Researchers Lower Salt in Parmigiano Reggiano But Keep Flavour

Aged cheeses like Parmigiano Reggiano are prized for their strong, sharp flavours, but their production process creates a high salt content. Now, researchers have come up with a new process that reduces the salt content, a boon for people who have to manage their salt content, such as those with hypertension.

In the production process, aged cheesesĀ are either coated in wax or submerged in brine for a number of weeks to create a rind. Parmigiano Reggiano is produced only in certain Italian provinces, and is subject to strict regulations. Made from skimmed cow’s milk, it is aged for at least one year and is lactose free. The flavours come from conversion of milk compounds during the ripening process, in which salt plays a role by hardening the cheese and regulating microbe and enzyme activity. Parmigiano Reggiano has a sodium content of 650mg per 100g. Reducing sodium in the diet reduces hypertension and also cardiovascular disease mortality and morbidity.

A key chemical process is lipolysis, where triglycerides from milk break down into free fatty acids and diacylglycerides. Free fatty acids add to the taste of the cheese and also serve as precursors to other flavour molecules. Lipolysis also takes place in the body when adipose triglycerides are broken down for energy.

To see if salt content could be reduced without compromising flavour, the researchers submerged wheels of the cheese in brine for 18 days or a shorter 12 day period before a 15 month ripening period. Salt content was 9% lower in the cheese brined for a shorter time. The researchers were surprised to find no difference in the moisture level, cholesterol, and total fat in the two sets of cheeses.

No major variations in compounds involved in the flavour profile were seen, as most of the free fatty acids overlapped in concentration ranges.

Yet in the cheeses with the shorter brining time, overall, the total free fatty acids and the total diacylglycerides concentration ranges were 260% and 100% higher, respectively, than the traditionally brined version. It is possible that the lower salt to moisture ratio made more water available for lipolysis reactions and more rapid enzymatic triglycerides breakdown. The cheese still needs to be assessed for texture.

Source: News-Medical.Net