Cream Cheese vs Yogurt Cheese: what / how much difference does the bacteria make?
This recipe for homemade cream cheese looks extremely similar to making yogurt and then straining it.
In fact, the final step for culturing the milk goes:
After 12 to 18 hours, the cheese should look like yogurt (solid if tipped but still relatively soft). You may see some whey separating from the cheese. The whey is a mostly clear liquid.
The 'main ingredient' in both cultures are again, just different varieties of Lactic Acid Bacteria (plus sugars and rennet for cream cheese)
Cream Cheese Starter Culture: Sucrose, maltodextrins, lactic bacteria (Lactococcus lactis subsp. Lactis, Lactococcus lactis supsp. cremoris), Rennet
Yogurt Starter Culture: Bifidobacterium lactis, Lactobacillus acidophilus, Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus, Streptococcus thermophilus
Upon following the same procedure as given for creation of cream cheese, with yoghurt culture +/- Rennet, what exactly would be the difference in the two cheeses as compared to each other?
I ask instead of experimenting because I'm having a hard time getting my hands on some cream cheese starter culture, so I'm hoping to get a voice of experience on this subject.
Note: There's a related question asking about usability of 'yoghurt cheese in cheese cake', but I'm more interested in knowing what the differences in the resulting cheeses would be, rather than just substitutability.
Best Answer
Just as important as the bacterial culture is the use of rennet in cream cheese, which aids in the removal of liquid whey. When making cream cheese, the point is to drain much of the whey, resulting in a semi-solid texture. Rennet helps encourage the solids to curdle and squeeze out liquid. Yogurt doesn't necessarily include the draining step, though it can be done if you're looking for a thicker Greek-style yogurt. In this case, the acid produced during fermentation while making yogurt aids curdling and helps produce the final texture.
In fact, it's possible to take the draining process even further with yogurt, resulting in what's often called yogurt cheese or labneh. The final texture can vary a bit depending on how long it's drained, and whether you use weights to encourage the process.
In my experience labneh still never gets quite as solid as cream cheese, but it's pretty close when sufficiently weighted and drained. Labneh also retains yogurt's tangy flavor, which is mostly an effect of the bacterial culture. Though I haven't measured, I would expect that the pH of labneh is lower, so it's probably not always appropriate as a direct substitution for sensitive applications like baking. In other places, you could definitely use labneh instead of cream cheese. If you're having difficulty locating cream cheese cultures, this would be the easiest tack to take.
I haven't tried (or seen) both rennet and yogurt culture used together, but my suspicion is that it would take the curdling action a bit too far for the result to be smooth and spreadable.
So, tl;dr: the major difference is that yogurt culture is calibrated to produce a higher level of acid, resulting in a tangier flavor and reducing the need for rennet to curdle the solids. If you follow the same procedure, varying only the culture used, you'll have a reasonably similar end result.
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Does yogurt and cheese have bacteria?
Two kinds of bacteria are needed to make yogurt: Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus. They work together throughout the fermentation process to produce lactic acid, which is what gives yogurt its tart flavor and acts like a preservative. Cultured dairy products are staple foods in many homes.What is healthier yogurt or cheese?
A closer look at both these health trends revealed some surprising results: A 100-gram serving of full-fat cottage cheese contains 11.5 grams of protein and 4.3 grams of fat. The same amount of full-fat Greek yogurt has about 8.7 grams of protein and nearly as much fat (4.1 grams).Is there bacteria in cream cheese?
Cream cheese is made using a starter culture from lactic acid bacteria. Some of these strains of bacteria are probiotics, which are friendly bacteria that offer health benefits ( 12 ).The beneficial bacteria that make delicious food - Erez Garty
More answers regarding cream Cheese vs Yogurt Cheese: what / how much difference does the bacteria make?
Answer 2
I tried to make yoghurt, but got cream cheese.
Been making yoghurt for a long time, spoonful of previous yoghurt in a mug of pasteurized milk, left to stand overnight.
So this time I used raw milk, spoonful of previous yoghurt in a mug of raw milk, left to stand overnight.
In the morning, it looked wrong, instead of a mug of yoghurt (teaspoon of whey or less on top), result was much more solid (1/2" of whey on top), didn't taste like yogurt, tasted like cheese. Instead of yoghurt paste, it was very small solid curds.
Strained it through a muslin cloth and added un-iodised salt, = cream cheese. Guess if I had wanted yoghurt, should have pasteurized the raw milk first.
PS. I'm in the tropics, nighttime temperature 20-30c
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