Parmesan Cheese
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Parmesan Cheese is made from raw skim milk. Calf Rennet is added to the milk, and the milk heated until it curdles. The curd is cut, heated to 125 F (51 C), stirred, then heated further up to 131 F (55 C.) The curd is packed into moulds lined with cheesecloth, then removed from the moulds and soaked in brine for a month. The whey leftover from the process is used to feed pigs, which then become meats such as Mortadella and Parma ham. 4 1/2 gallons (US) / 16 litres of milk are needed to make 2 1/4 pounds (1 kg) of the cheese.
The cheeses are aged on wooden racks for anywhere from 12 months to 3 years. Young Parmesan cheese, just over a year old, is mostly sold inside Italy; they are served shaved into thin curls. "Vecchio" (old) is aged from 1 1/2 to 2 years. "Stravecchio" (extra-old) Parmesan is aged over two years. These latter two are the cheeses sold and used for grating.
Cheese makers often leave wheels of Parmesan cheese with their bank as collateral. The banks have special vaults to store the cheese in, so that it can age properly while they are holding it.
The wheels of aged Parmesans are straw-coloured. The cheese is crumbly and has a slightly salty taste. The rinds are not eaten or grated; they are discarded.
Parmesan must be made in Parma or Emilia-Romagna. As of 2004, there were at least 900 small cheesemakers in the area joined in a consortium. Any Parmesan-type cheese produced outside that area has to call itself a "grana."
Each dairy's production is tracked and inspected in "lots", which correspond to 4 months of the year:
- January to April (inspection starts 1 December)
- May to August (inspection starts in the following year, on 1 April)
- September to December (inspection starts in the following year, on 1 September)
(Some foodies feel the best cheeses are those produced between April and November.)
Inspection is done by experts appointed by the Consortium. At least one cheese from each "lot" must be inspected by cutting a portion from it for internal inspection. Its appearance, texture and aroma are assessed. The lot is then graded first grade, medium grade or rejected. The grading is branded on the wheels of cheese that pass the testing with a hot iron. Rejected wheels have to have their Mark of Origin removed; then are then sold on for industrial processing and sale not under the official name. [1] Dairies have four days in which to register an appeal over rejected lots; if they do, a second, different inspection team is sent out within 15 days of the appeal being received.
Even if the cheese is only 8 months old when it passes inspection (example: produced in April, inspected in December), "cheese cannot be put on the market for consumption under the Parmigiano-Reggiano protected designation before having reached the 12th month of maturation". [1]
When Parmesan is cut into small wedges for retail sale, it must by law be cut so that some portion of the rind is showing. This allows consumers to see the trademark on the trade and see that it is the genuine article. Coincidently, it also means that the inedible rind becomes part of the weight that consumers have to pay for.
Cooking Tips for Parmesan Cheese

Parmesan Cheese Grater
© Denzil Green
You elevate this to a dish you can serve to others, by pitching in a sprinkle of parsley for colouring along with freshly-grated pepper.
All Foodies dismiss, of course, the dried, ground Parmesan-style cheese that comes off supermarket shelves in little shake-ee cardboard containers. Dismiss it though they may, someone's buying it: it's still a huge seller.
Those that dismiss it as "sawdust", though, may have more of a point than they know. Cellulose is often added to those cheese mixtures to prevent clumping. (It's also what prevents those cheeses from melting nicely on top of hot food.) And the source of that cellulose? Cotton or wood pulp.
Substitutes for Parmesan Cheese
Nutrition for Parmesan Cheese
Storage Hints for Parmesan Cheese
If little patches of mould appear, the cheese is still fine to use: just scrape them off and use the cheese.
It freezes well if frozen whole; the flavour doesn't survive so well if frozen grated.
History Notes for Parmesan Cheese
Literature & Lore
Acknowledgements
Also called:
Parmigiano Reggiano; Parmesan (French); Parmesan (German); Parmigiano (Italian); Parmesano (Spanish); Queijo parmesã (Portuguese)
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See Also:
Grana Padano, Protected Designation of Origin
Other entries for: Extra-Hard Cheeses
Asiago Cheese, Cotija Cheese, Grana Padano, Manchego Viejo, Parmesan Cheese, Sapsago Cheese, Sbrinz Cheese
Other entries for: Cheese
Affinage, American Cheeses, British Cheeses, Casu Marzu, Cheese Curds, Cheese Rinds, Creamery, Double/Triple-Cream Cheese, Firm Cheeses, Goat's Milk Cheeses, Mexican Cheeses, Pate (of a Cheese), Processed Cheese, Queso Fundido, Rennet, Semi-Firm Cheeses, Sheep's Milk Cheeses, Skim-Milk Cheeses, Smear-Ripened Cheeses, Soft Cheeses, Surface-Ripened Cheeses, Sweet Curd Cheeses, The Crumblies, Truckle, Washed-Curd Cheeses, Washed-Rind Cheeses, Yak Cheese, Yeel Cheese
Other entries for: Dairy
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