Overview
- Editors:
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P. F. Fox
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Department of Food Chemistry, University College, Cork, Ireland
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Table of contents (16 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-xiii
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- R. C. Lawrence, J. Gilles, L. K. Creamer
Pages 1-38
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- P. Walstra, A. Noomen, T. J. Geurts
Pages 39-82
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- C. Steffen, P. Eberhard, J. O. Bosset, M. Ruegg
Pages 83-110
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- B. Battistotti, C. Corradini
Pages 221-243
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- Hanne Werner, E. Waagner Nielsen, Ylva Ardö, Arnfinn Rage, Veijo Antila
Pages 245-262
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- M. H. Abd El-Salam, E. Alichanidis, G. K. Zerfiridis
Pages 301-335
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- T. P. Guinee, P. D. Pudja, N. Y. Farkye
Pages 363-419
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- J. A. Phelan, J. Renaud, P. F. Fox
Pages 421-465
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- Marijana Carić, Miloslav Kaláb
Pages 467-505
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Back Matter
Pages 555-577
About this book
The first edition of this book was very well received by the various groups (lecturers, students, researchers and industrialists) interested in the scientific and techno logical aspects of cheese. The initial printing was sold out faster than anticipated and created an opportunity to revise and extend tht; baok. The second edition retains all 21 subjects from the first edition, generally revised by the same authors and in some cases expanded considerably. In addition, 10 new chapters have been added: Cheese: Methods of chemical analysis; Biochemistry of cheese ripening; Water activity and the composition of cheese; Growth and survival of pathogenic and other undesirable microorganisms in cheese; Mem brane processes in cheese technology, in Volume 1 and North-European varieties; Cheeses of the former USSR; Mozzarella and Pizza cheese; Acid-coagulated cheeses and Cheeses from sheep's and goats' milk in Volume 2. These new chapters were included mainly to fill perceived deficiencies in the first edition. The book provides an in-depth coverage of the principal scientific and techno logical aspects of cheese. While it is intended primarily for lecturers, senior students and researchers, production management and quality control personnel should find it to be a very valuable reference book. Although cheese production has become increasingly scientific in recent years, the quality of the final product is still not totally predictable. It is not claimed that this book will provide all the answers for the cheese scientist/technologist but it does provide the most com prehensive compendium of scientific knowledge on cheese available.
Editors and Affiliations
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Department of Food Chemistry, University College, Cork, Ireland
P. F. Fox