The cheeses with mold include those with a white, dusty looking covering, and those veined with blue or green.
Cheeses covered with whitish dust have a mold called Penicillium camemberti on them. These cheeses include brie camambert and other similar cheeses.
Cheeses veined with blue or green usually have a mold called Penicillium roqueforti, and these include roquefort, ordinary blue cheese, Danish blue cheese, and some types of gorgonzola. Traditional gorgonzola is made with Penicillium glaucum.
Any cheese can get moldy, but this is not what is supposed to happen. Cheeses such as cheddar, colby, Swiss, gouda, and so on, should not have mold. These cheeses are often protected by a covering of wax, a rind, or a plastic package to prevent air from getting to the cheese. Any cheese that has access to even the tiniest amount of air can get moldy.
Difference in ingredients
Ask a blue cheese maker.
Cheese is molded on purpose. The blue in cheese is the color of mold.
milk and mold
No, mold grows on cheese.
When cheese is still in its' liquid state, it can be poured into a mold.
Mold on cheese is a type of fungus, most mold starts out macroscopic then after time become visible to the human eye.
This all depends how moist the type of cheese is. So ricotta cheese will mold very fast, but parmesian will not mold as fast. So, make sure the area is heavily humid and moist. This will accelerate mold growth.
Make sure the packet is opened and you have touched the cheese. Keep it out of the fridge.
Some alternative ingredients that can be used to make a delicious cheesecake without cream cheese include ricotta cheese, mascarpone cheese, Greek yogurt, or tofu.
You put Cheese in a dark fridge and wait ten days and vwalla you will have moldy cheese
No, Mustard can NOT mold, it has tons of preservatives witch make it impossible to mold, I'm currently doing a science project with mold and diffrent ingredients, and mustard will not mold.