FOOD
Learn more about food science and sanitation with our Food Education resources.
Teachers, scroll down for a quick list of key resources in our Teachers’ Toolkit.

Photograph by J. Baylor Roberts, National Geographic
Discussion Ideas
- Will the “eyes” of Swiss cheese keep away the three blind mice?
- Possibly . . . The holes in Swiss cheese are called eyes. Cheese without holes is known as blind. Maybe the three blind mice had decent sight but specialized in blind cheese?
- What creates the eyes in Swiss cheese?
- How did scientists conduct their experiment to discover how Swiss cheese gets its eyes?
- According to the BBC, “Scientists reached their conclusions after adding small amounts of hay dust to milk and making it into cheese over 130 days.”
- More specifically, the scientists used “a new method based on computed tomography—more commonly known as a CT scan—to study where and how holes formed.”
- According to the BBC, “Scientists reached their conclusions after adding small amounts of hay dust to milk and making it into cheese over 130 days.”
- Why have there been fewer holes in Swiss cheese in recent years?
- Will this new study—not yet peer reviewed!—help cheesemakers reverse the trend and develop more holey Swiss cheese?
- Yes. Researchers “recommend that cheese producers who want holes to appear in their product add hay particles during the cheese making process.”
- Why does it matter if there are fewer holes in Swiss cheese?
- The eyes are what makes Swiss cheese . . . Swiss cheese. Read through the USDA’s 14 pages of rules and regulations for Swiss cheese if you don’t believe me.
- There are actually three grades of Swiss cheese: A, B, and C. For grade A cheese, “the majority of the eyes shall be 3/8 to 13/16 inch in diameter.” For grade C cheese, “The cheese may possess the following eye characteristics to a slight degree: afterset, cabbage, collapsed, irregular, large eyed, and small eyed, and the following to a definite degree: dead eyes, dull, frog mouth, nesty, one sided, overset, rough, shell, underset, and uneven. The cheese may possess the following texture characteristics to a slight degree: gassy, splits and sweet holes; and the following to a definite degree: checks, picks and streuble.”
- OK, here’s a cheesy vocabulary list that will help you understand that paragraph and put you on your way to being a Certified Cheese Professional. You’re welcome:
- afterset: “small eyes caused by secondary fermentation”
- cabbage: “eyes so numerous within the major part of the cheese that they crowd each other, leaving only a paper-thin layer of cheese between the eyes”
- collapsed: “eyes which have not formed properly and do not appear round or slightly
oval but rather flattened and appear to have collapsed” - dead eyes: “eyes that have completely lost their glossy or velvety appearance”
- frog mouth: “eyes which have developed into a lenticular or spindle-shaped opening”
- nesty: “overabundance of small eyes in a localized area”
- one-sided: “reasonably developed on one side and underdeveloped on the other as to eye development”
- overset: “excessive number of eyes”
- shell: “rough nut-shell appearance on the wall surface of the eyes”
- underset: “too few eyes”
- split: “sizable crack found within the body of the cheese”
- sweet holes: “spherical gas holes, glossy in appearance; usually about the size of BB shot”
- checks: “small, short cracks within the body of the cheese”
- picks: “small irregular or ragged openings within the body of the cheese”
- streuble: “an overabundance of small eyes located just under the surface of the cheese.”
- OK, here’s a cheesy vocabulary list that will help you understand that paragraph and put you on your way to being a Certified Cheese Professional. You’re welcome:
- There are actually three grades of Swiss cheese: A, B, and C. For grade A cheese, “the majority of the eyes shall be 3/8 to 13/16 inch in diameter.” For grade C cheese, “The cheese may possess the following eye characteristics to a slight degree: afterset, cabbage, collapsed, irregular, large eyed, and small eyed, and the following to a definite degree: dead eyes, dull, frog mouth, nesty, one sided, overset, rough, shell, underset, and uneven. The cheese may possess the following texture characteristics to a slight degree: gassy, splits and sweet holes; and the following to a definite degree: checks, picks and streuble.”
- The eyes are what makes Swiss cheese . . . Swiss cheese. Read through the USDA’s 14 pages of rules and regulations for Swiss cheese if you don’t believe me.
TEACHERS’ TOOLKIT
BBC: Swiss cheese hole mystery solved: It’s all down to dirt
Nat Geo: Food Education
(extra credit!) USDA: United States Standards for Grades of Swiss Cheese, Emmentaler Cheese
American Cheese Society: Certified Cheese Professional Exam and the Body of Knowledge outline
Very interesting to know the story of eyes of Swiss cheese!!! More dirty the bucket more holes would be.. Microscopically small hay particles do a good job… It’s very interesting that cheese has different name based on eyes like cabbage, collapse, overset, underset etc etc….
Now the Swiss will try to get a patent for it.