refrigeration cannot
be depended upon to reduce the number of pathogens, as it has been proven
that Listeria monocytogenes (L. monocytogenes) and other psychrotrophic
pathogens are capable of growth at these
temperatures. Therefore, other factors,
such as diligence with regard to good
hygiene practices by the food industry,
must be responsible for the lack of pathogen growth in fermented dairy foods.
Results also confirm the low frequency
of contamination by L. monocytogenes of
pasteurized fluid milk products sold in the
United States (24).
INHERENT CHARACTERISTICS OF CHEESE
Cheeses are one of the oldest types
of prepared foods. Cheesemaking provided human kind with a means of concentrating and preserving milk at a time
when refrigeration was unknown and
principles of food preservation were
vague empirical concepts at best (52).
The vast majority of cheese manufactured in the United States is made from
pasteurized or heat-treated milk, which
renders the product free of most pathogens (38, 39, 40). The inherent characteristics of cheeses made with starter culture addition provide multiple hurdles that
inhibit pathogen growth (3, 47). A multiplicity of practices other than pasteurization or heat-treatment also contribute significantly to the microbiological safety of
cheese (10, 11, 38). Some practices, such
as milk quality management, lactic culture protocols, pH control, salt addition,
and controlled curing conditions, are established technologies (38). Other factors
may include natural inhibitory substances
(e.g., lysozyme), starter metabolites and
fermentation by-products (e.g., nisin), including organic acids (e.g., lactic, acetic,
propionic, and formic). Water activity/
moisture content imposes additional detrimental effects on foodborne pathogens
during the manufacturing and ripening of
cheese (10, 11, 38, 66).
During the manufacture of semi-soft,
hard, and very hard cheeses, the cheese
is subjected to relatively long exposure
to ideal incubation temperatures for bacteria. For example, Cheddar and related
varieties are maintained at 31–39°C during manufacture and are formed or
hooped at temperatures in the 32–37°C
range. Many Cheddar-type cheeses are
cured or aged at temperatures up to
15.6°C. Swiss cheese is held for a period
of 4–8 weeks at a temperature of 22.2–
23.3°C to develop the characteristic eyes
and flavor. If storage of Cheddar and Swiss
cheese at room temperature had any inherent detrimental effect on safety of
these cheeses, then neither would be safe
to consume (51).
Specifically for L. monocytogenes,
numerous studies suggest that the composition of cheese, ripening and storage
conditions, lactic acid cultures, pH, salt,
and moisture concentration influence its
survival and growth (15, 29, 39, 40, 43).
The fate of L. monocytogenes and other
foodborne pathogens during cheese ripening is determined by the microbiological, biochemical, and physical properties
of the particular cheese (43, 64). Thus,
cheese is a very complex system, with
the following factors acting simultaneously
to determine the behavior of L. monocytogenes during ripening: (a) type,
amount, and activity of starter culture; (b)
pH as determined by concentrations of
lactic, acetic, formic, and other acids; (c)
presence of hydrogen peroxide, diacetyl,
and various antimicrobial agents (Nisin,
diplococcin, and other bacteriocins); (d)
levels of nutrients, salt, moisture, and
oxygen; and (e) the cheese ripening temperature (64).
Fermentation is an age-old food preservation method used to inhibit the growth
and survival of pathogenic bacteria (48).
Lactic acid bacteria commonly used to
produce fermented dairy products are
antagonistic to foodborne pathogens and
will either inhibit their growth or inactivate them (5, 13, 36, 59, 66, 70). In addition, research has shown that some starter
cultures are detrimental to food spoilage
organisms as well as various pathogens
in these products (1, 17, 22, 51, 58, 69,
76). Responsible for this action are metabolites such as lactic and other acids,
diacetyl, hydrogen peroxide, and various
antibiotic-like substances produced by
lactic acid bacteria, which are probably
synergistic (34, 36, 37, 45, 49, 66).
Examples of pathogens that are susceptible to inactivation or growth inhibition by metabolites of lactic acid bacteria
include Salmonella Typhimurium, enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, and L. monocytogenes (66).
Growth of L. monocytogenes is always
inhibited appreciably in lactic acid cultured product when compared to that of
the control, no matter how high the final
pH of the fermented milk. Even when
the final pH dropped only to 5.99, growth
of the pathogen was inhibited by 84%
relative to the control (65). This suggests
that factors other than the hydrogen
ion concentration are involved in the
inhibition of L. monocytogenes by lactic
acid bacteria (65). These observations
have been documented by other researchers, who noted that lactic cultures inhibited pathogens such as salmonellae and
staphylococci, even when pH was controlled at 6.6 (26). Modern lactic culture
technology for cheese manufacturers
has virtually eliminated Staphylococcuscaused outbreaks involving cheese (40).
Vigorous starter growth should protect fermented milk products against the growth
of pathogens and the formation of staphylococcal enterotoxin (36). Mathew
and Ryser (48) reported increased injury
of healthy L. monocytogenes cells during
716 FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS | OCTOBER 2006
fermentation; at the end of the
24-h fermentation period, &gt; 90% of the
healthy L. monocytogenes cells were injured. Additionally, at the end of the
product’s shelf life, &gt; 99% of the initial
population was injured, and no significant decrease in the percentage of injury
was observed. It was also discovered that
the presence of L. monocytogenes did not
adversely affect the growth of the starter
culture at any inoculation level (48).
Gengeorgis et al. (25) demonstrated that
non-soft cheeses made with the use of
starter cultures and pH values of &lt; 5.5, as
well as processed cheeses, will not support growth of L. monocytogenes at 4 to
30°C if the cheeses are contaminated from
raw foods after the consumers open packages. Rapid acid production is the principal factor responsible for the elimination
of pathogens from semi-hard cheese. The
use of an effective starter culture is not
only critical for preventing growth of
pathogens, but also essential for the production of good quality cheese (6). The
preservative effect of lactic acid bacteria
can be attributed partly to the activation
of the lactoperoxidase system and partly
to bacteriocins (4).
