Overview

From paneer in India to Parmigiano-Reggiano in Italy, people around the globe love cheese in all its more than 1,000 varieties. Made by introducing bacteria and enzymes into milk, cheese is packed with protein, calcium, and vitamins.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Some people in Italy enjoy a cheese with live maggots in it

    From squeaky Wisconsin cheese curds to the squirmy Sardinian casu marzu, cheese around the globe comes in myriad forms. Exploring the work of seven cheesemakers in seven countries, this video shows each cheese has traditions and flavors unique to its part of the world.

  • Why there’s barely any cheese in traditional East Asian food

    East Asian cuisine has historically been cheese-free, but why? Several unique circumstances combined to limit—or eliminate—the dairy product in dishes from Japan, Korea, China, and other nearby countries: Livestock were seen as working animals rather than nutritional sources, and most people were lactose intolerant. As Western cuisine becomes more popular globally, though, cheese is making its way into more East Asian diets.

  • Animals' stomach lining produces cheese

    Cheesemaking would be impossible without rennet, the enzyme that separates milk’s liquid and solid components. Rennet occurs naturally in the stomach lining of young goats, cows, and lambs to help them digest milk, a process that also allows cheesemakers to use it to make curds. Now we have plant-based rennet that comes from thistles, artichokes, and other similar plants.

  • A New York farmer established the first cheese factory and revolutionized the industry

    Jesse Williams, a farmer in New York state, had a passion for cheese but didn’t have the resources to produce it at the scale he desired. So, in 1851, Jesse and his son opened the first cheese factory, sourcing milk from multiple local farms and producing 100,000 pounds of cheddar—in their first season. Soon, Williams had hundreds of factories and created the prototype for cheesemaking as we know it today.

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