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Why Does Swiss Cheese Have Holes? Swiss Researchers Solve Mystery

The holes in Swiss cheese have stumped scientists for nearly a century. Now a team in Switzerland says they've found the holy grail.

Why Does Swiss Cheese Have Holes? Swiss Researchers Solve Mystery

BERN — Researchers in Switzerland say they've finally solved the mystery of why holes form in Swiss cheese. The clue is that Swiss cheese has had fewer holes in recent years because the cow's milk has gotten cleaner, reports the Swiss news agency ATS.

The researchers at Agroscope, a Swiss lab that studies food and agriculture production, dosed samples of Emmental with tiny particles of hay. Based on the amount of hay they inserted, the researchers found they could predict where and how many holes would form in the cheese.

“It’s now possible to get the cheese to open up almost exactly to your liking,” according to Thursday's press release of the findings.

Scientists have long tried to understand why holes formed in Swiss cheese. American researcher William Clark concluded in 1917 that the holes had something to do with carbon dioxide emitted by bacteria in the milk, but was ultimately unable to discern why the holes formed in some places and not others.

In recent years, pasteurization has moved to covered systems rather than open vats. Unwanted bacteria was reduced, but the holes in Swiss cheese also started to disappear.

“In addition to milk, enzymes and bacterial cultures, you need bits of hay,” the researchers conclude. “It’s a good example of how raw, unprocessed milk is still what essentially underlines the character of traditional Swiss cheeses.“

Lead photo: Gerard Lacz Images/VW Pics/ZUMA

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Geopolitics

Iranian Air Strikes Can't Touch Israel, But Are Killing Syrians All The Time

While the whole world was shocked by Iranian drones attacking Israel, which caused no casualties, nobody pays much attaention to the attacks being carried out by the same Iranian drones in northwestern Syria, where they regularly kill civilians.

Members of military personnel in civilian clothing inspect apparent remains of a ballistic missile lying in the desert.

Members of military personnel in civilian clothing inspect apparent remains of a ballistic missile lying in the desert in Israel, April 24 2024.

dpa/ZUMA
Mosab al-Yassin

IDLIB — Mohammed al-Sakaf was confident when he said that the drone launched by the Iranian militias, which injured his children while they were working in the olive farm south of Idlib, is the same type of drone that Iran launched on Israel earlier this month.

In an interview with Daraj, he asked: “Why was it unable to reach Israel on the night of April 14?”

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Al-Sakkaf’s inquiry is a legitimate one since Iran’s missiles and drones didn’t hit any “meaningful” target in Israel. Most of the missiles and drones were intercepted and dropped over Jordan and Syria. A few reached Israel, according to the pictures published by the Israeli army.

Iran launched hundreds of drones, ballistic missiles and cruise missiles that sought to overwhelm Israel’s air defenses earlier this month. It was the first air attack on Israel by a foreign power since Iraq's late leader Saddam Hussein launched Scud missiles at Israel in the 1991 Gulf War.

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