Temperatures of curd cooking and
aging/curing/ripening/storage have an
impact on pathogen growth and survival
in cheese. In hard cheese types with
higher curd cooking temperatures, growth
is slight (68). There is considerable evidence showing that certain cheeses do
not support growth of pathogens during
the aging process and subsequent storage (11). A review of the literature related to the potential for growth of pathogens in hard cheeses that are aged for at
least 60 days shows that such growth is
not likely to occur because of factors inherent to these cheeses (31). Pathogens
that survive the manufacturing process decrease faster at higher storage temperatures (14). The death rate of Salmonella
in Samsoe cheese was slower at 10–12°C
than at 16–20°C (36). It has been concluded that, for traditionally made hard
cheeses, time/temperature control for
safety is not required (3).
In most cheese varieties, salt concentrations attain levels of 1.6–3.0% of the
total weight of the cheese, which would
not affect most of the pathogenic bacteria in cheese. But it must be realized that
salt is dissolved in the aqueous phase of
the cheese only, the actual site of bacterial growth. Given the respective calculated values, salt concentrations in the
aqueous phase reach levels of 2.2–6.5%
or higher and will, in fact, at least slow
down the growth rate of most bacteria
and even have a detrimental effect on the
more sensitive ones (68).
Where scientific data do not exist,
all the inherent characteristics of cheese
can serve as criteria in determining potential growth of pathogens by the use of
mathematical modeling (16, 72, 79, 83).
When two or more of these criteria are
combined, the resultant effect is an additional hurdle to the outgrowth of pathogens of concern. It is this effect that makes
it possible to store certain cheeses safely
beyond either one of the two Food Code
criteria for date marking and refrigeration
(i.e., 7 days at 5°C or 4 days at 7.2°C).
This led the US Food and Drug Administration to issue, on December 15, 1999
(11), a letter suggesting that regulatory
agencies use their discretionary
authority and defer enforcement action
regarding date marking aged hard
cheeses. In that letter, FDA granted a formal interpretation to the Food Code that
hard and semisoft aged cheeses and pasteurized process cheese, each manufactured according to 21 CFR 133 as specifically cited above and maintained under
refrigeration, are exempt from the Food
Code’s date marking provision related to
refrigerated, ready-to-eat, potentially hazardous food. This interpretation has subsequently been incorporated into state
statutes, such as Wisconsin’s (2). Feta
cheese was later added to this exemption
list by FDA (in the case of Iowa Dept.
Health vs. Shullsburg Creamery).
TABLE 1. Model L. monocytogenes exposure of cheese (2001)
 Home
 Contamination Retail Home storage storage
Cheese Frequency Contamination Growth rate Time
Cheddar Low Low Low Long
Colby Low Low Low Long
Feta Moderate Moderate Low Long
Monterey Jack Low Low Low Long
Mozzarella Low Low Moderate Long
Parmesan Low Low Low Long
Processed Low Low Moderate Long
Provolone Low Low Low Long
Swiss Low Low Low Long
The evaluation revealed that there was a very low risk for listeriosis by Feta cheese, heat-treated natural
and process cheeses, and aged cheeses (77).
Obtaining more information from research, industry, and regulatory experience, FDA/USDA (78) updated their
L. monocytogenes risk analysis in 2003 with the following results (Table 2).
OCTOBER 2006 | FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS 717
SPECIFIC CHEESES
AND THEIR INHERENT
CHACTERISTICS
Cheeses are typically categorized
according to their moisture content:
Soft &gt; 50%
Semi-soft &gt; 39 – &lt; 50%
Hard &lt; 39% (4, 22)
Hard and semi-soft cheeses are the
focus of this research review.
Research by Gengeorgis and colleagues (25) has yielded results indicative of those obtained by other researchers, which prove death of pathogens in
nonsoft cheeses stored at various temperatures. In this study, 49 market cheeses representing 24 varieties were purchased
commercially. Cheeses were inoculated
with 104
 cells of L. monocytogenes per
square cm. The inoculum was a cocktail
of 5 strains — Scott A, V7, RM-1, VPH1,
VPH2. Inoculated cheeses were stored at
4, 8 and 30°C for up to 36 hours. Certain
cheeses (Queso Fresco, Panela Ranchero,
Ricotta, Teleme, Brie, Camembert, and
Cottage) supported Listeria growth in
cheese at one of the storage temperatures.
Cheeses not supporting growth but causing gradual death at all temperatures included Cotija, cream, blue, Cheddar,
Monterey Jack, Swiss, Colby, string, Provolone, Muenster, Feta, and Kasseri with
pH values of 4.3–5.6; process cheese (pH
5.7–6.4); and Limburger cheese (pH 7.2).
Overall, this study demonstrated that
nonsoft cheeses made with the use of
starter cultures and at pH values of
&lt; 5.6, as well as processed cheeses, will
not support growth of L. monocytogenes
at 4–30°C if contaminated from raw foods
(meat, poultry, fish, vegetables) after the
opening of the packages by consumers.
In all cheeses that caused gradual death
(Cotija, cream, Blue, Cheddar, Monterey
Jack, Swiss, Colby, Provolone, Muenster,
Feta, Kasseri, Process, Limburger), death
at 30°C was greater than or equal to death
at 4°C.
Asiago (medium and old)
Medium and old Asiago (aged at least
6 months and 12 months, respectively)
are hard cheeses with characteristics very
similar to those of Parmesan. FDA has previously exempted these cheeses from
date-marking (11) and stated that hard
cheeses aged at least 60 days are not likely
to support pathogen growth (31).
Bachman and Spahr (6) found that Swisstype hard cheeses are hygienically safe
and that the technology used in manufacturing these cheeses does not support
growth of pathogens and leads to a more
rapid rate of death.
