
thumb|Testing of the setting of cheese curd during the manufacture of cheddar cheese thumb|Heating and stirring the curd in the traditional process to make French Beaufort cheese, an [[Alpine cheese]]
thumb|Testing of the setting of cheese curd during the manufacture of cheddar cheese thumb|Heating and stirring the curd in the traditional process to make French Beaufort cheese, an [[Alpine cheese]]
Curd is obtained by coagulating milk in a sequential process called curdling. It can be a final dairy product or the first stage in cheesemaking. The coagulation can be caused by adding rennet, a culture, or any edible acidic substance such as lemon juice or vinegar, and then allowing it to coagulate. The increased acidity causes the milk proteins (casein) to tangle into solid masses, or curds. Milk that has been left to sour (raw milk alone or pasteurized milk with added lactic acid bacteria) will also naturally produce curds, and sour milk cheeses are produced this way.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).