Lower-scoring cheeses (again, all made from part-skim milk) were significantly leaner, with between 36% and 41% fat in their dry solids. Our winner-the only cheese made from whole milk in our lineup-contained 45% fat in its dry solids (a measurement of how much of the cheese is fat once water is removed). Instead, lab tests pointed to fat as the culprit. Why were some cheeses better than others when melted? The nutritional labels didn’t reveal any differences in the amount of cellulose powder or starch in each brand. Though many brands were still unacceptably rubbery and stiff when melted, a handful emerged from the oven perfectly stretchy and chewy. But while tasters said no, grazie to the idea of eating pre-shredded cheese for a snack or atop a salad, most agreed that texture wasn’t as much of an issue when the cheese was melted on pizza. None were great when eaten raw-the anti-caking agents made their strands gritty and powdery, and there was no fooling tasters into thinking this was freshly shredded mozzarella. Texture was the most glaring problem for most of the brands. We also sent the cheeses to an independent lab to get a read on fat and sodium content. To find out, 21 America’s Test Kitchen staffers tried seven brands of shredded mozzarella plain and melted on pizza. We usually prefer to shred our own mozzarella for pizza, pasta bakes, etc., since most pre-shredded cheese contains anti-caking agents like cellulose powder (miniscule pieces of plant fiber) that can make the cheese stiff and dry, but we wondered if there was a shredded brand that could work in a pinch. It’s a tempting shortcut: spend a few more dollars for a bag of shredded cheese and save time-and potentially skinned knuckles-by not having to grate the cheese yourself.
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