Cheddar
Cheddar is a hard cheese that does
not support L. monocytogenes growth and
that causes gradual death at all temperatures (25). This finding is confirmed by
an FDA correspondence (11) and also
agrees with work by Ryser and Marth (61),
who reported that growth of L. monocytogenes during Cheddar cheese manufacture appeared to be inhibited by proper
acid development resulting from an active starter culture. Behavior of other
pathogens during Cheddar manufacture
and ripening show similar results. With
normal starter activity, inoculated Staphylococcus aureus died rapidly (60), as did
Yersinia enterocolitica (67). Norholt (54)
illustrated die-off of Salmonella spp. after
2 weeks. Wood et al. (84) found that, of
11 vats of Salmonella-contaminated Cheddar cheese curd, only 2 remained positive in the finished cheese immediately
after manufacture. In 1 and 4 months,
TABLE 2. Model L. monocytogenes exposure of cheese (2003)
 Home
 Contamination Retail Home storage storage
Cheese Frequency Contamination Growth rate Time
Cheddar Low Low Low Long
Colby Low Low Low Long
Feta Moderate Moderate Low Long
Monterey Jack Low Low Low Long
Mozzarella Low Low Moderate Long
Muenster Moderate Low Low Long
Parmesan Low Low Low Long
The FDA/USDA evaluation classified cheeses as follows:
Fresh soft – Queso fresco, Queso de Crema, Queso de Puna
Soft unripened (&gt; 50% moisture) – Cottage, cream, Ricotta
Soft ripened (&gt; 50% moisture) – Brie, Camembert, Feta, Mozzarella
Semi-soft (&gt;39–50% moisture) – Blue, Brick, Monterey Jack, Muenster, Provolone
Hard (&lt; 39% moisture) – Cheddar, Colby, Parmesan, Processed
718 FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS | OCTOBER 2006
these 2 vats were clear of the inoculated
Salmonella. This result is supported by
studies of Goepfert et al. (28) and
Hargrove et al. (32) in artificially inoculated Cheddar. Both groups found a 75–
80% reduction in Salmonella after hooping and pressing during manufacture.
Numerous researchers have reported
kill of pathogens at higher ripening and
storage temperatures. Salmonella spp.
survived longer when Cheddar cheese
was stored at 4.5°C rather than 10°C (82).
In general, a low pH and a high ripening
temperature result in a higher inactivation rate for pathogenic organisms (61).
Using stirred-curd Cheddar cheese,
Goepfert et al. (28) showed that the number of S. Typhimurium decreased by a factor of 10,000 during 10–12 weeks of ripening at 13°C, whereas a similar decrease
required 14–16 weeks at 7.5°C. Park et
al. (58) reported that salmonellae survived
during ripening of Cheddar cheese for up
to 7 months at 13°C and 10 months at
7°C. Ryser and Marth (61) reported an
inactivation rate of L. monocytogenes 0.9
logs less at 6°C than at 13°C. International
Dairy Federation researchers demonstrated that the decrease in numbers of
staphylococci in Cheddar was greater at
higher temperatures (10°C and 13°C) than
at 7°C (36).
Colby
Colby is a hard to semi-soft cheese
that does not support L. monocytogenes
growth and causes gradual death at all
temperatures (25), a finding confirmed by
an FDA correspondence (11). Various
researchers studying the behavior of inoculated pathogens during Colby cheese
manufacture and ripening determined that
E. coli generally decreased over a period
of weeks and was not detected after 4–6
weeks (41) and that numbers of Y. enterocolitica generally decreased over a period of weeks at 3°C (51). Yousef and
Marth (85) found that, early in storage of
Colby cheese, numbers of Listeria in the
cheese remained relatively constant for a
time that depended on the strain used.
Numbers of Listeria in cheese decreased
steadily thereafter at a rate that depended
mainly on composition of the cheese. It
should be noted that 2 of the 6 lots of
cheese manufactured in this study had
moisture levels higher than CFR specifications. IDF researchers demonstrated that
the decrease in numbers of staphylococci
in Colby was greater at the higher temperatures (10°C and 13°C) than at 7°C
(36).
Feta
The Greek regulatory standard for
Feta cheese stipulates that it cannot contain more than 56% moisture and less than
43% FDM. No standard exists for the
amount of salt, but the salting procedure
is described in this regulation. Commercial Feta produced in Greece normally
contains about 2.5% salt (75). Currently,
there is no US standard of identity for Feta,
a soft ripened cheese that does not support L. monocytogenes growth and that
causes gradual death at all temperatures
(25, 55). Other experiments have shown
that Listeria not only failed to grow in Feta
but was gradually inactivated in whey and
skim milk brine containing 12% salt (NaCl)
(57). Papageorgiou and Marth (55) observed that the pH value of 2-day old Feta
cheese decreased to 4.6, after which the
growth of L. monocytogenes ceased.
Monterey Jack
Monterey Jack is a hard to semi-soft
cheese which does not support L. monocytogenes growth and causes gradual
death at all temperatures (25). Other than
this referenced study, there exists little
published research with this cheese. However, it is very similar, with regard to pH,
aqueous NaCl, and moisture, to other
cheeses that have been heavily studied
and proven not to support pathogen
growth.
Mozzarella
Mozzarella is a soft to semi-soft
cheese that has a manufacturing protocol
detrimental to bacteria. Buazzi et al. (9)
found that the typical cooking of Mozzarella curd at 40°C for 30 min caused a
38% decrease of L. monocytogenes, compared to numbers of the pathogen in curd
after cutting. Placing of curd in hot water
(77°C) and stretching for 3–4 min caused
complete demise of the pathogen. The
curd temperature during stretching was
58–65°C. In conclusion, no L. monocytogenes was found in the cheese at the
end of stretching, start of brining, and end
of storage. The heat treatment given to
the curd freed the product of L. monocytogenes, even though the curd initially
contained approximately 6.2 × 104 cells
of the pathogen per g. Ryser and Marth
(64) reported that the heat treatment given
to Mozzarella cheese curd is clearly sufficient to inactivate small numbers of
L. monocytogenes that might be present.
Villani et al. (81) found similar results
during manufacture of traditional Mozzarella cheese from buffalo milk.
Stecchini et al. (71) addressed the
issue of post-process contamination by
inoculating the surface and packaging fluid of Mozzarella cheese with
L. monocytogenes and then storing the
product at 5°C for 21 days. Under these
conditions, numbers of L. monocytogenes
increased about 10,000-fold. Mozzarella
was implicated in an outbreak of salmonellosis in 1984. Post-processing contamination was thought to have caused the
outbreak (19).
Muenster
Muenster is a semi-soft cheese that
does not support L. monocytogenes
growth and causes a gradual death at all
temperatures (25). Other than this referenced study, there exists little published
research with this cheese. However, it is
very similar in pH, aqueous NaCl, and
moisture, to other cheeses that have been
heavily studied and proven not to support pathogen growth.
