Next Article in Journal
Positive Effects of Elevated Platforms and Straw Bales on the Welfare of Fast-Growing Broiler Chickens Reared at Two Different Stocking Densities
Previous Article in Journal
Haemolymphatic Parameters in Two Aquaculture Crustacean Species Cherax destructor (Clark, 1836) and Cherax quadricarinatus (Von Martens, 1868)
Previous Article in Special Issue
The Quality of Five Natural, Historical Italian Cheeses Produced in Different Months: Gross Composition, Fat-Soluble Vitamins, Fatty Acids, Total Phenols, Antioxidant Capacity, and Health Index
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Effects of Grazing Season on Physico-Chemical Characteristics and Fatty Acids of Nutritional Interest of Caciocavallo Palermitano Cheese

Dipartimento Scienze Agrarie, Alimentari e Forestali (SAAF), Università degli Studi di Palermo, Viale delle Scienze, 90128 Palermo, Italy
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Animals 2022, 12(5), 544; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12050544
Submission received: 14 January 2022 / Revised: 14 February 2022 / Accepted: 21 February 2022 / Published: 22 February 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Quality of Products from Ruminants in Extensive Production Systems)

Abstract

:

Simple Summary

Cheeses obtained from grazing animals are considered by attentive consumers to be qualitatively better for various reasons linked to ethical, environmental and health aspects. It is known that these cheeses have a chemical composition, especially in terms of fatty acid profile, which makes them more beneficial for human health, preventing the risk of cardiovascular diseases and cancer. On the other hand, the quantitative and qualitative productivity of the pastures is inconstant during the different seasons of the year; therefore, in extensive livestock farms there is the need to integrate the diet of lactating cows with feed integrations in some periods. The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the quality of an artisanal cheese produced in extensive farms (11) in the different seasons of the year (summer, autumn-winter, and spring), with particular reference to those fatty acids that have relevance in determining positive effects on human health.

Abstract

The aim of this work was to evaluate, in the different production seasons of the year, the physico-chemical quality of an artisanal cheese traditionally obtained from autochthonous grazing cows, with particular reference to fatty acids (FA) of nutritional interest that play an important role in the risk or prevention of some human pathologies. For this purpose, cheeses were sampled in 11 farms, repeating the samplings in 3 different periods of the year (summer, autumn–winter, and spring) when the productive conditions of the pastures varied. The cheeses produced in the spring period, when cows ingest a greater amount of grazed forage, resulted in a more adequate composition of the main FA, which are recognized as having a health effect, such as α-linolenic, trans-vaccenic, rumenic, docosapentaenoic (DPA) and docosahexaenoic (DHA) acids. Branched-chain FA were found in greater quantities in spring cheeses, as well as in summer ones. The FA composition of cheeses produced in the different seasons was reflected in some nutritional indexes that also resulted as more suitable in cheeses obtained in the spring period. The positive effects induced on the FA profile of cheeses are presumably linked to the diet of autochthonous cows, which is mainly based on forage from natural pastures. Therefore, the results obtained confirm the benefits of grazing, which is able to guarantee the production of healthier cheeses for consumers.

1. Introduction

Food consumption has changed considerably in recent years. Food, in addition to being the essential source of energy for living, has become a lifestyle and also a means of interaction and distinction between people. The modern consumer is more informed, critical, exigent and, with increasing health trends, stimulated by the wrong consumption models of developed countries that have generated serious health problems (obesity, cardiovascular diseases, cancer). Furthermore, due to frequent food scandals, the modern consumer has less confidence in the large industrial agri-food companies that are often the cause.
Moreover, there is an increasing interest in sustainable food, coming from the short supply chain, the so-called “0 km” products, in order to reduce the environmental impact by mitigating the CO2 emissions resulting from long transport [1] and also satisfy a nostalgic exigency and the need for authenticity [2].
There is also a growing interest of consumers in animal products obtained in pasture-based systems where the main purpose is not the maximization of production, as occurs in intensive-housed systems, but mainly obtaining quality products that are safe and genuine, with the maximum respect for the environment and animal welfare [3].
Many indigenous breeds, characterized by the ability to exploit natural pastures, are reared in the Mediterranean areas where they contribute to maintaining livestock activity in marginal productive contexts; therefore, these breeds play an important role in using and enhancing resources that do not directly compete with human nutrition and also in economically sustaining the local rural communities and safeguarding the territory from environmental damage [4,5,6].
The valorization of autochthonous breeds must necessarily provide the improvement of profitability of their rearing, which, in the Mediterranean countries, is often based on the enhancement of dairy products. For this reason, the feeding regime of animals is increasingly taken into consideration, since it must support the nutritional needs of the animals to maintain adequate productivity but also respect the traditional forms of the extensive farming system that in almost all periods of the year is based on grazing spontaneous vegetable resources [7].
In the Mediterranean areas, however, it is known that pasture allowance is characterized by high quantitative and qualitative fluctuations during the different seasons of the year. The production of forage biomass is highest in spring when temperature and rain conditions are optimal, stops in summer when temperatures increase, then starts again for a short period in autumn, before stopping again in winter with lowering of temperatures [8]. Consequently, livestock farmers who operate in pasture-based systems empirically modulate the feed integration administered to animals according to their physiological stage, production level and pasture intake.
As has been widely demonstrated, the feeding of grazing ruminants plays a fundamental role in improving the nutritional and health properties of dairy products. In fact, the fresh forage, ingested by grazing animals, transfers into the milk compounds able to carry out beneficial actions for human health, thus making dairy products functional foods [9,10]. In the case of animal products, these compounds are mainly represented by some molecules belonging to the classes of polyphenols and vitamins, as well as some fatty acids (FA), including the polyunsaturated FA (PUFA) of the C18 series (linoleic and α-linolenic acids), the omega-3 PUFA, and the rumenic acid; this latter is the most represented isomer of conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), recognized to have antidiabetic, antiatherogenic and anticancer effects. In addition, branched chain FA, other than having a favorable effect on the incidence of cardiovascular diseases, show high anticancer activity [11,12,13,14,15].
Therefore, it is evident that in extensive farming systems the grazing of animals can be decisive to enhance milk and cheese production, and this would help to dispel the negative perception that an increasing segment of consumers has towards dairy products, often unjustly accused of causing health problems due to their acidic composition, unbalanced towards saturated and trans fatty acids [16].
The objective of this investigation was to characterize the Caciocavallo Palermitano cheese produced with raw milk of autochthonous Cinisara cows, using artisanal methods, in relation to the different season of the year and, consequently, to the different feeding regimes applied in extensive farming systems. The cheeses have been evaluated by determining the main physico-chemical characteristics and the FA profile, with particular reference to FA of nutritional interest that play an important role in the risk or prevention of cardiovascular disease and cancer.

