Cacioricotta Explained

Cacioricotta
Country:Italy
Region:

Cacioricotta is a typical southern Italian cheese produced in the regions of Basilicata, Apulia and Calabria.

Production method

Cacioricotta is produced with a "hybrid" method of preparation, following both the steps used in the production of ricotta as well as hard paste cheese. The cheese is usually made with sheep or goat milk, and more rarely with cow milk and water buffalo milk.[1]

To manufacture the cheese filtered milk is heated up until it reaches its boiling point; the liquid is then left to cool until it reaches a temperature of 38–40°, rennet is then added. Due to the liquid reaching a temperature close to 90° whilst reaching its boiling point, curd, as well as casein and albumin, are integrated within the liquid, unlike ricotta where whey becomes a by-product.[2] [3]

Acknowledgements and regional differences

Cacioricotta is recognised as a prodotto agroalimentare tradizionale (PAT), and has the following variants in these Italian regions:

Basilicata
Calabria
Campania
Lazio
Apulia

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cacioricotta . Cibo360.it . it.
  2. Web site: Cacio ricotta . LaTerradiPuglia.it . it.
  3. Web site: Il cacioricotta, formaggio dai mille perché . formaggio.it . 7 October 2014 . it.