Parmesan
Parmesan is a hard cheese ripened
at 12.8°C for 10 months, which does not
support L. monocytogenes growth and
which causes gradual death at all temperatures. No outbreaks in the United
States have implicated any Italian-type
hard cheeses, including Parmesan. This
unblemished safety record may reflect
conditions during manufacture and curing that inhibit or destroy pathogens (40).
Yousef and Marth (86) observed that,
during Parmesan cheese ripening, numbers of L. monocytogenes decreased almost linearly and faster than reported for
other hard cheeses. L. monocytogenes
was not detected in cheese after 2–16
weeks of ripening, depending on the
strain of the pathogen and the lot of
cheese. Parmesan made in this study was
not a favorable medium for survival of
L. monocytogenes. Decreased viability of
the pathogen in Parmesan is probably
related to a combination of factors, including (a) action of lipase added to the milk;
(b) heat treatment that the curd receives
during cheesemaking; and (c) lower moisture content and water activity of the fully
ripened cheese.
Parmesan is more acidic than other
cheeses, with a much lower water activity that inhibits microbial growth (35, 44).
Pathogenic bacteria vary just as widely as
the cheeses they contaminate, and their
survival characteristics are equally varied.
For example, Brie stored under refrigeration will support the growth of L. monocytogenes, while Parmesan stored at nearambient temperature will not (35).
OCTOBER 2006 | FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS 719
Pasteurized Process
(21CFR133.169)
Pasteurized process cheese is a soft
to semi-soft cheese that does not support
L. monocytogenes growth and that causes
gradual death at all temperatures (25, 27).
Pasteurized processed cheese and related
products have an excellent safety record
in the United States (39). During the past
50 years, very few disease outbreaks have
been attributed to contaminated pasteurized process cheese products (27). The
combined effects of pH, moisture, and salt
in standardized process cheese may inhibit vegetative pathogen growth in a way
similar to the mechanism of inhibition for
Clostridium botulinum (73, 74). If a pasteurized processed cheese is intended for
use at ambient temperature, pH, water
activity (aW), moisture content, and antimicrobials should be appropriately adjusted to inhibit botulinal toxin formation
(3). During manufacture, the product is
heated for &gt; 30 s at a temperature of
&gt; 65.6°C; this is sufficient to eliminate vegetative organisms but not the spores of
Clostridium botulinum. As a formulated
safe product with regard to C. botulinum,
the combinations of moisture, salt, and
pH act as multiple hurdles to inhibit botulinal growth and toxin production (42, 73).
While studying pathogen survival in
pasteurized process cheese slices, Glass
et al. (27) reported that populations of
Salmonella serotypes and E. coli O157:H7
decreased by an average of 1.3 and 2.1
log CFU/g, respectively, by 36 h. Salmonella serotypes decreased an additional
0.6 log CFU/g during the remaining 60 h.
Populations of L. monocytogenes also decreased, although to a lesser extent, exhibiting approximately 0.6 log CFU/g reduction in 96 h. S. aureus levels remained
relatively constant during the testing period and were below levels that support
detectable enterotoxin production. At
30°C, the pasteurized process cheese slices
TABLE 3. Summary of data on cheeses reviewed, and compositional calculations (21, 68, 75)
 * A/S Temp =&gt; Increased pathogen kill at elevated aging/storage temperatures.
 ** %FDM=&gt; Percent fat in dry matter.
+ Ah – Aeromonas hydrophils, Cj – Campylobacter jejuni, Clb – Clostridium botulinum, Ec – Escherichia coli O157:H7,
Lm – L. monocytogenes,
 P – Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Sa – Salmonella sp., Sta – Staphylococcus aureus, Ye – Yersinia enterocolitica.
720 FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS | OCTOBER 2006
allowed survival but did not support
growth of S. aureus, whereas populations
of L. monocytogenes, E. coli O157:H7, and
Salmonella serotypes decreased during
the 96 h storage. Water activity appears
to contribute significantly to the inhibition of pathogen growth in these cheese
slices. The aW of the tested formulations
(0.92–0.93) was at or below the minimum
required for growth of most foodborne
pathogens. Although low aW may inhibit
pathogen growth in these formulations,
the synergistic effect of moisture, salts, and
pH, or another factor such as sorbate, may
also contribute to the safety of the product. The results suggest that properly formulated pasteurized process cheese could
be exempt from the potentially hazardous food category because it does not support the rapid and progressive growth of
pathogens tested. The results of the study
suggested that unopened packages of
properly formulated pasteurized process
cheese can be safely stored unrefrigerated
for certain time periods (53). In fact, reducing storage temperatures has been
reported to actually enhance survival of
E. coli O157:H7 in acidified media, apple
cider, and mayonnaise (33, 50, 87).
Provolone
Provolone is a semi-soft cheese that
does not support L. monocytogenes
growth and that causes gradual death at
all temperatures (25). No outbreaks that
implicated any Italian-type cheese, including Provolone (40), have been found in
the United States. Other than this referenced study, little published research with
this cheese exists. However, with regard
to pH, aqueous NaCl, and moisture, it is
very similar to other cheeses that have
been heavily studied and proven not to
support pathogen growth.
Romano
Romano is a hard cheese that does
not appear to support L. monocytogenes
growth. In the United States, no outbreaks
have been found that implicated any Italian-type cheeses, including Romano (40).
Other than this referenced study, there
exists little published research with this
cheese. However, it is very similar to other
cheeses with regard to pH, aqueous NaCl,
and moisture, which have been heavily
studied and proven not to support pathogen growth.
Swiss / Emmentaler
Swiss/Emmentaler is a hard to
semi-soft cheese that does not support
L. monocytogenes growth and that causes
gradual death at all temperatures (25).
This finding is confirmed by an FDA correspondence (11). The ripening temperature of Swiss cheese is comparatively high
(22°C). Buazzi et al. (10) reported a sharp
decrease in numbers of L. monocytogenes
during brining of Swiss blocks (7°C for
30 h). The population of L. monocytogenes
continues to decrease during cheese ripening. Listeria was not detected after 80,
77, and 66 days of ripening of Swiss
cheese made from inoculated milk.