2. Materials and Methods

Caciocavallo Palermitano is usually produced by traditional small farms located in marginal areas of the coastal and inland northwestern part of the province of Palermo (Sicily, Italy) [17]. Cheeses were collected from 11 farms considered representative of the production area of Caciocavallo Palermitano cheese. All the farms reared Cinisara cows, a Sicilian autochthonous breed described in previous papers [5,18]. The altimetric distribution of the farms was very variable, ranging between 20 and 1000 m above sea level. At the time of cheeses collection, general information about each farm was recorded, focusing mainly on the feeding of lactating cows (type and management of pastures, quantity and type of feed integration received). Farms resulted almost homogeneous with regard to the cows’ feeding regime. Indeed, all the farms were characterized by the availability of natural pastures with a high slope and the presence of outcropping rocks used by the cows with rotational grazing during the different periods. These natural pastures were characterized by a high diversity of floristic composition. Botanical characterization studies carried out in the areas under investigation (unpublished data) revealed the presence of more than 350 taxa and 50 families; the most represented botanical families were Fabaceae (21%), Asteraceae (17%), Poaceae (13%), Apiaceae (6%), Brassicaceae (5%) and Malvaceae (3%). Arable land plots were available in some farms and used to obtain forage stocks in the form of hay. The grazing stocking rate (cows/ha) was always less than 2, which is the threshold indicated in the European law that regulates organic livestock. In all the farms, the lactating cows had access to pasture for 24 h daily, except in the two moments of the daily milking when they received the feed supplements. Only in winter, in correspondence of some days characterized by adverse thermo-pluviometric events, the cows were not sent to pasture. In the area under investigation, minimum and maximum recorded temperatures were respectively of 6–12 °C in winter, 10–23 °C in autumn, 11–25 °C in spring and 19–31 °C in summer; the seasonally accumulated rainfalls were respectively 280, 205, 115, e 25 mm/m2 in winter, autumn, spring and summer.
The farms were characterized by an average herd size of 23 lactating cows, and all of them used the pasture, supplemented with hay and concentrate, depending on the season of year, the available grazing area and the relative available biomass. The used supplements consisted of commercial compound feed and mixed hay. All farms processed the milk in their own cheese factory employing the traditional procedure to obtain Caciocavallo Palermitano cheese, using wooden utensils [19]. The management of animals was in accordance with Animal Welfare and Good Clinical Practice (Directive 2010/63/EU) and had the approval of the local Bioethics Committee (protocol number: UNIPA-CLE-Prot. 84097).
The collection of cheeses was repeated in three different periods of the year, distinguishing:
-
Summer (Su), (July–September);
-
Autumn-winter (AW), (November–February);
-
Spring (March–May).
Since in spring the biomass on pasture was more abundant and five farms interrupted the administration of feed integration, collected cheeses were further divided into:
-
Cheeses obtained from the milk of animals exclusively fed with herbage of pasture (SpG);
-
Cheeses obtained from animals fed on pasture with additions of hay and concentrate (SpI).
In the farms, the collected Caciocavallo Palermitano cheeses were forms of about 10 kg, corresponding to the average standard weight of the product found on the market.
The collected cheeses were ripened up to 120 days in controlled conditions at a temperature of 16 °C and a constant humidity of 85%. The cheeses were sampled at 30, 60 and 120 days of ripening. For sampling, an aliquot of about 3 kg was removed from each cheese and used for the analyses, while the remaining part was sealed with liquid paraffin for food use to continue maturation.
The number of cheese samples were analyzed and the feeding supplements provided to the cows in the different seasons are summarized in Table 1. Considering the 11 farms investigated, only in two of them, due to the low quantity of milk produced by the few lactating cows in the period, it was not possible to collect the summer and autumn–winter samples. Thus, instead of the 33 planned, in total, 29 cheeses were collected. Each cheese sample was evaluated in 3 ripening periods, therefore 87 analyzes were carried out.
For each cheese sample, dry matter (DM), protein (N × 6.38), fat, and ash content were determined in accordance with International Dairy Federation (IDF) standards (4A:1982 [20], 25:1964 [21], 5B:1986 [22], and 27:1964 [23], respectively). Moreover, NaCl using the IDF procedure (17A:1972; [24]), and soluble nitrogen (N) value on an aqueous filtrate, using the Kjeldahl method [25], were evaluated.
The color of cheese was determined by the Minolta Chroma Meter (CR-300; Minolta, Osaka, Japan) using illuminant C. Outcomes are referred to as lightness (L*), redness (a*), and yellowness (b*), in accordance with the International Commission on Illumination (CIE) L*a*b* system. Hardness of cheese was expressed as maximum resistance to compression (compressive stress, N/mm2) determined using the Instron 5564 tester (Instron, Trezzano sul Naviglio, Milano, Italy).
The FA composition was determined in lyophilized cheese samples (100 mg) directly methylated with 2 mL of 0.5 M NaOCH3 at 50 °C for 15 min, followed by 1 mL of 5% HCl in methanol at 50 °C for 15 min [26].
Fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs) were recuperated in hexane (1.5 mL). One microliter of each sample was inoculated by an autosampler into an HP 6890 gas chromatography system equipped with a flame-ionization detector (Agilent Technologies Inc., Santa Clara, CA, the United States). FAMEs of samples were split using a 100-m length, 0.25-mm i.d., 0.25-μm capillary column (CP-Sil 88; Chrompack, Middelburg, the Netherlands). The injector temperature was maintained at 255 °C and the detector temperature was maintained at 250 °C, with an H2 flow of 40 mL/min, air current of 400 mL/min, and a constant He flux of 45 mL/min. The preliminary oven temperature was maintained at 70 °C for 1 min, amplified at 5 °C/min to 100 °C, kept for 2 min, amplified at 10 °C/min to 175 °C, kept for 40 min, and to conclude amplified at 5 °C/min to an ultimate temperature of 225 °C and kept for 45 min. Helium, with pressure of 158.6 kPa and a flux of 0.7 mL/min (linear velocity of 14 cm/s), was utilized as the carrier gas. FAMEs hexane mix solution (Nu-Chek Prep Inc., Elysian, MN) was utilized to classify all FA. CLA isomers were identified using a commercial blend of cis- and trans 9,11- and 10,12-octadecadienoic acid methyl esters (Sigma-Aldrich, Milano, Italy). To identify some odd and branched chain fatty acids the individual standards of C15:0 iso, C15:0 anteiso, C17:0 iso, and C17:0 anteiso (Larodan Fine Chemicals AB, Malmö, Sweden) were used. To calculate total FA, C23:0 (Sigma-Aldrich) was added to every sample (4 mg/g of lyophilized cheese) as the internal standard.
The hypercholesterolemic saturated FA (HSFA, [27]), atherogenic index (AI, [28]), and thrombogenic index (TI, [29]) were calculated according to following formulas:
HSFA = C12:0 + 4 × C14:0 + C16:0;
AI = [(4×C14:0) + C16:0 + C18:0]/∑MUFA + ∑PUFAn6 + ∑PUFAn3];
TI = (C14:0 + C16:0 + C18:0)/(0.5 × MUFA + 0.5 × n6 PUFA + 3 × n3 PUFA + n3/n6).
The health-promoting index (HPI) was assessed with the formula proposed by Chen et al. [30]:
HPI = (n3 PUFA + n6 PUFA + MUFA)/(C12:0 + 4 × C14:0 + C16:0).
Considering the effects exerted by different FA on the two main causes of human mortality in industrialized countries, cardiovascular diseases and cancer, simplified indexes proposed by Renna et al. [31] were used, with the aim of verifying the level of risk and prevention for the mentioned diseases.
The simplified indexes used were the following:
increased risk of onset of cardiovascular diseases = CVD-R = [C12: 0 + C14: 0 + C16: 0 + Σ trans-(C18: 2c9t11 + C18: 1t11)];
prevention of cardiovascular diseases = CVD-P = [C18: 1t11 + C18: 1c9 + C18: 2c9t11 + C18: 2n6 + Σ n3];
increased risk of onset of cancer diseases = C-R = [C14: 0 + C16: 0 + Σ n6];
cancer disease prevention = C-P = [C4: 0 + C15iso + C16iso + C18: 2c9t11 + C18: 1t11 + Σ n3].
To make them comparable with the values obtained by Renna et al. [31], the content of FA used were expressed in g/100 g of cheese.
The general impact of the FA composition on the two diseases was further estimated by the ratios CVD-R/CVD-P and C-R/C-P; the greater the index, the higher the impact on CVD and cancer.
Physicochemical parameters and FA profiles of cheeses were analyzed statistically using the SAS 9.2 software [32]. The fixed effects of production season (PS-(Su, AW, SpG, SpI)), ripening time (RT-(30, 60, 120 days)) and the interaction PS × RT were assessed by a MIXED model including the farm (11 levels) as a random effect. Since the effects of RT and MS × RT were not significant, the relative means of FA were not reported in the tables. Tukey’s test was used to compare the means when the effects were significant (p < 0.01 and p < 0.05).

