Northeast Dairy Food Research Center, Department of Food Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853.
Northeast Dairy Food Research Center, Department of Food Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853.
J Dairy Sci. 2013 Apr;96(4):2011-2019. doi: 10.3168/jds.2012-6006. Epub 2013 Feb 15.
The objective of experiment 1 was to determine if the extent of gravity separation of milk fat, bacteria, and somatic cells is influenced by the time and temperature of gravity separation or the level of contaminating bacteria present in the raw milk. The objective of experiment 2 was to determine if different temperatures of milk heat treatment affected the gravity separation of milk fat, bacteria, and somatic cells. In raw milk, fat, bacteria, and somatic cells rose to the top of columns during gravity separation. About 50 to 80% of the fat and bacteria were present in the top 8% of the milk after gravity separation of raw milk. Gravity separation for 7h at 12°C or for 22h at 4°C produced equivalent separation of fat, bacteria, and somatic cells. The completeness of gravity separation of fat was influenced by the level of bacteria in the milk before separation. Milk with a high bacterial count had less (about 50 to 55%) gravity separation of fat than milk with low bacteria count (about 80%) in 22h at 4°C. Gravity separation caused fat, bacteria, and somatic cells to rise to the top of columns for raw whole milk and high temperature, short-time pasteurized (72.6°C, 25s) whole milk. Pasteurization at ≥76.9°C for 25s prevented all 3 components from rising, possibly due to denaturation of native bovine immunoglobulins that normally associate with fat, bacteria, and somatic cells during gravity separation. Gravity separation can be used to produce reduced-fat milk with decreased bacterial and somatic cell counts, and may be a critical factor in the history of safe and unique traditional Italian hard cheeses produced from gravity-separated raw milk. A better understanding of the mechanism of this natural process could lead to the development of new nonthermal thermal technology (that does not involve heating the milk to high temperatures) to remove bacteria and spores from milk or other liquids.
实验 1 的目的是确定重力分离牛奶脂肪、细菌和体细胞的程度是否受到重力分离时间和温度或原料奶中污染细菌水平的影响。实验 2 的目的是确定不同的牛奶热处理温度是否会影响牛奶脂肪、细菌和体细胞的重力分离。在原料奶中,脂肪、细菌和体细胞在重力分离过程中上升到柱的顶部。重力分离原料奶后,约 50%至 80%的脂肪和细菌存在于牛奶的前 8%。在 12°C 下分离 7 小时或在 4°C 下分离 22 小时,可产生相同的脂肪、细菌和体细胞分离效果。脂肪重力分离的完全程度受分离前牛奶中细菌水平的影响。细菌计数高的牛奶在 4°C 下分离 22 小时后,脂肪的重力分离程度较低(约 50%至 55%),而细菌计数低的牛奶(约 80%)的脂肪分离程度较高。重力分离导致脂肪、细菌和体细胞上升到原料全脂牛奶和高温短时间巴氏杀菌(72.6°C,25s)全脂牛奶的柱顶。巴氏杀菌温度≥76.9°C 25s 可防止所有 3 种成分上升,这可能是由于天然牛免疫球蛋白变性所致,这些免疫球蛋白在重力分离过程中通常与脂肪、细菌和体细胞结合。重力分离可用于生产低脂肪、低细菌和体细胞计数的牛奶,并且可能是源自重力分离原料奶的安全且独特的传统意大利硬质奶酪生产历史中的关键因素。更好地了解这一自然过程的机制可能会导致开发新的非热技术(不涉及将牛奶加热至高温)来从牛奶或其他液体中去除细菌和孢子。