“…As mentioned previously, cheese is considered a suitable delivery for probiotics to the human intestine compared to the fermented milks because of the chemical composition and physical properties of cheese (e.g., high pH, low acidity, high fat content, high buffering ability, low oxygen, and the dense matrix or thickness of cheese texture) that could increase the viability of probiotic microorganisms. Probiotic bacteria have been used in manufacturing different varieties of cheese around the world, namely Ras or Roumy cheese [7], Mascarpone cheese [28], Minas fresh cheese [29,30], fresh cheese [31], soft cheese [32], fresh cream cheese with inulin as supplement [33], Festivo cheese [19], Crescenza cheese [20], Fresco cheese [9], cottage cheese [15], Petit-Suisse cheese [34], Pategrás cheese [35,36], Tallaga cheese [37], Iranian-type white cheese [38], Karish cheese [14], Cremoso cheese [36], Gouda cheese [16], probiotic goat's cheese [39,40], Canestrato Pugliese hard cheese [3], Turkish white cheese [10], Cheddar cheese [13,26,41,42], Turkish-type Beyaz cheese [43], white-brined cheese [44], Kasar cheese [45], and cheese dips [46]. It has been reported that many probiotics (such as B. animalis ssp.…”