Page:The story of milk.djvu/56

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In a Continuous Pasteurizer a constant stream of milk is fed into the machine, heated by flowing over a metal surface with steam or hot water on the opposite side, and cooled by running over a cooler furnished with a stream of cold water or ice water.


PURE CULTURES

Before 1890 it was supposed that the flavor of fine butter depended upon certain volatile oils and acids peculiar to butter-fat. In the early nineties Professor V. Storch of the Danish Experiment Station showed, however, that it was due rather to the products of bacteria and he isolated the lactic acid bacilli which would produce such exquisite flavor even when perfectly neutral and tasteless butter-fat was churned with milk acidified or ripened with a pure culture of these bacilli. In this country Dr. H. W. Conn of Wesleyan University, Storrs, Conn., did much to advance the theory and practice of ripening cream with a pure culture starter.

"Pure cultures" are produced in the bacteriological laboratory by picking out under the microscope colonies of the desired species of bacteria, planting them in a sterilized medium and allowing them to grow under the most favorable conditions and with the exclusion of all other germs.

Professor V. Storch, originator of pure cultures for ripening cream and milk


When such a culture has reached its maximum growth it is transplanted into a larger quantity of a sterilized medium containing proper nourishment for the par-