3. Results and Discussion

Table 2 shows the physico-chemical parameters of cheeses sampled during different production seasons and at three ripening times.
Production season did not interfere with the chemical composition of cheese, which instead was influenced, as expected, by ripening time.
Indeed, passing from 30 to 120 days of aging, due to the loss of water, dry matter of cheese increased (p < 0.01) and, consequently, the NaCl content increased (p < 0.01), as reported in previous works for other cheeses in which moisture was indirectly connected to salt content [33,34,35,36].
The soluble nitrogen of the cheese was also influenced by ripening time (p < 0.01). It is well-known that the level of nitrogenous soluble compounds in cheeses derived from microbial proteolysis increases during aging and is used as an index of proteolysis and maturity of cheese [37]. The results of cheese hardness, as expected, confirmed that this parameter increases during storage (p < 0.01). Other authors, studying textural parameters of Caciocavallo cheese during ripening, observed that the hardness rises [6,38].
Color parameters (L*, a* and b*) of analyzed cheeses, unlike what other authors found, were not influenced by ripening time; nevertheless, an increasing trend can be observed with slight differences that did not reach a significant level, probably due to the limited duration of ripening time. Instead, color was greatly influenced by the production season. The cheeses obtained during the spring period, when the cows used more green forage at pasture, were less luminous (L*, p < 0.01) and with higher red (a*, p < 0.01) and yellow (b*, p < 0.01) indexes. Thus, this more intense tonality of red and yellow in the cheeses obtained in spring, when the cows were fed on pasture, as also found by other authors, is certainly the result of the higher content of carotenoids in the fresh forage ingested by grazing cows, which is transferred to milk and cheeses [39,40].
Table 3 shows the FA composition of cheeses sampled during different production seasons and analyzed at diverse ripening times. Overall, especially considering the FA that have an impact on human health, the ripening times did not significantly influence any of the FA examined, according to what was reported in the literature, while a significant influence was exerted by the production season.
Short and medium chain FA (C:4–C:14) were higher (p < 0.01) in spring and winter periods, when the animals were fed with green pasture and feed integration and probably received rations more suitable to their needs. This condition allowed them to achieve an adequate energy status, which led to a lower recourse to lipid reserves; on the contrary, in summer, due to the desiccation of grazing resources and in the presence of scarce feed integrations, a negative energy status often occurs in cows of autochthonous breeds reared in traditional farms. This trend, also found by other authors [41], seems to be related to the change in the diet of cows; in fact, in the summer season, the worsening pastures quality probably caused a decrease in the de novo synthesis of short and medium chain FA in the udder [42,43], and seems to have favored long-chain FA such as oleic acid, which is normally related with lipomobilization by animals [44]. Among the short-chain FA, the only one that has an impact on human health is butyric acid (C:4), the content of which does not depend on animal feeding [45]; butyric acid is recognized to have an important anticarcinogenic effect, especially in the large intestine, where it even exerts a chemotherapeutic effect in the form in which it is found in milk, i.e., a triglyceride with three molecules of butyric acid (tributyrin) [46,47].
The odd and branched chain FA content was also affected (p < 0.01) by the production season (Table 3). This class of FA, neglected in the past due to their low content compared to total FA, has recently been re-evaluated by the scientific community due to their intense beneficial activity on human health. As reported in the literature [15], these FA are synthesized de novo particularly by rumen cellulolytic bacteria and incorporated in their cellular lipid membrane, while they are little represented in rumen amylolytic bacteria; therefore, their variation in milk and cheese reflects the variations of rumen bacterial population [48]. The sampled cheeses showed a decrease in C13:0 iso, C13:0 anteiso, C14:0 iso, C15:0 anteiso, C16 iso, C17 anteiso, and C17:0 in winter, probably due to the change in the quality of the animals’ diet, which was richer in starch from concentrate and low in NDF fiber, and especially cellulose, from forage. These results are in line with those obtained in other experiments carried out with sheep, goats and cows where the level of branched chain FA was higher with the increase in the amount of forage in the ration [49,50,51]. On the whole, the total branched chain FA showed higher values both in cheeses produced in spring and in summer, when the animals benefited from a greater quantity of fiber from forage in the ration.
The cheese production season also had a significant influence on other FA with beneficial action on health, such as C18:3 n3 (α-linolenic acid, ALA), C18:2 c9t11 (rumenic acid, RA), C18:2 t11c15 (vaccelenic acid, VNA), and C18:1 t11 (trans vaccenic acid, TVA), which resulted in greater quantities in spring, when, in the extensive farming system used for autochthonous cow breeds, green forages of pasture are consumed in greater quantities than other periods of the year, as also found by other authors [2,10].
As widely found in the literature, the main effect of grazing on FA composition of dairy products is given by the high content of ALA in pasture forages, which is partially biohydrogenated in the rumen in TVA and partially absorbed directly in the animal’s intestine and transferred in the milk [52]. In addition, in the mammary gland, a significant amount of VA is converted into RA, through the action of the stearoyl-CoA desaturase enzyme, producing most of the RA found in milk and therefore in cheeses. Moreover, it is also possible, as hypothesized by Nudda et al. [53], that the ingestion of green forages causes the development of some bacterial species in the rumen responsible for the production of RA or responsible for the interruption of further transformation of TVA into stearic acid (C18:0), that is the final product of the ruminal biohydrogenation of ALA.
Furthermore, this investigation allowed to observe, in agreement with other authors [41,53,54], that the ALA content in cheeses decreased (p < 0.01) passing from spring to summer, in line with the decreasing availability and the advancement of the maturity of the pasture forages.
Moreover, the SpG cheeses obtained in spring from animals fed exclusively on pasture showed significantly higher values (p < 0.05) of TVA and RA, even compared to the spring SpI cheeses obtained from animals that received feed integration in addition to grazing. This was probably due to the so-called “substitution effect” occurring in cows that receive dietary supplementation, which involves a lower intake of green forage from pasture, considered the main source of ALA and, consequently, of the related FA with the health effect produced by ruminal biohydrogenation (TVA, VNA and RA) [54,55,56].
The cheeses produced in the spring period (Table 3), when the cows consumed green forage, were also distinguished by the higher content of docosapentaenoic (DPA) and docosahexaenoic (DHA) acids, important long-chain omega-3 FA, which play an essential role in some human biological processes. The beneficial effects of human intake of DHA, which can also be produced directly by the human organism starting from ALA, as well as of DPA, have been widely demonstrated in the literature [57,58].
Similar results, with higher levels of these important essential FA on cheeses obtained when the animals were fed mainly on pasture, were found in other studies focusing on dairy products from cows [6], sheep [59] and goats [60].
Table 4 shows the main classes of FA that have nutritional and health significance for humans. The production season of cheeses had a notable impact on some categories of FA. The cheeses produced in spring, SpG and SpI, showed a more favorable composition for human health because they contained a higher content of PUFA (p < 0.01), total CLA (p < 0.01), and total omega-3 PUFA (p < 0.01), in accordance with what is reported in the literature in the case of animals fed with a prevalent amount of grazed forage in the ration [10,52,61]. Grazing also had favorable effects on the PUFA/SFA (p < 0.01) and omega-6/omega-3 ratios (p < 0.05); in particular, the latter always resulted below the threshold of 5 indicated by the FAO/WHO [62] and in line with those obtained by Altamonte et al. [63] on cheeses produced in spring.
Starting from the FA composition of cheeses, some health indexes were also calculated (Table 4). Significant differences (p < 0.01) were found for TI, which was better in cheeses SpG and SpI produced in spring, with grazing animals. The TI indicates the tendency of some specific FA to form clots in the blood vessels, so the consumption of cheeses with a lower TI decreases the incidence of cardiovascular disease; in all analyzed cheeses, the TI index resulted lower than those obtained in other experiments carried out on Friesian cows [64].
Considering the effects of FA on the main diseases causing human mortality in developed countries, cardiovascular diseases (CVD) and cancer (C), other simplified indexes were also calculated as proposed by Renna et al. [31] (Table 4).
Based on the FA composition of the cheeses analyzed, also in this case the cheeses produced in spring from grazing animals showed more adequate values for the cancer prevention (C-P) index and, therefore, on the cancer risk/cancer prevention (CR/CP) ratio. The CP and CR/CP indexes found in the cheeses showed better values than those of cheeses analyzed in different farming conditions by Renna et al. [31], whereas displayed the same trend observed for cheeses obtained with milk from grazing animals.