Bachmann and Spahr (6) discovered none
of the inoculated potentially pathogenic
bacteria, except for low numbers of
S. aureus, could be found in the experimental Swiss cheese 1 day after manufacturing. All subsequent determinations
showed that the cheese was free from
potentially pathogenic bacteria and
toxins. Baumgartner et al. (8) previously
reported the same behavior of S. aureus
in Emmentaler cheese. Bachmann and
Spahr (6) also found that even in poor
quality cheese that had been inoculated
with E. coli and was exhibiting early blowing, no E. coli could be detected at the
end of ripening. Additionally, results
showed that 1 week after manufacturing,
the inoculated pathogens (Aeromonas
hydrophils, Campylobacter jejuni, E. coli,
L. monocytogenes, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella spp., S. aureus, and
Y. enterocolitica) could no longer be
detected.
El-Shenawy and Marth (18) suggested that production of propionate by
eye-forming bacteria may have contributed to the demise of L. monocytogenes
in Swiss cheese. In other work, &lt; 2,000
ppm of sodium propionate inhibited
growth of L. monocytogenes at pH 5.0
(10). At pH 5.0 and 3,000 ppm sodium
propionate, the Listeria population decreased 1,000-fold during 67 days of incubation at 35°C and disappeared after
78 days. A 60-day-old Swiss cheese typically contains 3,750 ppm propionic acid
(46). Acetate may also play a major role
in inactivating L. monocytogenes in Swiss
cheese (10); more lactate is fermented to
acetate and CO2 than to propionate (12).
The rapid decrease of the redox potential
of Swiss cheese probably supports the inhibitory effect on pathogenic bacteria
(54).
Generally, manufacturing technology
of Swiss cheese does not support the
growth of pathogenic bacteria (6, 10).
Because of the synergistic effect of active
antimicrobial enzyme systems in fresh raw
milk, antagonistic starter culture flora, fast
acidification, antimicrobial effect of lactic
acid, and high curd cooking temperatures,
potentially pathogenic bacteria do not
survive the manufacturing of Swiss cheese
produced under good manufacturing
practices. In addition, intense brining and
ripening at elevated temperatures for at
least 2 months eliminate the occurrence
of the tested strains. Pathogens that may
survive the manufacturing process decrease faster at higher storage temperatures (14). Swiss cheese appears to pose
a very low risk for transmission of
foodborne diseases (40).
Brick
Brick is a semi-soft cheese. In studies of the behavior of pathogens during
Brick cheese manufacture and ripening,
L. monocytogenes numbers decreased during 20–22 weeks of curing at 10°C (67),
and E. coli grew during manufacture and
then died off during curing (23).
Blue
Blue is considered a semi-soft cheese
that has been proven to not support
L. monocytogenes growth and that causes
gradual death at all temperatures (25).
Papageorgiou and Marth (59) reported
that growth of L. monocytogenes ceased
when the pH of blue cheese dropped below 5.0. Populations of L. monocytogenes
decreased significantly (P &lt; 0.005) during the first 50 days of ripening, by an
average of 2.6 logs CFU/g compared to
populations of 1-day old cheese. The high
salt content in blue cheese is likely the
main reason for the lack of growth of Listeria. Productions of fatty acids and methyl ketones derived from fatty acids via
the beta-oxidation pathway, and their corresponding secondary alcohols, may contribute to the unfavorable environment for
L. monocytogenes (32). Blue cheese on
the market has a pH &gt;5.0; therefore, conclusive pathogen death is not verified.
Soft / Hispanic
This category includes Queso
Blanco, Queso Fresco, Ricotta, Teleme,
Brie, Camembert, Panela, Ranchero,
cream, and cottage. Gengeorgis et al. (25)
evaluated the fate of Listeria as a postprocessing contaminant and found that
Listeria growth was primarily confined to
high-moisture varieties, including Brie,
Camembert, Ricotta, and the soft Hispanic
cheeses, all of which had a pH &gt; 6.0 and
low to moderate levels of salt in the
moisture phase. Back et al. (7) noted that
L. monocytogenes survived, and under
most conditions multiplied, when inoculated directly into the cheese milk of laboratory-made Camembert cheese.
OCTOBER 2006 | FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS 721
REGULATORY EVALUATION
In a series of correspondences, in a
letter form as an inclusion to the US FDA
Program Information Manual on retail
Food Safety and in a subsequent correspondence (11, 31), FDA exempted the
following cheeses from the date marking
mandate within the US Food Code:
Asiago Limburger
Blue Monterey Jack
Brick Muenster
Cheddar Parmesan
Colby (&lt; 40% Pasteurized
moisture) process
Edam Provolone
Feta Reggiano
Gorgonzola Romano
Gouda Sapsago
Gruyere Swiss/Emmentaler
In 2001, FDA/USDA (77) conducted
a risk analysis of foodborne outbreaks of
L. monocytogenes from ready-to-eat foods
(Table 1).
The evaluation revealed that there
was a very low risk for listeriosis by Feta
cheese, heat-treated natural and process
cheeses, and aged cheeses (77).
Obtaining more information from
research, industry, and regulatory experience, FDA/USDA (78) updated their
L. monocytogenes risk analysis in 2003
with the following results (Table 2).
 Utilizing a cluster analysis of predicted risk that takes into account the relative risk of listeriosis for the total population on a per serving and per annum basis, the following risk categories were developed for cheese:
• High risk – soft unripened
cheeses (cottage, cream)
• Moderate risk – fresh soft cheeses
(Queso Fresco) soft ripened
cheeses (Brie, Camembert, Feta,
Mozzarella)semi-soft cheese
(Blue, Brick, Monterey Jack)
• Very low risk – hard cheeses
(Cheddar, Swiss, Parmesan)
• Process cheeses
FDA/USDA actually decreased the
predicted risk of soft ripened and certain
semi-soft cheeses to “Moderate” due to
increased use of pasteurized or otherwise
heat-treated milk, and effective food safety
control programs.
The very low risk cheeses have similar characteristics of being subjected to
bactericidal treatment, having very low
contamination rates, and possessing an
inherent characteristic (or two) that either
inactivates L. monocytogenes (hard
cheese) or prevents its growth (process
cheese). As can be noted from this review, many more cheeses fit this category
than recognized by USDA. The relative
risk indices used may not give a clear picture of the range of risk potential that
exists. The differential between per-serving risks associated with deli meats (relative risk rank of 1) and hard cheeses (relative risk rank of 23) is almost 10,000,000-
fold (78).
