The important rind from the cheese

The important rind from the cheese

Cheese rind = surface protection for cheese

To protect the cheese wheel, it is put into salt bath or turned into dry salt. The salt removes water from the cheese and it dries faster. So the rind is formed.

In addition, the salt protects against unwanted mold.

Certain cheeses get an extra treatment after salting. In order to obtain the white surface mold of the soft cheese Camembert, this is e.g. treated with a mushroom cure. For the so-called red smear at e.g. dairymen cheese provide special bacterial cultures (red culture), with which the cheese rind is lubricated.

After this step, the cheese is ready for maturing. Here the cheese camps for days, weeks, months to years. By evaporating further water, the rind solidifies.

The cheese care in the maturing cellar

Salzbad für frische Laibe
Salt bath for fresh cheese wheels

The cheese care is associated with great effort. The cheese is regularly turned over by the cheese maker, brushed and washed. Mountain cheese and other varieties are additionally rubbed with brine for a particularly hard bark.

Once the cheese has completed the maturing process, it is ready for enjoyment.

Is the cheese rind always enjoyable?

The rind of dayries are edible without problems. The naturally formed cheese rind can, if not further treated, be eaten without hesitation.

Care should be taken only in pregnant women, the elderly and people with a weakened immune system, as on the surface special bacteria, the Listeria, can settle.

Not every cheese rind  is a natural one!

Some cheese is packed after the salt bath by the manufacturer in a plastic foil. In this closed state, no bark can form. This “plastic rind” should not be consumed.

Also the plastic casing attached to the natural rind, which is intended to further protect the cheese in the case of solid and semi-solid varieties, must also be removed before the cheese is eaten. The manufacturer must point this out to “plastic coating not suitable for consumption”.

An exception is the vacuum packaging just for short transport.

Käsebad Salzlake
Fresh cheese wheels in the cheese bath brine

Surface treatment with natamycin

Another way to protect the cheese against mildew is the surface treatment with natamycin. This is allowed for hard cheese, semi-hard cheese and semi-hard cheese.

Unfortunately, mushrooms are not prohibited on cheese: natamycin acts as an antibiotic (a penicillin-like additive (E 235) with antibiotic effect) and is used in medicine in the treatment of various fungal infections in humans. Despite the consumption warning of BfR and MRI, the use of natamycin in cheese is allowed.

Taking natamycin frequently can lead to resistance to the substance. That’s why the rind must be cut away with cheese that has been treated with it – and that generously. The additive is detectable up to five millimeters below the surface.

 

Back to the cheese encyclopedia
Close Popup

We use cookies to give you the best online experience. By agreeing, you accept the use of cookies in accordance with our cookie policy. Further surfing in the web shop automatically leads to approval.

Close Popup
Privacy Settings saved!
Privacy Settings

When you visit any web site, it may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. Control your personal Cookie Services here.

These cookies are necessary for the website to function and cannot be switched off in our systems.

Technical Cookies
In order to use this website we use the following technically required cookies
  • wordpress_test_cookie
  • wordpress_logged_in_
  • wordpress_sec
  • tk_lr
  • tk_or
  • tk_r3d

Onlineshop
To use this online shop, i.e. for shopping cart and order processing, we use the following technically necessary cookies and services:
  • woocommerce_cart_hash
  • woocommerce_items_in_cart

GDPR
To enable the GDPR service on this website, we use the following technically necessary cookies:
  • wordpress_gdpr_allowed_services
  • wordpress_gdpr_cookies_declined
  • wordpress_gdpr_first_time
  • wordpress_gdpr_first_time_url

Decline all Services
Save
Accept all Services