[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 21, Volume 2]
[Revised as of April 1, 2001]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 21CFR133.165]

[Page 339]
 
                        TITLE 21--FOOD AND DRUGS
 
CHAPTER I--FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN 
                           SERVICES--CONTINUED
 
PART 133--CHEESES AND RELATED CHEESE PRODUCTS--Table of Contents
 
  Subpart B--Requirements for Specific Standardized Cheese and Related 
                                Products
 
Sec. 133.165  Parmesan and reggiano cheese.

    (a) Parmesan cheese, reggiano cheese, is the food prepared from milk 
and other ingredients specified in this section, by the procedure set 
forth in paragraph (b) of this section, or by another procedure which 
produces a finished cheese having the same physical and chemical 
properties as the cheese produced when the procedure set forth in 
paragraph (b) of this section is used. It is characterized by a granular 
texture and a hard and brittle rind. It grates readily. It contains not 
more than 32 percent of moisture, and its solids contain not less than 
32 percent of milkfat, as determined by the methods prescribed in 
Sec. 133.5 (a), (b), and (d). It is cured for not less than 10 months.
    (b) Milk, which may be pasteurized or clarified or both, and which 
may be warmed, is subjected to the action of harmless lactic-acid-
producing bacteria, present in such milk or added thereto. Sufficient 
rennet, or other safe and suitable milk-clotting enzyme that produces 
equivalent curd formation, or both, with or without purified calcium 
chloride in a quantity not more than 0.02 percent (calculated as 
anhydrous calcium chloride) of the weight of the milk, is added to set 
the milk to a semisolid mass. Harmless artificial coloring may be added. 
The mass is cut into pieces no larger than wheat kernels, heated, and 
stirred until the temperature reaches between 115  deg.F and 125  deg.F. 
The curd is allowed to settle and is then removed from the kettle or 
vat, drained for a short time, placed in hoops, and pressed. The pressed 
curd is removed and salted in brine, or dry-salted. The cheese is cured 
in a cool, ventilated room. The rind of the cheese may be coated or 
colored. A harmless preparation of enzymes of animal or plant origin 
capable of aiding in the curing or development of flavor of parmesan 
cheese may be added during the procedure, in such quantity that the 
weight of the solids of such preparation is not more than 0.1 percent of 
the weight of the milk used.
    (c)(1) For the purposes of this section, the word ``milk'' means 
cow's milk, which may be adjusted by separating part of the fat 
therefrom or by adding thereto one or more of the following: Cream, skim 
milk, concentrated skim milk, nonfat dry milk, water in a quantity 
sufficient to reconstitute any concentrated skim milk or nonfat dry milk 
used.
    (2) Such milk may be bleached by the use of benzoyl peroxide or a 
mixture of benzoyl peroxide with potassium alum, calcium sulfate, and 
magnesium carbonate; but the weight of the benzoyl peroxide is not more 
than 0.002 percent of the weight of the milk bleached, and the weight of 
the potassium alum, calcium sulfate, and magnesium carbonate, singly or 
combined, is not more than six times the weight of the benzoyl peroxide 
used. If milk is bleached in this manner, sufficient vitamin A is added 
to the curd to compensate for the vitamin A or its precursors destroyed 
in the bleaching process, and artificial coloring is not used.
    (d) Safe and suitable antimycotic agent(s), the cumulative levels of 
which shall not exceed current good manufacturing practice may be added 
to the surface of the cheese.
    (e) Label declaration: Each of the ingredients used in the food 
shall be declared on the label as required by the applicable sections of 
parts 101 and 130 of this chapter, except that enzymes of animal, plant, 
or microbial origin may be declared as ``enzymes''.

[42 FR 14366, Mar. 15, 1977, as amended at 48 FR 49014, Oct. 24, 1983; 
49 FR 10095, Mar. 19, 1984; 58 FR 2894, Jan. 6, 1993]

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