Until its modern spread along with European culture, cheese was
nearly unheard of in oriental cultures, in the pre-Columbian Americas,
and only had limited use in sub-Mediterranean Africa, mainly being
widespread and popular only in Europe, the Middle East and areas
influenced by those cultures. But with the spread, first of European
imperialism, and later of Euro-American culture and food, cheese has
gradually become known and increasingly popular worldwide, though still
rarely considered a part of local ethnic cuisines outside Europe, the
Middle East, and the Americas.
The first factory for the industrial production of cheese opened in
Switzerland in 1815, but it was in the United States where large-scale
production first found real success. Credit usually goes to Jesse
Williams, a dairy farmer from Rome, New York, who in 1851 started making cheese in an assembly-line fashion using the milk from neighboring farms. Within decades hundreds of such dairy associations existed.
The 1860s saw the beginnings of mass-produced rennet, and by the turn
of the century scientists were producing pure microbial cultures.
Before then, bacteria in cheesemaking had come from the environment or
from recycling an earlier batch's whey; the pure cultures meant a more
standardized cheese could be produced.
Factory-made cheese overtook traditional cheesemaking in the World War II era, and factories have been the source of most cheese in America and Europe ever since. Today, Americans buy more processed cheese than "real", factory-made or not.
Sabtu, 08 Desember 2012
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