4. Conclusions

The most interesting results of this investigation, aimed to evaluate cheeses produced in extensive farms of autochthonous cows fed with pasture-based diets, concerned the effect of the production season on cheese FA composition and, consequently, on the nutritional indexes calculated to establish the healthiness of the cheese fat.
The cheeses produced in the spring period, when the cows consumed diets with a greater amount of grazed fresh forage, resulted in a more adequate composition of the main FA, which are recognized to have a health effect, such as α-linolenic, trans vaccenic, rumenic, DPA and DHA. Branched-chain FA were found in greater quantity in spring cheeses, as well as in summer, when the intake of fiber from forage by grazing cows increases. The differences in FA composition of cheeses due to the different production season influenced some nutritional indexes, such as thrombogenic index, the cancer prevention index and the cancer risk/cancer prevention ratio, which in this case produces more suitable results in the cheeses obtained in the spring period.
The positive effects induced by the spring season on the FA profile of cheeses are presumably linked to the diet of autochthonous cows, which is mainly based on fresh forage from natural pastures. Therefore, the results obtained confirm the benefits of grazing, which, in addition to being a valid tool for maintaining adequate sustainability of livestock, using resources not directly consumable by humans and guaranteeing important ecosystem services, is able to ensure the production of healthier foods to be made available for consumers who are increasingly attentive to these aspects.
The results of this research represent a contribution to enhancing the traditional typical cheeses so that they can acquire the right remuneration on the market, as well as to incentivize the farmers to maintain the practice of grazing animals, even in part-time form.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, A.D.G. and A.B.; methodology, A.D.G. and A.B.; formal analysis, G.M. and M.P.; investigation, A.D.G., G.M. and M.A.; data curation, A.D.G. and A.B.; writing—original draft preparation, A.D.G. and A.B.; writing—review and editing, A.D.G., A.B., M.A., G.M. and M.P.; supervision, A.B.; funding acquisition, A.B. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by Assessorato Agricoltura e Foreste della Regione Siciliana (Palermo, Italy), project “Progetto per lo sviluppo dell’agricoltura biologica in Sicilia”, sub-project “Il benessere animale negli allevamenti biologici di bovine da latte: valutazione e conseguenze sulla qualità dei prodotti lattiero caseari”; principal investigator Prof. Adriana Bonanno.

Institutional Review Board Statement

The animal study protocol was approved by the Bioethics Committee of the University of Palermo (protocol code UNIPA-CLE 84907).