CONCLUSIONS
Science-based data presented herein
adequately illustrate the fact that most
cheeses containing &lt; 50% moisture (or
more, in the case of Feta) and active lactic acid starter cultures, along with traditional levels of salt, pH, fat, etc., do not
allow the growth of pathogens at temperatures between 4 and 30°C. In fact, in
the vast majority of the cheeses, a higher
temperature during ripening/aging and
storage leads to significant bactericidal
activity. A summary of the reviewed science and data is available in Table 3.
Mathematical models were generated
using the USDA Pathogen Modeling Program, but given that this system is in nutrient broth, not in a limited moisture solid
food (cheese), growth/death curves generated were meaningless. No other models reviewed were found to be appropriate.
RECOMMENDATIONS
For cheeses manufactured in the
United States with pasteurized or heattreated (&gt; 63°C for &gt; 16 s) milk, under
hygienic conditions outlined in Good
Hygienic Practices, Good Manufacturing
Practices, and HACCP systems, using active lactic acid cultures, and according to
CFR specifications, the following cheese
should be considered by regulatory agencies (FDA, USDA, state, local, etc.) exempt from any and all refrigeration requirements for aging, storage, shipping,
and retail display, with a maximum temperature of 30°C:
Asiago (medium and old)
Cheddar
Colby
Feta
Monterey Jack
Muenster
Parmesan
Pasteurized process cheese
Provolone
Romano
Swiss / Emmentaler
If this exemption would apply only
to pre-packaged cheeses, Parmesan and
Romano, and possibly medium and old
Asiago — because of their inherent characteristics — would not have to be prepackaged for this refrigeration exemption.
Soft/fresh Asiago, Blue, Brick, cream and
Mozzarella require further investigation
before a recommendation for exemption
could be made.
There is one common thread among
all the ripened cheeses evaluated (this
would exclude Mozzarella); the curing/
ripening/aging step is detrimental to bacterial pathogens, especially at elevated
temperatures up to 30°C. Therefore, for
safety purposes, refrigerated storage of the
cheeses would appear to be unnecessary
and possibly counterproductive.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are grateful to Dr. Kathy Glass of
the Food Research Institute for providing
valuable input into this paper. We are
grateful to Charlie Guan, Kristen Houck
and Karen Paulus of the Wisconsin Center for Dairy Research for their assistance.
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722 FOOD PROTECTION TRENDS | OCTOBER 2006
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59:2526–2530.</p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Apple Smoked Cheddar Hot Browns]]></title>
			<link>https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/apple-smoked-cheddar-hot-browns/</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 18 Nov 2018 10:55:10 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/apple-smoked-cheddar-hot-browns/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p><span style=""><span style="color: rgb(192, 145, 0);"><span style="font-size: 18px;"></span></span></span><strong style="background-color: initial; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, Verdana, Tahoma, sans-serif; color: rgb(52, 49, 63);"><u><span style=""><span style="color: rgb(192, 145, 0);"><span style="font-size: 18px;">Apple Smoked Cheddar Hot
Browns</span></span></span></u></strong></p><ul><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">2 T
butter<br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">4
slices rye bread<br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">1 lb
fresh shaved turkey or ham (or both)<br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">½ lb
grated&nbsp;<a href="http://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/apple-smoked-cheddar/">Apple Smoked Cheddar</a><br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">1 T
grated onion<br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">½ Cup
mayonnaise<br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">Dash
Hot Sauce<br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">Dash
of Worchestershire Sauce</span></span></li></ul><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong>Preparation:</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p>Lightly butter rye bread. Place on cookie sheet or individual
oven-proof serving dishes. Top each slice of bread with ¼ of meat. Mix cheese,
mayo, onion, hot sauce and Worchestershire. Top meat with mixture. Bake at 350
degrees for 15 minutes or until cheese is puffed and lightly browned.</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style=""><span style="color: rgb(192, 145, 0);"><span style="font-size: 18px;"></span></span></span><strong style="background-color: initial; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, Verdana, Tahoma, sans-serif; color: rgb(52, 49, 63);"><u><span style=""><span style="color: rgb(192, 145, 0);"><span style="font-size: 18px;">Apple Smoked Cheddar Hot
Browns</span></span></span></u></strong></p><ul><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">2 T
butter<br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">4
slices rye bread<br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">1 lb
fresh shaved turkey or ham (or both)<br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">½ lb
grated&nbsp;<a href="http://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/apple-smoked-cheddar/">Apple Smoked Cheddar</a><br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">1 T
grated onion<br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">½ Cup
mayonnaise<br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">Dash
Hot Sauce<br></span></span></li><li><span style=""><span style="font-size: 18px;">Dash
of Worchestershire Sauce</span></span></li></ul><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong>Preparation:</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p>Lightly butter rye bread. Place on cookie sheet or individual
oven-proof serving dishes. Top each slice of bread with ¼ of meat. Mix cheese,
mayo, onion, hot sauce and Worchestershire. Top meat with mixture. Bake at 350
degrees for 15 minutes or until cheese is puffed and lightly browned.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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			<title><![CDATA[French Onion Soup Baked Cheese Sandwich]]></title>
