SEM Photography Session (brie cheese)

I am a cheese obsessed, so for the SEM photography assignment, I decided to look closer to the secret life of a piece of brie cheese.

Brie is an off-white, soft-ripened cheese, usually made from cow’s milk that has a bloomy rind of white mold or ‘penicillium candidum,’ a fungus used in its fabrication along with a mesophilic lactic acid culture. Since brie is a very creamy cheese, I was pretty worried about the dryness of the sample before my appointment with Donna. Besides this, the brie cheese that comes to the US, though produced in France, is a stabilized version that has been aged at least 60 days and may not contain such a varied culture. Luckily, we discovered a slumberous community of life forms under the golden surface.

Brie sample (‘familiar view’)

The close-up images show the branches of the fungus rising over a forest of spores. They are responsible for breaking down the fats and proteins of the dairy, causing the runny texture of the brie over time.

Brie culture (micrometer scale)
Penicillium spores (‘unfamiliar view’)
Anaglyph image

After photographing my sample, I had the privilege of analyzing the spider web sample that Donna found stuck to duct tape in her laboratory. I could not finish this post without sharing the treasures that we found there.

A spore tangled in the filaments of the web.
Some kind of vegetable life.
Microscopical structure of a moth’s scale
Spores, plants and one scale
Folded scale.
Mummified insect parts.