Data Availability Statement

All data included in this study are available upon request by contacting the corresponding author.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Quaranta, G.; Citro, E.; Salvia, R. Economic and social sustainable synergies to promote innovations in rural tourism and local development. Sustainability 2016, 8, 668. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  2. Serrapica, F.; Masucci, F.; Di Francia, A.; Napolitano, F.; Braghieri, A.; Esposito, G.; Romano, R. Seasonal variation of chemical composition, fatty acid profile, and sensory properties of a mountain pecorino cheese. Foods 2020, 9, 1091. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  3. Cabiddu, A.; Delgadillo-Puga, C.; Decandia, M.; Molle, G. Extensive ruminant production systems and milk quality with emphasis on unsaturated fatty acids, volatile compounds, antioxidant protection degree and phenol content. Animals 2019, 9, 771. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  4. Dumont, B.; Groot, J.C.J.; Tichit, M. Review: Make ruminants green again—How can sustainable intensification and agroecology converge for a better future? Animal 2018, 12, s210–s219. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  5. Di Gregorio, P.; Di Grigoli, A.; Di Trana, A.; Alabiso, M.; Maniaci, G.; Rando, A.; Valluzzi, C.; Finizio, D.; Bonanno, A. Effects of different genotypes at the CSN3 and LGB loci on milk and cheese-making characteristics of the bovine Cinisara breed. Int. Dairy J. 2017, 71, 1–5. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Bonanno, A.; Tornambè, G.; Bellina, V.; De Pasquale, C.; Mazza, F.; Maniaci, G.; Di Grigoli, A. Effect of farming system and cheesemaking technology on the physicochemical characteristics, fatty acid profile, and sensory properties of Caciocavallo Palermitano cheese. J. Dairy Sci. 2013, 96, 710–724. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Sabia, E.; Gauly, M.; Napolitano, F.; Serrapica, F.; Cifuni, G.F.; Claps, S. Dairy sheep carbon footprint and ReCiPe end-point study. Small Rumin. Res. 2020, 185, 106085. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Scocco, P.; Piermarteri, K.; Malfatti, A.; Tardella, F.M.; Catorci, A. Increase of drought stress negatively affects the sustainability of extensive sheep farming in sub-Mediterranean climate. J. Arid. Environ. 2016, 128, 50–58. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Martin, B.; Hurtaud, C.; Graulet, B.; Ferlay, A.; Chilliard, Y.; Coulon, J.B. Grass and the nutritional and organoleptic qualities of dairy products. Fourrages 2009, 199, 291–310. [Google Scholar]
  10. Nudda, A.; Battacone, G.; Neto, O.B.; Cannas, A.; Francesconi, A.H.D.; Atzori, A.; Pulina, G. Feeding strategies to design the fatty acid profile of sheep milk and cheese. Rev. Bras. Zootec. 2014, 43, 445–456. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  11. Di Grigoli, A.; Di Trana, A.; Alabiso, M.; Maniaci, G.; Giorgio, D.; Bonanno, A. Effects of grazing on the behaviour, oxidative and immune status, and production of organic dairy cows. Animals 2019, 9, 371. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  12. Bonanno, A.; Di Grigoli, A.; Todaro, M.; Alabiso, M.; Vitale, F.; Di Trana, A.; Giorgio, D.; Settanni, L.; Gaglio, R.; Laddomada, B.; et al. Improvement of oxidative status, milk and cheese production, and food sustainability indexes by addition of durum wheat bran to dairy cows’ diet. Animals 2019, 9, 698. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  13. Parodi, P.W. Conjugated linoleic acid and other anticarcinogenic agents of bovine milk. J. Dairy Sci. 1999, 82, 1339–1349. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Banni, S.; Murru, E.; Angioni, E.; Carta, G.; Melis, M.P. Conjugated linoleic acid isomers (CLA): Good for everything? Sci. Aliment. 2002, 22, 371–380. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Vlaeminck, B.; Fievez, V.; Cabrata, A.R.J.; Fonseca, A.J.M.; Dewhurst, R.J. Factors affecting odd-and branched-chain fatty acids in milk: A review. Anim. Feed Sci. Technol. 2006, 131, 389–417. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Barendse, W. Should animal fats be back on the table? A critical review of the human health effects of animal fat. Anim. Prod. Sci. 2014, 54, 831–855. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  17. Di Grigoli, A.; Francesca, N.; Gaglio, R.; Guarrasi, V.; Moschetti, M.; Scatassa, M.L.; Settanni, L.; Bonanno, A. The influence of the wooden equipment employed for cheese manufacture on the characteristics of a traditional stretched cheese during ripening. Food Microbiol. 2015, 46, 81–91. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  18. Maniaci, G.; Alabiso, M.; Francesca, N.; Giosuè, C.; Di Grigoli, A.; Corona, O.; Cardamone, C.; Graci, G.; Portolano, B.; Bonanno, A. Bresaola made from Cinisara cattle: Effect of muscle type and animal category on physicochemical and sensory traits. CyTA–J. Food 2020, 18, 383–391. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Guarrasi, V.; Sannino, C.; Moschetti, M.; Bonanno, A.; Di Grigoli, A.; Settanni, L. The individual contribution of starter and non-starter lactic acid bacteria to the volatile organic compound composition of Caciocavallo Palermitano cheese. Int. J. Food Microbiol. 2017, 259, 35–42. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Standard FIL-IDF 4A:1982; Cheese and Processed Cheese Product. Determination of the Total solids Content. International Dairy Federation: Brussels, Belgium, 1982.
  21. Standard FIL-IDF 25:1964; Determination of the Protein Content of Processed Cheese Products. International Dairy Federation: Brussels, Belgium, 1964.
  22. Standard FIL-IDF 5B:1986; Cheese and Processed Cheese Product. Determination of Fat Content-Gravimetric Method (Reference Method). International Dairy Federation: Brussels, Belgium, 1986.
  23. Standard FIL-IDF 27:1964; Determination of the Ash Content of Processed Cheese Products. International Dairy Federation: Brussels, Belgium, 1964.
  24. Standard FIL-IDF 17A:1972; Cheese-Determination of Chloride Content. International Dairy Federation: Brussels, Belgium, 1972.
  25. MAF (Ministero dell’Agricoltura e delle Foreste). Decreto ministeriale 21/4/1986. Approvazione dei metodi ufficiali di analisi per i formaggi (Italian official methods of cheeses analysis). Supplemento Ordinario alla Gazzetta Ufficiale della Repubblica Italiana (GURI), 2 October 1986, p. 15; no. 229.
