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Desorbed terpenes and sesquiterpenes from forages and cheeses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 1999

CHRISTINE VIALLON
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Flaveur, INRA Theix, F-63122 Saint-Genès-Champanelle, France
ISABELLE VERDIER-METZ
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Recherches Fromagères, INRA, 36 rue de Salers, F-15000 Aurillac, France
CHRISTIAN DENOYER
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Flaveur, INRA Theix, F-63122 Saint-Genès-Champanelle, France
PHILIPPE PRADEL
Affiliation:
Domaine de la Borie, INRA, F-15330 Marcenat, France
JEAN-BAPTISTE COULON
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Adaptation des Herbivores aux Milieux, INRA Theix, F-63122 Saint-Genès-Champanelle, France
JEAN-LOUIS BERDAGUÉ
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Flaveur, INRA Theix, F-63122 Saint-Genès-Champanelle, France

Abstract

The composition and sensory characteristics of matured cheeses are controlled by a number of factors, among which the type of feed is important. The influence of feeding can be reflected by the presence in cheeses of terpenes and sesquiterpenes, compounds typically indicating their vegetable origin (Mariaca et al. 1997). Indeed, several investigators have already established that these compounds could characterize the forage even to a specific geographical location. Dumont & Adda (1978), Dumont et al. (1981), Guichard et al. (1987), Bosset et al. (1994) and Moio et al. (1996) were thus able to distinguish cheeses from lowland and upland regions. In most of these studies, the conditions under which milk was produced and processed were not completely controlled. Furthermore, all these studies analysed only the volatile fraction of cheeses and did not examine the volatile compounds in the forages used. Recently Bosset et al. (1994), in one part of the project described by Jeangros et al. (1997), showed that highland grass with a highly diversified botanical composition produces milk and cheeses with significantly different chemical compositions from those from lowland grass. To improve our understanding of the relationship between animal feed and cheese composition, we have investigated under controlled experimental conditions both the composition of the terpene and sesquiterpene fractions of four forages with different botanical diversities and the influence of those forages on the terpene fraction of cheeses.

Type
SHORT COMMUNICATION
Copyright
Proprietors of Journal of Dairy Research 1999

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