• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

The Reason Why Different Cheeses Have A Smell

February 22, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Not all cheeses have a strong smell, but you certainly know when you’re dealing with one that does. Whether you love it or hate it, the smell of cheese has a fascinating origin that also makes it taste so good. 

The more pungent cheeses, such as Époisses, Stinking Bishop or Limburger, tend to be what are called “washed-rind” or “smear-ripened” cheeses. This means what you would expect it to mean: the rind of these cheeses has been washed during the maturing process with saline or sometimes alcohols, such as wine, beer, or brandy. 

Advertisement

As the washing continues, moisture builds up and allows various microbes to grow on the rind. The most important of these are bacteria known as Brevibacterium linens. It should also be noted that some cheese makers spread B. linens directly onto the rind during the washing phase while others inoculate the milk with it at the start. 

This bacterium is important for the cheese in two ways. Firstly, it often gives the rind its characteristic color (though this is not always the case). Secondly, it produces sulfur compounds as it grows, which are responsible for the strong smell. B. linens is also ubiquitously present on human skin and is the main cause of foot odor, which is why these cheeses often evoke such a strong comparison. Interestingly, the smell produced by this B. linens when present on human feet is also extremely attractive to mosquitoes. 

But why do we like this smell? When you eat stinking cheese, the aroma compounds are released into your mouth and move to the back of your nose as they go. They are then detected by the same smell receptors that would tell you that the cheese is revolting if you were only smelling it; but when they enter through this back-door, as it were, the brain combines them with the creamy taste it is simultaneously detecting on the tongue. A kind of alchemy takes place, and the brain registers the delicious taste of the cheese. This process is called “backward smelling” or “retronasal smell”.  

Traditionally, the type of substance used to wash these cheeses depended on geography, which was also responsible for their texture. Washed-rind cheeses produced in lowlands, such as by French monks, tend to be softer in texture than their mountain-born counterparts that are characteristically harder. The monastic cheeses were often stored in in humid cellars, which were already home to diverse microbial life. As the cheese dried, it would be washed with whatever the monks had to hand, which often included beer as the only suitable and drinkable liquid at the time. Over time, the bacteria would break down the cheese and make it softer and creamier. 

Advertisement

Washed-rind cheeses produced in the mountains were more typically washed with saline as these areas did not experience the types of water-purity issues common in the lowlands. 

And, as much as we love this type of stinking cheese, it was also a valuable tool in the discovery of a new genus of animal. 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Social network Peanut expands to include more women with launch of Peanut Menopause
  2. Marketmind: Watch those spiralling gas prices
  3. Thai central bank chief warns economy remains fragile, exposed to shocks
  4. Be On The Cutting-Edge Of Tech With This Top-Rated Learning Bundle

Source Link: The Reason Why Different Cheeses Have A Smell

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Neanderthals Repurposed Cave Lion Bones Into “Multifunctional Tools” 130,000 Years Ago
  • Jumping Spiders: With Cute Eyes And Complex Behavior, They’re Nature’s Most Charismatic Arachnids
  • Scientists Dropped A Cow Carcass 1,629 Meters Into The South China Sea – And 8 Unexpected Visitors Turned Up
  • A Colossal Moa: One Of The Biggest Birds Ever To Walk The Earth Becomes 5th “De-Extinction” Species
  • Aliens Up To 200 Light-Years Away Could Find Earth Thanks To Our Airports
  • For The First Time, Wild Rays Have Been Filmed Telling Sharks To “Back Off!” With Electric Shocks
  • Gonorrhea Vaccines, New Antibiotics, And At-Home Testing: What’s The Latest In STI Research?
  • What NASA’s Galileo Spacecraft Saw As It Plunged Into Jupiter
  • Very Hungry “Plastivore” Caterpillars Get Fat From Eating Plastic
  • “Nobody Expected This”: Earth’s Rotation Will Speed Up Tomorrow, Bucking The Downward Trend
  • Chimps Are Sticking Grass In Their Ears And Rears As They Embrace “Pointless” Fad
  • Hui Te Rangiora: Old Māori Legend Suggests They May Have Discovered Antarctica 1,000 Years Before Europeans
  • “Potential Impact On Saturn”: Astronomers Appeal For Help As Video Appears To Show Object Hitting The Gas Giant
  • What Is Prosopometamorphopsia? The “Exceedingly Rare” Condition That Made A Patient See Faces As Dragons
  • Are We In An Enormous Void? It Could Explain What’s Wrong With Our Model Of The Universe
  • Woylies Boing Back Into Western Australia Thanks To Groundbreaking Wildlife Project
  • North America’s Oldest Pterosaur And Turtle Fossils Found In Arizona’s Petrified Forest
  • Proposed “Dark Dwarfs” Near The Galactic Center Could Reveal The Nature Of Dark Matter
  • Watch: 18-Kilometer-High Ash Cloud Looms Over Indonesia’s Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki After “Explosive” Eruption
  • “ShipGoo001”: Mystery Of Entirely New Lifeform Discovered Coating A Great Lakes Ship
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version