The Internet Has Discovered Parmesan Cheese May Not Vegetarian

Apologies in advance for any vegetarians in the room but the internet has just clocked that parmesan cheese may actually have animal bits in it. So, is this really true? Should we be holding a moment of silence for all the cheese boards and bowls of spaghetti bolognaise that will be affected by this development? Let’s investigate.

Per a 2017 article by PETA (), most parmesan cheeses contain an ingredient called “”.

is made from the enzymes which are found in the stomach lining of calves (AKA baby cows).

According to (which I was baffled to learn is absolutely a real website), is used to coagulate milk during the production process to form a thick curd.

According to this fascinating website, there are two types of rennet — animal and vegetable.

As PETA mentioned, the animal variety comes from the stomachs of calves, lambs and goats while the vegetable variety performs a but, unlike animal rennet, is suitable for vegetarians.

I then had a scroll on and found the below comment that argued that while parmesan is most likely vego, Parmigiano-Reggiano is not.

For context, Parmigiano-Reggiano is a cheese variety made according to a set of guidelines and can only be produced in specific regions of . Kinda like Champagne but for cheese.

So, armed with this knowledge endorsed by sources on both sides of the ethical argument, I did some googling for supermarket parmesans to suss whether they contained rennet.

After a quick search, I could tell that all Parmigiano-Reggianos did indeed contain animal rennet in their ingredients list. So, bad news for any vegos with expensive taste.

On the other hand, the ingredients list for the less expenny parmesans at Coles and Woolies only indicated that they contained “enzymes”. They did not specify if these enzymes were of the animal or vegetable variety that we discussed earlier….

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