			<link>https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/french-onion-soup-baked-cheese-sandwich/</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 18 Nov 2018 09:18:34 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/french-onion-soup-baked-cheese-sandwich/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p><span style="color: rgb(192, 145, 0);"><strong>Why are so many restaurants famous for their French Onion Soup?</strong></span></p><p>Because it's delicious!</p><p>The problem is, it's a pain to make, takes too much time, you need the right bowls...</p><p>Our solution? A Sandwich!</p><p>The key to a great French Onion Soup, and, to our sandwich, is the cheese. We use Grand Cru, a flavor packed Gruyere style from Green County (Wisconsin of course). It has a rich, nutty flavor and a beautiful melt, making it the right cheese for the soup if you decide to make it, or, the sandwich which saves you a bunch of time.</p><p>For added gusto you can take this vegetarian sandwich to the next level by dressing up your left-overs. Try adding this slices of turkey, meatloaf or prime rib.</p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong><u><br></u></strong></p><p><strong><u><span style="color: rgb(192, 145, 0);">French Onion Soup Baked Cheese Sandwich</span></u></strong></p><ul>
 <li>One
     loaf Ciabatta or a softer Italian style loaf</li> <li>2
      large, sweet onions</li> <li>½
     pound&nbsp;<a href="http://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/grand-cru/">Grand Cru</a></li> <li>¼
     cup Au Jus (Johnny’s if you can get it)</li> <li>1
     stick Wisconsin Butter</li></ul><p><u>Preparation:</u></p><ul>
 <li>Slice
     onions very thin</li> <li>Caramelize
     onion in butter for 20 minutes over medium heat</li> <li>Add
     Au Jus to onions, reduce heat and cook for 10 more minutes</li> <li>Slice
     Ciabatta in half,  length wise</li> <li>Coarsely
     grate Grand Cru</li> <li>Spread
     half of the Grand Cru on the bottom half of Ciabatta</li> <li>Spoon
     onion mixture on top of cheese layer</li> <li>Spread
     remainder of Grand Cru on top of cheese/onion layer.</li> <li>Place
     top of Ciabatta on bottom</li> <li>Wrap
     in aluminum foil</li> <li>Bake
     at 350 degrees for 45 minutes</li> <li>Slice
     into 1 “ pieces and serve</li></ul>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="color: rgb(192, 145, 0);"><strong>Why are so many restaurants famous for their French Onion Soup?</strong></span></p><p>Because it's delicious!</p><p>The problem is, it's a pain to make, takes too much time, you need the right bowls...</p><p>Our solution? A Sandwich!</p><p>The key to a great French Onion Soup, and, to our sandwich, is the cheese. We use Grand Cru, a flavor packed Gruyere style from Green County (Wisconsin of course). It has a rich, nutty flavor and a beautiful melt, making it the right cheese for the soup if you decide to make it, or, the sandwich which saves you a bunch of time.</p><p>For added gusto you can take this vegetarian sandwich to the next level by dressing up your left-overs. Try adding this slices of turkey, meatloaf or prime rib.</p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong><u><br></u></strong></p><p><strong><u><span style="color: rgb(192, 145, 0);">French Onion Soup Baked Cheese Sandwich</span></u></strong></p><ul>
 <li>One
     loaf Ciabatta or a softer Italian style loaf</li> <li>2
      large, sweet onions</li> <li>½
     pound&nbsp;<a href="http://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/grand-cru/">Grand Cru</a></li> <li>¼
     cup Au Jus (Johnny’s if you can get it)</li> <li>1
     stick Wisconsin Butter</li></ul><p><u>Preparation:</u></p><ul>
 <li>Slice
     onions very thin</li> <li>Caramelize
     onion in butter for 20 minutes over medium heat</li> <li>Add
     Au Jus to onions, reduce heat and cook for 10 more minutes</li> <li>Slice
     Ciabatta in half,  length wise</li> <li>Coarsely
     grate Grand Cru</li> <li>Spread
     half of the Grand Cru on the bottom half of Ciabatta</li> <li>Spoon
     onion mixture on top of cheese layer</li> <li>Spread
     remainder of Grand Cru on top of cheese/onion layer.</li> <li>Place
     top of Ciabatta on bottom</li> <li>Wrap
     in aluminum foil</li> <li>Bake
     at 350 degrees for 45 minutes</li> <li>Slice
     into 1 “ pieces and serve</li></ul>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
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			<title><![CDATA[Fondue Recipe]]></title>
			<link>https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/fondue-recipe/</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 07 Dec 2017 09:00:15 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/why-wisconsin-cheese/fondue-recipe/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>In
the 70’s everyone had a Fondue pot. Well, they are back. Many cheeses can be
used to create this classic dish that your guests can enjoy all night long. We
don’t think you can beat <strong>Grand Cru</strong>
as the center piece.</p><p><strong style="background-color: initial; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, Verdana, Tahoma, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; color: rgb(52, 49, 63);"><u>Grand Cru Fondue</u></strong></p><p><strong></strong><strong></strong></p><p>1 tablespoon butter</p><p>1 1/4 cups thinly sliced shallots
(about 6 ounces)</p><p>1 teaspoon sugar</p><p>1 1/2 cups (or more) Chardonnay</p><p>14 ounces grated Grand Cru cheese
(about 3 1/2 cups packed)</p><p>2 tablespoons all purpose flour</p><p>Generous pinch of ground nutmeg</p><p><strong></strong><strong></strong></p><p>Melt
butter in heavy medium skillet over medium heat. Add thinly sliced shallots and
sauté 3 minutes. Reduce heat to low; sprinkle shallots with sugar, salt and
pepper. Sauté until shallots are caramelized, about 15 minutes. Transfer
shallots to small bowl. Add 1 1/2 cups wine to skillet; boil 1 minute.  Pour wine into heavy medium saucepan; set over
medium-low heat. Toss cheese with flour in medium bowl to coat. Add half of
caramelized shallots to wine; add cheese mixture by handfuls, stirring until
cheese melts and is smooth before adding more. Thin with more wine if mixture
is too thick. Season with nutmeg, salt and pepper. </p><p>Transfer
cheese mixture to fondue pot. Set pot over candle or canned heat burner. Top
fondue with remaining<strong></strong>caramelized shallots. Serve with bread
cubes.<strong></strong></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In
the 70’s everyone had a Fondue pot. Well, they are back. Many cheeses can be
used to create this classic dish that your guests can enjoy all night long. We
don’t think you can beat <strong>Grand Cru</strong>
as the center piece.</p><p><strong style="background-color: initial; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, Verdana, Tahoma, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; color: rgb(52, 49, 63);"><u>Grand Cru Fondue</u></strong></p><p><strong></strong><strong></strong></p><p>1 tablespoon butter</p><p>1 1/4 cups thinly sliced shallots
(about 6 ounces)</p><p>1 teaspoon sugar</p><p>1 1/2 cups (or more) Chardonnay</p><p>14 ounces grated Grand Cru cheese
(about 3 1/2 cups packed)</p><p>2 tablespoons all purpose flour</p><p>Generous pinch of ground nutmeg</p><p><strong></strong><strong></strong></p><p>Melt
butter in heavy medium skillet over medium heat. Add thinly sliced shallots and
sauté 3 minutes. Reduce heat to low; sprinkle shallots with sugar, salt and
pepper. Sauté until shallots are caramelized, about 15 minutes. Transfer
