centrifugation
Yes Centrifugation is the most common technique used to separate cream from milk (especially raw cow milk).
Centrifugal force is used in commercial dairy factories. Gravity can be used with raw milk to get cream floating to the top.
Milk is centrifuged to separate the cream/fat.
The industrial method is based on the centrifugation of milk.
Skim milk is milk with all of the butterfat (cream) removed. The butterfat rises to the top, and is easy to skim off. The remainder can be removed by centrifuge. What is left is skim milk. It is powdered by the simple industrial process of evaporation.
You don't separate crream from curd, you separate whey from curd. Cream is skimmed from the top of milk as it sits and the cream floats to the top. Then the milk is used to make curds and whey by adding a curdling agent like rennet. The curds form and the clear liquid they float in is whey. Then you can strain the curds from the whey by pouring them through cheese cloth.
When raw milk is allowed to stand for a day, the cream will rise to the top. This cream was skimmed off and the remaining milk was called skim milk. This method is no longer used in most dairies and a mechanical separation of cream and milk is used.
Standardisation is when cream is removed from the milk and then added back to a specific butterfat. For instance - cream is first removed, leaving skim milk and cream. The cream is then added back into the milk phase to 2.0% to give low fat milk. The rest of the cream is used for cream or butter.
Whole milk or regular cream is typically used.
Milk is used to make ice cream, yogurt, cheese, cream, and many bakery products like cookies and pasties.
raised on a farm I know this a cream separator a device that separates the heavier milk from the cream by centrifugal force
4 liquid ingredients used in baking are water, milk,oil,and cream.