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But Why: A Podcast for Curious Kids

How is cheese made?

But Why: A Podcast for Curious Kids

Vermont Public

Nature, Language, Kids & Family, Science

4.44.9K Ratings

🗓️ 21 October 2022

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Kids love cheese! (So do adults: Americans consume an average of 40 pounds of cheese per person per year.) In this episode we learn how cheese is made and answer all of your cheesy questions: Why are there different types of cheese? Why do cheeses have different flavors? How do you make Colby Jack cheese? How does cheese get its color? And why do we say cheese when we take a picture? We visit the Cabot Cheese factory and talk with Maegen Olsen and Panos Lekkas.

Download our learning guides: PDF | Google Slide | Transcript

  • Cheese starts with milk. Cheese is often made with milk from cows or goats, but it can also be made with milk from sheep, buffalo, camels or other mammals. (There’s even a moose-cheese company in Russia!) If the cheese is made in bulk to sell to lots of people, companies will usually run tests on the milk before they turn it into cheese. They want to make sure it doesn’t have bad bacteria or antibiotics in it. The milk is then pasteurized, which means it’s heated quickly and cooled quickly to kill any lurking bad bacteria.

  • Next cheesemakers will add a starter culture. Starter culture is GOOD bacteria, which will eat the milk sugar (lactose), create lactic acid and drive down the pH of the milk. That helps create curds.

  • The next step is coagulation! (Coagulation is the process of turning a liquid into a semi-solid or solid.) To coagulate the milk, an enzyme called rennet is added.

  • Now it’s time to separate the curds from the whey. Cheesemakers will use knives to cut the coagulated milk into chunks known as curds, leaving some liquid behind. That liquid is known as whey. When milk is made into cheddar it gives a 10% yield, meaning 10% of the milk will become cheese and 90% will be left over as whey. Some cheesemakers, like Cabot, use the whey to make protein powders. In other factories it might go to waste.

  • Next, it’s time to add salt. Salt serves as a preservative and gives the cheese flavor. If it’s a flavored cheese, things like garlic or peppers will be added at this point.

  • The cheese is then pressed into blocks. At factories like Cabot, they pull the curds into tall towers and then add more and more, creating pressure that forms those curds into solid blocks. Smaller cheesemakers use a cheese press.

  • In the final step, the cheese is aged. It will sit in a cold storage or cheese cave and just…get older. Cheddar can be aged for years, giving it a stronger flavor. Aging also changes the texture of a cheese like cheddar. It can get more crumbly the older it gets. Once it’s ready, it will be cut, packaged and shipped to stores.

Transcript

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0:00.0

But why? A podcast for curious kids is known for serious answers to silly questions sent

0:07.0

in by kids just like you. But did you know that but why is now a book series?

0:12.9

Our first book, Our Lama's Ticklish, answers questions from real kids about farm animals.

0:18.8

This colorfully illustrated book is perfect for kids ages 8 to 10. And our second book,

0:24.4

To Fish Breathe Underwater, explores the underwater world of the ocean. Learn more at But Why Kids.org

0:30.7

Slash Books.

0:54.5

This is But Why, a podcast for curious kids from Vermont Public. I'm Jane Lindholm.

1:00.7

On this show, we take questions from curious kids all over the world. In fact, we've gotten

1:06.1

more than 10,000 questions from kids in more than 90 countries. And it's our job to find

1:12.0

answers to all the things you want to know about. Today, say cheese. We're actually not

1:19.6

talking about cameras or taking pictures. We're going to be talking about cheese. What is

1:26.1

it? How is it made? And why are some people okay with eating cheese that smells like dirty

1:32.1

socks and has mold on its rind? You've sent us a lot of questions about this fascinating

1:37.8

and culturally important food. So today, we're going to go on a cheese factory tour to learn

1:43.5

more. Before we get started, let me give you just the briefest history of cheese. Humans

1:49.6

have been making cheese for thousands of years. Probably for almost as long as we've had

1:55.0

domesticated animals. Cheese is a way of taking fresh milk that goes bad pretty quickly

2:01.1

and preserving it or storing it so you can eat it for longer. Sometime way back when

2:07.2

someone figured out that adding rennet and enzyme to milk could make that milk curdle

2:12.6

or form curds, add some salt and flavoring, and you've got delicious cheese. Since its

2:19.6

initial discovery, the making of cheese has spread all over the world. Different cultures

2:24.7

make different types of cheeses and some regions are known around the globe for their specialty

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