Chemical and Microbiological Evaluation of Sudanese Braided Cheese (Mudaffara)
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.53332/uofkjas.v21i2.1849Keywords:
Braided cheese, traditional, area, batch, chemical, microbiologicalAbstract
This study was conducted to determine the chemical and
microbiological characteristics of traditional braided cheese (mudaffara)
sold in Khartoum market, Sudan. Fifty four samples were collected from
three different areas and subjected to chemical analysis (fat, protein, TS,
ash, acidity) and microbiological examination (total viable bacteria,
coliform bacteria, proteolytic bacteria, lipolytic bacteria, yeasts and
moulds counts). Results showed that batch number significantly affected
the chemical components of cheese, while area from which samples were
collected did not. Fifty-five percent of samples had fat content of 26-
37%, while 51% had low protein content (7-10%), 83% of samples had
total solids content of 55-70%, 70% of samples had ash content of 3-
5.99%, and 39% were highly acidic (1.0-1.5%). Microbiological
populations examined were high in batch B except for yeasts and moulds
which were high in batch A. The area from which sampling was done did
not significantly affect the microbial quality of cheese.
Microbiologically, samples were highly contaminated as shown in TVBC,
where 89% of samples had Log 7.5-9.5 cfu/g, 89% had coliform count of
Log 2.0-2.80 cfu/g, 72% had proteolytic bacteria count of Log 2.0-3.0
cfu/g, 65% had lipolytic bacteria count of Log 2.0-2.50 cfu/g and 91%
had yeasts and moulds count of Log 2.0-3.80 cfu/g.