“…Although some cheeses have a protected designation of origin (e.g., fresh cheeses such as Mozzarella di Bufala Campana, and semi-hard or hard cheeses such as Provolone Valpadana, Caciocavallo Silano, Provolone del Monaco, Ragusano; http://ec.europa.eu/ agriculture/quality/door/list.html) according to standards of identity that require the use of raw milk and natural starter cultures or no added starter (Randazzo et al, 2002;Piraino et al, 2005;Aponte et al, 2008;Ercolini et al, 2008;De Angelis and Gobbetti, 2011;De Filippis et al, 2014), several others, including several fresh, semi-hard, and hard varieties, are produced using either direct acid addition or defined starter cultures composed of Streptococcus thermophilus alone or in combination with thermophilic lactobacilli (De Angelis and Gobbetti, 2011). Scamorza and Provola are 2 shortripened varieties that have evolved from traditional cheeses produced throughout southern Italy Cronin et al, 2007); they are similar in texture to low-moisture Mozzarella cheese (Kindstedt, 2004;Kindstedt et al, 2004) and are used as table cheese or pizza topping. Due to their short ripening time (<30 d), these cheeses cannot undergo significant proteolysis compared with cheeses with longer ripening times (such as Caciocavallo and Provolone; Gobbetti et al, 2002;Piraino et al, 2005).…”