  26. Loor, J.J.; Herbein, J.H.; Polan, C.E. Trans18:1 and 18:2 isomers in blood plasma and milk fat of grazing cows fed a grain supplement containing solvent-extracted or mechanically extracted soybean meal. J. Dairy Sci. 2002, 85, 1197–1207. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Barlowska, J.; Pastuszka, R.; Rysiak, A.; Król, J.; Brodziak, A.; Kedzierska-Matysek, M.; Wolanciuk, A.; Litwinczuk, Z. Physicochemical and sensory properties of goat cheeses and their fatty acid profile in relation to the geographic region of production. Int. J. Dairy Technol. 2018, 70, 699–708. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Batista, A.L.D.; Silva, R.; Cappato, L.P.; Ferreira, M.V.S.; Nascimento, K.O.; Schmiele, M.; Esmerino, E.A.; Balthazar, C.F.; Silva, H.L.A.; Moraes, J.; et al. Developing a symbiotic fermented milk using probiotic bacteria and organic green banana flour. J. Funct. Foods 2017, 38, 242–250. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  29. Ulbricht, T.L.V.; Southgate, D.A.T. Coronary heart disease: Seven dietary factors. Lancet 1991, 338, 985–992. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Chen, S.; Bobe, G.; Zimmerman, S.; Hammond, E.G.; Luhman, C.M.; Boylston, T.D.; Freeman, A.E.; Beitz, D.C. Physical and sensory properties of dairy products from cows with various milk fatty acid compositions. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2004, 52, 3422–3428. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  31. Renna, M.; Lussiana, C.; Malfatto, W.; Battaglini, L.M. PDO cheeses from Piedmont (NW Italy): Amount and variability of fatty acids of nutritional interest. Sci. Tec. Latt.-Casearia 2015, 66, 27–37. [Google Scholar]
  32. SAS. User’s Guide 9.0; SAS Institute: Cary, NC, USA, 2010. [Google Scholar]
  33. Guineee, T.P. Salting and the role of salt in cheese. Int. J. Dairy Technol. 2003, 57, 99–109. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Simal, S.; Sanchez, E.S.; Bon, J.; Femenia, A.; Rossell, C. Water and salt diffusion during cheese ripening: Effect of the external and internal resistances to mass transfer. J. Food Eng. 2001, 48, 269–275. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Gobbetti, M.; Morea, M.; Baruzzi, F.; Corbo, M.R.; Matarante, A.; Considine, T.; Cagno, R.D.; Guinee, T.P.; Fox, P.F. Microbiological, compositional, biochemical and textural characterization of Caciocavallo Pugliese cheese during ripening. Int. Dairy J. 2002, 12, 511–523. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  36. Fallico, V.; McSweeney, P.L.H.; Siebert, K.J.; Horne, J.; Carpino, S.; Licitra, G. Chemometric analysis of proteolysis during ripening of Ragusano cheese. J. Dairy Sci. 2004, 87, 3138–3152. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Wallace, J.M.; Fox, P.F. Rapid spectrophotometric and fluorometric methods for monitoring nitrogenous (proteinaceous) compounds in cheese and cheese fractions: A review. Food Chemistry 1998, 62, 217–224. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Carpino, S.; Horne, J.; Melilli, C.; Licitra, G.; Barbano, D.M.; Van Soest, P.J. Contribution of native pasture to the sensory properties of Ragusano cheese. J. Dairy Sci. 2004, 87, 308–315. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  39. Coppa, M.; Verdier-Metz, I.; Ferlay, A.; Pradel, P.; Didienne, R.; Farruggia, A.; Montel, M.C.; Martin, B. Effect of different grazing systems on upland pastures compared with hay diet on cheese sensory properties evaluated at different ripening times. Int. Dairy J. 2011, 21, 815–822. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  40. Esposito, G.; Masucci, F.; Napolitano, F.; Braghieri, A.; Romano, R.; Manzo, N.; Di Francia, A. Fatty acid and sensory profiles of Caciocavallo cheese as affected by management system. J. Dairy Sci. 2014, 97, 1918–1928. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  41. Addis, M.; Fiori, M.; Riu, G.C.; Pes, M.; Salvatore, E.; Pirisi, A. Physico-chemical characteristics and acidic profile of PDO Pecorino Romano cheese: Seasonal variation. Small Rumin. Res. 2015, 126, 73–79. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  42. Chilliard, Y.; Ferlay, A.; Doreau, M. Effect of different types of forages, animal fat or marine oils in cow’s diet on milk fat secretion and composition, especially conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) and polyunsaturated fatty acids. Livest. Prod. Sci. 2001, 70, 31–48. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  43. Chilliard, Y.; Glasser, F.; Ferlay, A.; Bernard, L.; Rouel, J.; Doreau, M. Diet, rumen biohydrogenation and nutritional quality of cow and goat milk fat. Eur. J. Lipid Sci. Technol. 2007, 109, 828–855. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  44. Chilliard, Y.; Ferlay, A.; Rouel, J.; Lamberet, G. A review of nutritional and physiological factors affecting goat milk synthesis and lipolysis. J. Dairy Sci. 2003, 86, 1751–1770. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  45. Bailoni, L.; Buccioni, A.; Cattani, M.; Minieri, S.; Infascelli, F.; Tudisco, R. I fattori di variazione delle caratteristiche chimico-nutrizionali del latte e dei prodotti lattiero-caseari. Effetto della dieta sul profilo in acidi grassi. In Alimenti di Origine Animale e Salute; Mele, M., Pulina, G., Eds.; Franco Angeli: Milan, Italy, 2016; Chapter 5.3.3; pp. 203–211. [Google Scholar]
  46. Parodi, P.W. Milk fat in human nutrition. Aust. J. Dairy Technol. 2004, 59, 3–58. [Google Scholar]
  47. Belobrajdic, D.P.; McIntosh, G.H. Dietary butyrate inhibits NMU-induced mammary cancer in rats. Nutr. Cancer 2000, 36, 217–223. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  48. Fievez, V.; Colman, E.; Castro-Montoya, J.M.; Stefanov, I.; Vlaeminck, B. Milk odd- and branched-chain fatty acids as biomarkers of rumen function—An update. Anim. Feed Sci. Technol. 2012, 172, 51–65. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  49. Bas, P.; Archimède, H.; Rouzeau, A.; Sauvant, D. Fatty acid composition of mixed-rumen bacteria: Effect of concentration and type of forage. J. Dairy Sci. 2003, 86, 2940–2948. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  50. Borreani, G.; Coppa, M.; Revello-Chion, A.; Comino, L.; Giaccone, D.; Ferlay, A.; Tabacco, E. Effect of different feeding strategies in intensive dairy farming systems on milk fatty acid profiles, and implications on feeding costs in Italy. J. Dairy Sci. 2013, 96, 6840–6855. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  51. Nudda, A.; Correddu, F.; Cesarani, A.; Pulina, G.; Battacone, G. Functional odd- and branched-chain fatty acid in sheep and goat milk and cheeses. Dairy 2021, 2, 79–89. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  52. Mele, M. Designing milk fat to improve healthfulness and functional properties of dairy products: From feeding strategies to a genetic approach. Ital. J. Anim. Sci. 2009, 8, 365–374. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  53. Nudda, A.; McGuire, M.A.; Battacone, G.; Pulina, G. Seasonal variation in conjugated linoleic acid and vaccenic acid in milk fat of sheep and its transfer to cheese and ricotta. J. Dairy Sci. 2005, 88, 1311–1319. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  54. Dewhurst, R.J.; Shingfield, K.J.; Lee, M.R.F.; Scollan, N.D. Increasing the concentrations of beneficial polyunsaturated fatty acids in milk produced by dairy cows in high-forage systems. Anim. Feed Sci. Technol. 2006, 131, 168–206. