Cheese culture, a refined form of mold is put there during the cheese making process. The blue color is a color produced by the cheese mold.and by the CHEESE BEING CHEESE WITH ITS CHEESYNESS IN THE BLUE NEEDLE OF MOLDY MOLD BECAUSE ITS OH SO CHEESEY AND ITS OH SO CHEESEY BECAUSE ITS ANCESTOR IS THE GREAT CHEESASAURUS REX AND IT WAS THE GREAT CHEESE BEAST THT RULED THE EARTH LONG BEFORE CHRIST WITH THE DINOSAURS
Blue cheese is mostly white with veins of blue mold growing in it.
Mould.
Blue cheese gets the name from the veins of blue colored mold that go through it. It is intentional, as it is a cheese curd infected with penecillium to have that result, which also gives it the pungent flavor.
Yes, Danish Blue and Stilton use or have used copper wire to create the blue veins in the cheese.
Blue cheese is a catch-all term for cheeses that have blue coloration or veins due to the particular fungus used in its production. While Roquefort is a blue cheese, not all blue cheeses are Roquefort.
Blue cheese (or bleu cheese) is a cheese that has had Penicillium cultures added so that the final product is spotted or veined with blue-gray or blue-green mold.
No, feta is a Greek cheese made from goats milk. Blue (or bleu) cheese is made from cows, sheeps, or goats milk and contains the mold Penicillium that is introduced later in the process to produce bluish spots and veins.
Roquefort cheese is made with sheeps milk and usually has green veins of mold and is usually VERY strong flavored. Blue cheese can be made with cows, sheep, or goat milk and has penicullium mold added to the cheese and is very mild in taste.
The mould grows on it over the years. It ends up smelling really bad, too. You dont want to go to cheddar caves and have a whiff of the cheese. Go Robert Pattinson!!!!!
cheese that has blue dye in it Blue cheese is a general classification of cheeses that has had Penicillium cultures added so that the final product is spotted or veined throughout with blue or blue-green mould, and carries a distinct aroma. Some blue cheeses are injected with spores before the curds form; others have spores mixed in with the curds after they form. Blue cheeses are typically aged in a temperature-controlled environment such as a cave. The blue veins are entirely due to natural moulds, not to synthetic dyes.
I'm not sure to be honest, but I would say that blue cheese is cheese that has been allowed to kind of sit and "ferment" like wine, and it has grown mould in the veins. And I could be mistaken but isn't feta goats cheese? I'd say google it! :D
Blue Veins was created in 1999.