Skip to content

Why does milk curdle when sour?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: Acid denatures milk proteins

Acid denatures milk proteinsCorrect! Protein denaturation! Milk curdles because: (1) Fresh milk: casein proteins suspended (colloidal). (2) Bacteria produce lactic acid (fermentation—lactose → lactic acid). (3) pH drops (acidic environment). (4) Acid denatures casein—proteins unfold, lose charge. (5) Proteins clump together (coagulate)—visible curds. Buttermilk: intentional curdling (controlled). Cheese: rennet enzyme + acid curdles milk. Also curdles: adding lemon juice/vinegar. Cottage cheese, ricotta: acid-set curds. Pasteurization slows but doesn't prevent souring!

Souring creates gas bubblesWrong. No gas creates curds—lactic acid from bacterial fermentation denatures proteins, causing them to clump visibly.

Temperature change causes lumpsWrong. Heat can curdle milk, but souring specifically from acid (bacterial fermentation) denaturing proteins at room temperature.

🚀 Play today's quiz — new questions daily

More Chemistry Around Us questions