shallots to small bowl. Add 1 1/2 cups wine to skillet; boil 1 minute.  Pour wine into heavy medium saucepan; set over
medium-low heat. Toss cheese with flour in medium bowl to coat. Add half of
caramelized shallots to wine; add cheese mixture by handfuls, stirring until
cheese melts and is smooth before adding more. Thin with more wine if mixture
is too thick. Season with nutmeg, salt and pepper. </p><p>Transfer
cheese mixture to fondue pot. Set pot over candle or canned heat burner. Top
fondue with remaining<strong></strong>caramelized shallots. Serve with bread
cubes.<strong></strong></p>]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Why Wisconsin Cheese?]]></title>
			<link>https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/blog/why-wisconsin-cheese/</link>
			<pubDate>Wed, 18 Nov 2015 20:49:41 +0000</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.wisconsincheesemasters.com/blog/why-wisconsin-cheese/</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>We are often asked why we started Wisconsin Cheese Masters. It's a relatively simple story.</p><p>After years spent in the marketing field, I wanted to start an on-line business. This was almost 10 years ago, after the initial bubble of on-line retailers had burst. The only issue was I had no idea what I was going to sell.</p><p>We (Katie my wife and our daughter Casey) were on our annual family "drive-around". We visit many parts of this beautiful state and we were in one of our favorites - the "driftless" area. This southwestern part of Wisconsin was untouched by the glaciers of the last ice age leaving steep valleys between the rolling hills. Most of the valleys feature a small spring-fed stream (perfect for trout and thus fly-fishing).</p><p>We had nothing particular to do one morning and headed out toward the Mississippi River. Along the way it became unusually foggy and we slowed down in time to notice a sign that simply said "Cheese Factory", in front of an old farmhouse. Laughing, we decided that it was time for three Wisconsinites to visit our first cheese factory.</p><p>We expected to find curds or cheddar when we went through the door but instead were told that the only cheeses made there were Blue and Gorgonzola. We considered ourselves borderline "foodies" and I remember thinking, "How can we get out of here without trying the cheese?" I was sure it would be nothing like its French or Italian counterparts.</p><p>I was right. Each of their two creations was the best we had ever tried. And we said so. Our host replied, "Well, there <em>are</em>&nbsp;both world champions" and, then apologized, "but we're not Master Cheese Makers".</p><p>This was certainly a flood of new information. There are World Cheese Championships? Wisconsin cheeses have won them? What are Master Cheese Makers?</p><p>Within minutes our eyes had been opened to the world of Wisconsin cheese right under our noses. In fact, Wisconsin perennially wins about a third of the World Championship titles, more of the U.S. titles. And, most compelling for a marketer, there were only 39 Master Cheese Makers in the entire U.S. and every single one was in Wisconsin.</p><p>You would think that the idea of selling on-line and finding a universally recognized product with an unbeatable pedigree would have been enough to make the leap. It took a disappointing trip to the grocery back home in Milwaukee a few weeks later to finally make the connection.</p><p>We were out of Montforte Blue. We looked for it at the fine grocery store in our neighborhood. They didn't have it and had not heard of it. We went to other stores with the same result. "It's a World Champion cheese! It's made 100 miles from here!" Blank stares all around.</p><p>Finally it clicked. If I lived near the Best Cheese in America and can't buy it at the store, how can anyone else? We dedicated our next "drive-around" to finding other Wisconsin Cheeses we have never seen before. And, FINALLY, Wisconsin Cheese Masters was born</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We are often asked why we started Wisconsin Cheese Masters. It's a relatively simple story.</p><p>After years spent in the marketing field, I wanted to start an on-line business. This was almost 10 years ago, after the initial bubble of on-line retailers had burst. The only issue was I had no idea what I was going to sell.</p><p>We (Katie my wife and our daughter Casey) were on our annual family "drive-around". We visit many parts of this beautiful state and we were in one of our favorites - the "driftless" area. This southwestern part of Wisconsin was untouched by the glaciers of the last ice age leaving steep valleys between the rolling hills. Most of the valleys feature a small spring-fed stream (perfect for trout and thus fly-fishing).</p><p>We had nothing particular to do one morning and headed out toward the Mississippi River. Along the way it became unusually foggy and we slowed down in time to notice a sign that simply said "Cheese Factory", in front of an old farmhouse. Laughing, we decided that it was time for three Wisconsinites to visit our first cheese factory.</p><p>We expected to find curds or cheddar when we went through the door but instead were told that the only cheeses made there were Blue and Gorgonzola. We considered ourselves borderline "foodies" and I remember thinking, "How can we get out of here without trying the cheese?" I was sure it would be nothing like its French or Italian counterparts.</p><p>I was right. Each of their two creations was the best we had ever tried. And we said so. Our host replied, "Well, there <em>are</em>&nbsp;both world champions" and, then apologized, "but we're not Master Cheese Makers".</p><p>This was certainly a flood of new information. There are World Cheese Championships? Wisconsin cheeses have won them? What are Master Cheese Makers?</p><p>Within minutes our eyes had been opened to the world of Wisconsin cheese right under our noses. In fact, Wisconsin perennially wins about a third of the World Championship titles, more of the U.S. titles. And, most compelling for a marketer, there were only 39 Master Cheese Makers in the entire U.S. and every single one was in Wisconsin.</p><p>You would think that the idea of selling on-line and finding a universally recognized product with an unbeatable pedigree would have been enough to make the leap. It took a disappointing trip to the grocery back home in Milwaukee a few weeks later to finally make the connection.</p><p>We were out of Montforte Blue. We looked for it at the fine grocery store in our neighborhood. They didn't have it and had not heard of it. We went to other stores with the same result. "It's a World Champion cheese! It's made 100 miles from here!" Blank stares all around.</p><p>Finally it clicked. If I lived near the Best Cheese in America and can't buy it at the store, how can anyone else? We dedicated our next "drive-around" to finding other Wisconsin Cheeses we have never seen before. And, FINALLY, Wisconsin Cheese Masters was born</p>]]></content:encoded>
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