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  55. Bargo, F.; Delahoy, J.E.; Schroeder, G.F.; Muller, L.D. Milk fatty acid composition of dairy cows grazing at two pasture allowances and supplemented with different level and sources of concentrate. Anim. Feed Sci. Technol. 2006, 125, 17–31. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  56. Elgersma, A.; Tamminga, S.; Ellen, G. Modifying milk composition through forage. Anim. Feed Sci. Technol. 2006, 131, 207–225. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  57. Rimm, E.B.; Appel, L.J.; Chiuve, S.E.; Djoussé, L.; Engler, M.B.; Kris-Etherton, P.M.; Mozaarian, D.; Siscovick, D.S.; Lichtenstein, A.H. Seafood long-chain n3 polyunsaturated fatty acids and cardiovascular disease: A science advisory from the American Heart Association. Circulation 2018, 138, 35–47. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  58. Guo, X.F.; Sinclair, A.J.; Kaur, G.; Li, D. Differential effects of EPA, DPA and DHA on cardio-metabolic risk factors in high-fat diet fed mice. Prostaglandins Leukot. Essent. Fatty Acids 2018, 136, 47–55. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  59. Abilleira, E.; Collomb, M.; Schlichtherle-Cerny, H.; Virto, M.; de Renobales, M.; Barron, L.J. Winter/spring changes in fatty acid composition of farmhouse Idiazabal cheese due to different flock management systems. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2009, 57, 4746–4753. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  60. Delgado-Pertíñez, M.; Gutiérrez-Peña, R.; Mena, Y.; Fernández-Cabanás, V.M.; Laberye, D. Milk production, fatty acid composition and vitamin E content of Payoya goats according to grazing level in summer on Mediterranean shrublands. Small Rumin. Res. 2013, 114, 167–175. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  61. Maniaci, G.; Di Grigoli, A.; Bonanno, A.; Giosuè, C.; Ilardi, V.; Alabiso, M. Fatty acids as biomarkers of the production season of Caciocavallo Palermitano cheese. Animals 2021, 11, 2675. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  62. FAO/WHO. Fats and Oils in Human Nutrition; Report of a Joint FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of United Nations) and WHO (World Health Organization) Experts Consultation; FAO: Rome, Italy, 1994. [Google Scholar]
  63. Altomonte, I.; Conte, G.; Serra, A.; Mele, M.; Cannizzo, L.; Salari, F.; Martini, M. Nutritional characteristics and volatile components of sheep milk products during two grazing seasons. Small Rum. Res. 2019, 180, 41–49. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  64. Vargas-Bello-Pérez, E.; Íñiguez-González, G.; Fehrmann-Cartes, K.; Toro-Mujica, P.; Garnsworthy, P.C. Influence of fish oil alone or in combination with hydrogenated palm oil on sensory characteristics and fatty acid composition of bovine cheese. Anim. Feed Sci. Technol. 2015, 205, 60–68. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Table 1. Cheese samples analyzed and feeding supplements offered to the cows in the different seasons.
Table 1. Cheese samples analyzed and feeding supplements offered to the cows in the different seasons.
Measure UnitRipening (Days)Summer (Su)Autumn-Winter (AW)Spring 1 (SpG)Spring 2 (SpI)
Samplesn.309956
609956
1209956
Concentratekg/day per head 3.23.603.4
Haykg/day per head 1.93.201.9
1 SpG = cheeses obtained from milk of animals that ingested exclusively herbage of pasture. 2 SpI = cheeses obtained from animals that used pasture with additions of hay and concentrate.
Table 2. Effect of production season and ripening time on chemical composition, hardness, and colorimetric parameters of cheeses.
Table 2. Effect of production season and ripening time on chemical composition, hardness, and colorimetric parameters of cheeses.
Ripening TimeProduction Season (PS) Significance (p Value)
(RT)Summer
(Su)
Autumn
Winter (AW)
Spring 1 (SpG)Spring 2
(SpI)
pSE 3PSRTPS × RT
Dry matter (DM),
%
30 d61.45 B62.2059.7061.1062.801.3900.06420.00010.9913
60 d62.31 B63.3061.0061.5063.50
120 d66.94 A67.7064.4065.1066.50
Total 64.2061.7162.5564.28
Protein,
% DM
30 d46.7046.5047.3046.9046.000.9520.25240.30250.9865
60 d47.4648.3048.2047.0046.30
120 d46.3846.4046.9046.6045.70
Total 47.0447.4946.8346.02
Fat,
% DM
30 d41.2241.0039.9041.7042.201.2560.55140.47480.5526
60 d40.2239.7041.5039.7040.10
120 d40.2338.7041.5040.0040.70
Total 39.7940.9540.4741.02
Ash,
% DM
30 d6.977.546.906.207.220.4310.06950.36410.9928
60 d6.807.596.946.176.80
120 d7.228.046.976.607.31
Total 7.726.846.327.11
NaCl,
g/100 g
30 d2.21 B2.272.151.652.570.3870.07450.01560.8239
60 d2.30 B2.382.271.642.65
120 d2.89 A3.402.812.202.82
Total 2.672.401.822.71
Soluble N
% DM
30 d0.51 Bc0.540.480.480.550.0650.12780.00010.9902
60 d0.59 ABb0.640.520.590.64
120 d0.69 Aa0.710.650.720.73
Total 0.630.550.600.64
Hardness,
N (mm2)−1
30 d0.52 Bc0.530.560.470.520.0860.08490.00010.9218
60 d0.63 ABb0.590.700.550.68
120 d0.77 Aa0.730.850.630.87
Total 0.620.710.550.69
L*, lightness30 d83.0585.0085.0082.4279.701.7810.00110.16840.7260
60 d80.4283.7084.1077.2076.70
120 d81.4882.1083.5079.9080.50
Total 83.60 A84.21 A79.83 B78.96 B
a*, redness30 d−4.18−4.96−4.18−3.89−3.680.2430.00010.96120.4627
60 d−4.19−4.58−4.56−4.13−3.49
120 d−4.14−4.71−4.24−3.73−3.90
Total −4.75 A−4.33 A−3.92 B−3.69 B
b*, yellowness30 d24.1819.5024.4027.8025.001.2580.00010.55350.8646
60 d24.8320.4025.0026.9026.90
120 d25.1320.7026.2026.2027.40
Total 20.23 B25.20 A26.99 A26.43 A
1 SpG = cheeses obtained from milk of animals that ingested exclusively herbage of pasture. 2 SpI = cheeses obtained from animals that used pasture with additions of hay and concentrate. 3 pSE, pooled standard error. A, B, C Values in the same row with different superscripts differ significantly (p < 0.01). A, B, C values in the same column with different superscripts differ significantly (p < 0.01) while a, b, c differ significantly (p < 0.05).
Table 3. Fatty acid composition (g/100 g FA) of cheese produced in different seasons.
Table 3. Fatty acid composition (g/100 g FA) of cheese produced in different seasons.
Production Season (PS) Significance (p Value)
Summer
(Su)
Autumn Winter (AW)Spring 1
(SpG)
Spring 2
(SpI)
pSE 3PSRTPS × RT
C 4:02.88 B3.39 A3.37 A3.36 A0.1420.00010.63470.0831
C 6:01.80 B2.23 A2.20 A2.23 A0.0940.00010.73490.9425
C 7:00.13 B0.12 B0.20 A0.22 A0.0230.00010.10760.0924 0.0936
C 8:00.99 B1.29 A1.36 A1.37 A0.0700.00010.94200.9923
C 9:00.11 B0.11 B0.16 A0.18 A0.0190.00010.50080.1058
C 10:01.89 Bc2.52 Bb2.82 Aa2.79 Aa0.1750.00010.88050.9901
C 10:10.004 C0.004 C0.025 B0.035 A0.0030.00010.56410.1108
C 11:00.29 Bc0.34 Aab0.37 Aa0.32 Aba0.0200.00010.75290.3620
C 12:02.15 B2.80 A3.04 A2.88 A0.1670.00010.83130.9934
C 13:00.14 Bc0.16 ABb0.18 Aa0.16 ABb0.0090.00020.89340.9902
C 13:0 iso0.06 A0.02 B0.05 A0.05 A0.0150.00080.76650.1000
C 13:0 anteiso0.05 b0.05 b0.07 a0.06 ab0.0090.03690.32710.0254
C 12:10.06 b0.08 a0.09 a0.07 ab0.0090.00750.55280.8327
C 14 iso0.28 a0.23 b0.21 b0.22 b0.0130.00010.60560.9046
C 14:09.09 B9.97 A10.2 A9.88 A0.3180.00010.72480.9937
