Abstract
In [cow] milk, casein occurs as colloidal particles with an average size of .apprx. 100 nm. These are stabilized against flocculation by an outer layer of several thousands of .kappa.-casein molecules. Stability of micelles is characterized by the magnitude of the Smoluchowskian flocculation rate constant, which during the renneting of milk nearly approaches the diffusion-controlled limit. The processes of the clotting of milk by rennet and the phenomena of age-thinning ad age-thickening of ultra-high temperature-sterilized, concentrated milks bear interesting kinetic resemblances. Both processes are characterized by a lag phase during which viscosity decreases, followed by an explosive increase in viscosity. In the milk-clotting process, the decrease can be explained by the proteolytic action of the renneting enzyme. This strongly suggests that age-thinning and age-thickening are also caused by the action of a protease that survived the sterilization process. A quantitative check of this theory is difficult because of the apparently small amount of enzyme.