Kraft Finally Settled the Debate: This Is the Best Place To Store Grated Parmesan Cheese

Does that green cap shaker bottle of cheese have to be refrigerated?

For cheese lovers, few things aren't improved by a healthy sprinkle of grated Parmesan cheese. It always worth paying for the extra cheese. Whether it's freshly grated or straight from the iconic green shaker, more is more. But does that green shaker grated Parmesan cheese really need to be stored in the fridge after it's opened? Or is it safe in the pantry?

 bottle of Kraft grated parmesan cheese on a two-toned blue background

Kraft/Allrecipes

What Is Grated Parmesan?

First, what's the difference between cheese labeled Parmesan and Parmigiano-Reggiano? Parmigiano-Reggiano has a special protected cultural status with strict requirements. This cheese can only be made in a specific region of northern Italy from local cow's milk and using specific historical methods. It also has to be aged for a minimum of about one year. Think of Parmigano as the Champagne of cheeses. If it isn't made in northern Italy, then it's just sparkling cheese.

Parmesan doesn't need all of those rules. Any milk can make it, it can be made anywhere, and the aging process is shorter, only around 10 months. The texture of grated Parmesan is also drier than a fresh cheese. Grating or shredding hard cheeses requires dehydration, evaporation and then cooling to reduce the fat from oozing out and making it clump. The reduction of fat compounds slows the risk of the cheese going bad and ruining that plate of spaghetti.

Where Should You Store Grated Parmesan Cheese?

Sorry to your local pizza place, but those shakers of cheesy-goodness should in fact be refrigerated to keep it fresh and preserve the quality. In a response left on Target's website, Kraft advised storing their cheeses in the refrigerator at the normal temperature of 40° Fahrenheit and only keeping them at room temp for up to one hour. This makes sense if you remember that cheese, no matter how seemingly fine, is a dairy product primarily and no one likes room temperature milk.

The Bottom Line

The answer is straightforward: store that cheese in the fridge. With that said, harder cheeses will hold up against bacteria longer than softer cheeses due to their drier texture. If you notice any discoloration, foul odors or moisture on that grated Parm, as much as it hurts, throw it out!

Was this page helpful?

You’ll Also Love