∑ C 4:0–C 14:019.9 B23.3 A24.3 A23.8 A0.521<0.00010.73280.9418
C 15:0 iso0.470.430.440.440.0270.22280.93610.9929
C 15:0 anteiso0.84 A0.75 B0.80 AB0.77 B0.0350.00760.77491.0000
C 14:1 cis0.84 a0.83 a0.84 a0.74 b0.0510.02370.72280.9957
C 15:01.561.391.511.460.0610.08890.92431.0000
C 15:10.08 B0.07 B0.09 A0.10 A0.0090.00030.42520.5425
C 16 iso0.51 Aa0.47 ABb0.41 Bc0.41 Bc0.0260.00010.76390.9717
C 16:027.2 A26.2 A24.3 B23.9 B0.8610.00010.53270.6835
C 17:0 iso0.570.560.590.570.0490.90400.06460.0985
C 17:0 anteiso0.60 A0.26 B0.56 A0.58 A0.0500.00010.07180.0974
C 16:1 trans 90.23 B0.24 B0.33 A0.30 A0.0330.00320.62470.2249
C 16:1 cis1.26 A1.32 A1.01 B0.94 B0.1190.00010.20780.1152
C 17:00.99 A0.86 B0.85 B0.86 B0.0500.00010.84270.9904
∑ Branched chain FA3.48 A2.87 B3.23 A3.22 A0.1840.00010.13150.3785
∑ Odd chain FA3.12 Aa2.73 Bb2.90 ABb2.82 Bb0.1420.00050.74140.9915
C 18:0 iso0.072 A0.044 B0.077 A0.062 A0.0140.01660.26640.6090
C 17:1 cis0.33 A0.24 B0.24 B0.23 B0.0210.00010.52750.8054
C 18:011.211.310.511.60.4550.08500.73820.9904
C 18:1 trans 60.140.090.180.170.0490.11970.81540.7463
C 18:1 trans 90.39 ABa0.42 Aa0.29 Cc0.32 BCb0.0400.00060.55420.6852
C 18:1 trans 11 TVA 42.72 Bc2.95 Bc4.75 Aa3.69 ABb0.4990.00020.30370.1927
C 18:1 trans 12–140.26 B0.29 B0.36 A0.36 A0.3330.00050.19840.3038
C 18:1 cis 60.49 B0.50 B0.94 A0.93 A0.0820.00010.94230.6154
C 18:1 cis 9 OA 521.3 Aa19.6 Bb16.7 Cd18.3 Cc0.7560.00010.76460.9712
C 18:1 cis 100.57 ab0.60 a0.51 b0.54 b0.0430.03990.34280.2092
C 18:1 cis 110.24 a0.22 a0.15 b0.21 b0.0310.02180.72490.5556
C 18:1 cis 120.35 Cd0.43 BCc0.51 ABab0.55 Aa0.0470.00010.68540.0764
C 18:1 cis 130.30 a0.23 b0.27 a0.29 a0.0330.02700.06380.3685
C 18:1 cis 140.140.140.200.200.0450.11900.07760.1872
C 18:2 trans 9–120.25 B0.24 B0.33 A0.34 A0.0440.00780.05520.7734
C 18:2 cis 9 trans 120.000 B0.000 B0.072 A0.067 A0.0160.00010.17380.3352
C 18:2 cis 9 trans 130.300.330.260.280.0500.50930.0690.3499
C 18:2 trans 11 cis 15 VNA 60.29 C0.49 B0.90 A0.79 A0.0960.00010.80840.9885
C 18:2 LA 72.05 Aa1.78 Bb1.48 Bc1.68 Bbc0.1530.00010.68740.5875
C 20:00.240.220.190.210.0280.20600.54530.2124
C 18:3 n60.22 A0.15 B0.13 B0.14 B0.0170.00010.33690.4264
C 20:1 cis 110.082 A0.007 B0.014 B0.024 B0.0260.00120.44560.7427
C 18:3 n3 ALA 80.88 B0.92 B1.39 A1.25 A0.1290.00010.27840.1585
C 18:2 cis 9 trans 11 RA 91.04 Bc1.07 Bc1.87 Aa1.36 Bb0.2040.00010.48520.1510
Other isomers CLA 100.13 Bc0.15 Bc0.44 Aa0.31 Bb0.0470.00010.52370.1624
C 20:2 cis, cis n60.005 Dd0.054 Cc0.145 Aa0.101 ABb0.0210.00010.92640.9934
C 22:00.17 A0.11 B0.12 B0.13 B0.0180.00010.97520.7661
C 20:3 n60.0620.0670.0550.0660.0100.65250.40270.3828
C 20:4 n6 AA 110.150.130.130.140.0320.76320.45340.5191
C 20: 5 n3 EPA 120.0840.1410.0850.0810.0710.62230.93240.8846
C 24:00.062 B0.012 C0.106 A0.098 A0.0140.00010.12180.0771
C 22:5 n3 DPA 130.002 B0.000 B0.035 A0.055 A0.0100.00010.06430.1086
C 22: 6 n3 DHA 140.076 Bc0.114 ABb 0.156 Aa0.125 ABab0.0230.00020.45650.5894
1 SpG = cheeses obtained from milk of animals that ingested exclusively herbage of pasture; 2 SpI = cheeses obtained from animals that used pasture with additions of hay and concentrate; 3 pSE, pooled standard error; 4 TVA = trans vaccenic acid; 5 OA = oleic acid; 6 VNA = Vaccelenic acid; 7 LA = linoleic acid; 8 ALA = α-linolenic acid; 9 RA = rumenic acid; 10 CLA = conjugated linoleic acid; 11 AA = arachidonic acid; 12 EPA = eicosapentaenoic acid; 13 DPA = docosapentaenoic acid; 14 DHA = docosahexaenoic acid. A, B, C Values in the same row with different superscripts differ significantly (p < 0.01) while a, b, c differ significantly (p < 0.05).
Table 4. The effect of production season of cheese on fatty acid profile (g/100 g FA) and health indexes.
Table 4. The effect of production season of cheese on fatty acid profile (g/100 g FA) and health indexes.
Production Season (PS) Significance (p Value)
Summer
(Su)
Autumn Winter (AW)Spring 1
(SpG)
Spring 2
(SpI)
pSE 3PSRTPS × RT
∑ saturated64.365.764.564.71.3360.35140.50480.8012
∑ monounsaturated29.9 28.3 27.7 28.1 0.9270.06120.61210.9911
∑ polyunsaturated5.76 B5.86 B7.71 A7.12 A0.5290.00010.36150.1334
∑ CLA 41.17 C1.22 C2.32 A1.67 B0.2370.00010.64100.1351
∑ n31.43 Bc1.73 Bb2.61 Aa2.43 Aa0.2240.00010.76260.6624
∑ n62.752.452.432.590.1740.06250.60370.6151
∑ n6/∑ n32.84 a2.04 b1.02 c1.31 c0.3600.00010.99580.9732
∑ PUFA 5/∑ SFA 60.09 B0.09 B0.12 A0.11 A0.0120.00010.33420.1448
HSFA 765.668.768.266.12.2300.10150.64180.9821
HPI 80.530.490.480.510.0300.13590.51260.9412
AI 91.942.162.092.010.1480.11280.66230.9910
TI 102.31 A2.34 A1.86 B1.95 B0.1650.00010.73280.8324
CVD-R 119.419.368.629.110.6380.44650.80520.6621
CVD-P 127.266.806.947.160.3840.34760.14420.9110
C-R 1310.069.789.409.660.5450.49480.45830.8992
C-P 142.22 C2.46 BC3.29 A2.98 AB0.2090.00010.13120.4781
CVD-R/CVD-P1.281.391.211.230.1210.16820.64140.7275
C-R/C-P4.80 Aa4.12 Ab2.81 Bc3.25 Bc0.4210.00010.60840.5447
1 SpG = cheeses obtained from milk of animals that ingested exclusively herbage of pasture; 2 SpI = cheeses obtained from animals that used pasture with additions of hay and concentrate; 3 pSE, pooled standard error; Abbreviations: SEp, pooled standard error. 4 CLA = conjugated linoleic acid; 5 PUFA = polyunsaturated fatty acid; 6 SFA= saturated fatty acid; 7 HSFA, hypercholesterolemic saturated fatty acids = C12:0 + 4xC14:0 + C16:0; 8 HPI, health-promoting index = (n3 PUFA + n6 PUFA + MUFA)/(C12:0 + 4 × C14:0 + C16:0); 9 AI, aterogenic index = [(4x14:0) + 16:0 + 18:0]/∑MUFA + ∑PUFAn6 + ∑PUFAn3]; 10 TI, thrombogenic index = (C14:0 + C16:0 + C18:0)/(0.5 × MUFA + 0.5 × n6 PUFA + 3 × n3 PUFA + n3/n6); 11 CVD-R = cardiovascular diseases-Risk = [C12: 0 + C14: 0 + C16: 0 + Σ trans-(C18: 2c9t11 + C18: 1t11)]; 12 CVD-P = cardiovascular diseases-prevention= [C18: 1t11 + C18: 1c9 + C18: 2c9t11 + C18: 2n6 + Σn3]; 13 C-R = cancer risk = [C14: 0 + C16: 0 + Σ n6]; 14 C-P = cancer prevention = [C4: 0 + C15iso + C16iso + C18: 2c9t11 + C18: 1t11 + Σ n3].On rows: A, B, C = p ≤ 0.01; a, b, c = p ≤ 0.05.
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Di Grigoli, A.; Ponte, M.; Bonanno, A.; Maniaci, G.; Alabiso, M. Effects of Grazing Season on Physico-Chemical Characteristics and Fatty Acids of Nutritional Interest of Caciocavallo Palermitano Cheese. Animals 2022, 12, 544. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12050544

AMA Style

Di Grigoli A, Ponte M, Bonanno A, Maniaci G, Alabiso M. Effects of Grazing Season on Physico-Chemical Characteristics and Fatty Acids of Nutritional Interest of Caciocavallo Palermitano Cheese. Animals. 2022; 12(5):544. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12050544

Chicago/Turabian Style

Di Grigoli, Antonino, Marialetizia Ponte, Adriana Bonanno, Giuseppe Maniaci, and Marco Alabiso. 2022. "Effects of Grazing Season on Physico-Chemical Characteristics and Fatty Acids of Nutritional Interest of Caciocavallo Palermitano Cheese" Animals 12, no. 5: 544. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12050544

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop