CheeseBoard 2015: Teagasc Coordinates €1.3m Cheese Research Project
30 March 2012
Teagasc will coordinate a major new €1.3
million national research project, titled
‘National Cheese Research Programme 2015’. Dr
Phil Kelly, coordinator of the project, said:
“The Irish Cheese Research Consortium (ICRC)
embraces the Irish dairy industry’s forecast
(reflected in Food Harvest 2020) for significant
expansion in cheese production, both in overall
volume and in specific varieties, over the next
10 years.”
The timeline for the research programme reflects
the imminent opportunities and challenges that
the Irish dairy industry faces with EU milk
quotas ending in 2015. Five academic and
research institutions on the island of Ireland
will combine their respective competencies to
provide an integrated approach to challenges in
cheese research that are deemed critical for the
future development of this food industry.
The participating research teams that constitute
the ICRC include: Teagasc Food Research
Programme Moorepark and Ashtown, University
College Cork, University of Limerick, University
College Dublin and Agri-Food BioSciences
Institute (AFBI, Northern Ireland).
The project will be guided throughout its
four-year duration through market intelligence
and consumer interaction. Stakeholder
representation includes cheese manufacturers,
participating research institutions, Bord Bia,
Enterprise Ireland and a Food Institution
Research Measure/Department of Agriculture, Food
and the Marine representative.
The research programme will be accomplished by
means of six tasks. Three tasks on the
scientific and health aspects of natural
cheeses, along with a task on processed cheese,
will be informed by the outcomes of consumer
studies. A separate task, involving Teagasc and
AFBI, sets out to develop a rapid assay for
trans fatty acids (TFA), which should also be
capable of differentiating between
naturally-occurring TFA in milk fat (healthy
form) and those originating from the
hydrogenation of vegetable oils.
Other elements of the programme will examine
ways to improve the texture of reduced fat
cheese, as well as investigations into the
positive role of dietary milk calcium in weight
management.
Dr Kelly said: “The consortium is well
positioned to support immediate work on the
production of reduced-fat, low-salt cheese
variants to address growing health concerns, as
well as addressing long-term cheese
diversification opportunities.”
The article ‘CheeseBoard 2015’ is featured in
the spring 2012 issue of TResearch, Teagasc’s
research and innovation magazine available
online at:
http://www.teagasc.ie/publications/tresearch/index.asp

