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Dairy Products

Dairy Products. Chapter 6. Selection Factors. Product size Butter: 1 lb prints, slabs, or chips Size of container Packaging material Dairy regulations specify minimum packaging requirements Packaging procedure. Selection. Yield Form Sliced or grated cheese Preservation method

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Dairy Products

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  1. Dairy Products Chapter 6

  2. Selection Factors • Product size • Butter: 1 lb prints, slabs, or chips • Size of container • Packaging material • Dairy regulations specify minimum packaging requirements • Packaging procedure

  3. Selection • Yield • Form • Sliced or grated cheese • Preservation method • Frozen or refrigerated

  4. Milk Whole Milk consists of 88% water, 8.5% milk solids Whole milk is processed in a centrifuge to remove all or a portion of the milk fat and must provide fat soluable vitamins A&D.

  5. Lactose Intollerance • Lactose intolerance is the inability to digest lactose. Lactose is a type of sugar found in milk and other dairy products. • Lactose intolerance happens when the small intestine does not make enough of the enzyme lactase. Enzymes help the body absorb foods. • Not having enough lactase is called lactase deficiency. • Babies' bodies make this enzyme so they can digest milk, including breast milk. • Lactose intolerance is very common in adults and is not dangerous. • Approximately 30 million American adults have some amount of lactose intolerance by age 20. • http://www.foodintol.com/dairy_sensitivity

  6. Processing Techniques • Pasteurization (1920’s): Grade A has to be pasteurized. Milk is holding milk to 161°F for 15 seconds. Destroys enzymes that cause spoilage. • Ultra Pasteurization (1930’s): milk is heated to 275°F for 2-4 seconds to destroy virtually all bacteria. Used most often with whipped cream, individual creamers. • Ultra-High Temperature Processing (UHT) (1970’s): Is a form of Ultra Pasteurization milk is held at 280°F-300°F for 2-6 sec. Can be stored w/o refrigeratoin for 3 mo. It should be chilled before used after opening needs to be refrigerated.

  7. Homogenization • Crushes milkfat globules so small that they cannot rise to the surface and form a cream layer. • Helps mix added fat soluble vitamins, but can turn raw milk rancid, so pasteurization must also take place. • Didn’t gain acceptance until the 1930s when cardboard and opaque milk containers were introduced. • Before then, the cream line was visible through glass bottles and used by consumers to gauge the richness of milk. • Not required, sold commercially this way because of uniform consistency.

  8. U.S. Public Health Service Milk Ordinance and Code [Pmo] • Contains provisions concerning activities: • Approved care and feeding of dairy cows • Handling of the milk • Pasteurization requirements • Holding temps of the milk. • Source: Summary of Raw Milk Statutes and Administrative Codes • Compiled by Pete KennedyAs of December 1, 2004 • 46 of the 50 states have adopted most or all of the PMO for their own milk safety laws. • States not adopting it passing laws that are similar. • California, Pennsylvania, New York and Maryland have not adopted the PMO.

  9. Raw Milk Consumption • Section 9 of the PMO states in part that, "only Grade "A" pasteurized, ultra-pasteurized or aseptically processed milk and milk products shall be sold to the final consumer, to restaurants, soda fountains, grocery stores or similar establishments. • " In spite of 46 states adopting the PMO, it is at least technically possible at the present time to legally sell or distribute raw milk for human consumption in 32 states. PENNSYLVANIA LAW • Raw milk sales are legal on the farm and in retail stores. • Raw milk for retail producers must have a permit and can only sell to stores if they have their own packaging operation with labeling and bottling machines. • Stores purchasing raw milk from farmers for resale do not ordinarily need a permit. • Producers selling raw milk only on the farm do NOT need bottling equipment because the state permits customers to bring their own containers. • The only raw milk product that licensees can sell legally is cheese. According to the Department of Agriculture, because the state has a standard of identity regulation only for raw cheese, not for any other raw dairy products. • If a dairy product does NOT have a standard of identity regulation, they will not issue a permit.

  10. Milk Consumption patterns Americans are drinking less milk than they used to, as well as more lower-fat milk, but eating more cheese and way more frozen dairy products (aka ice cream).

  11. Organic vs. Conventional • Sales of organic dairy are increasing 20-25% each year. • Organic cows may be fed better. Although organic cows are supposed to only receive organic feed, farmers are not required to feed the cows grass. • Organic cows are less likely to be given hormones. The use of rBST (growth hormone) is prohibited with organic cows. • rBST is sometimes given to “conventional” cattle to promote growth and milk production, but is banned in Europe, Japan and Canada because of concerns over human health and animal welfare. • But organic isn’t synonymous with healthy living conditions or humane treatment of animals. • Organic dairy production in the U.S. is concentrated with only a few producers owned by agribusiness conglomerates. • Organic dairy farmers generally use the same breed and feed methods as conventional farmers, including concentrated animal feeding operations. • Organic milk is processed the same as conventional.

  12. Concentrated milks • Evaporated milk: removes 60% of water from whole homogenized milk. Reconstituted to whole milk • Sweetened Condensed Milk: 60% of water removed, added 40-45% sugar. • Dry Milk Powder: removing virtually all the moisture from pasteurized milk. Dry whole milk, nonfat milk, and buttermilk are available. • Shelf stable products needed no refrigeration.

  13. Cream • Cream is a rich liquid containing at least 18% fat. • Must be pasteurized or ultra-pasteurized, may not be homogenized. • Can keep up to 6-8 weeks. • Un-whipped cannot be frozen,

  14. Grading Butter • USDA Grade AA- butter of superior quality, with a fresh sweet flavor and aroma, a smooth, creamy texture & good spreadability. • USDA Grade A: Butter of very good quality, with a pleasing flavor and fairly smooth texture. • USDA Grade B: Butter of standard quality, made from sour cream; has an acceptable flavor but lacks flavor, texture and body of grade AA, A. Grade B is most often used in manufacture of foods.

  15. Ice Cream • Ice cream is made by freezing a simultaneously beating air into a (aerating) a liquid mixture that contains fat, sugar, milk solids, and emulsifying agent, flavoring and sometimes coloring. • http://practicalaction.org/practicalanswers The fat can be from milk, cream or butter or from a non-dairy source. Composition is defined as the following: • Standard ice cream must contain no less than 5% fat and not less than 2.5% milk protein. • Dairy ice cream must contain a min. of 5% fat that is only milk fat and not any other type.

  16. Overrun • The amount of air in a frozen dairy product. • FDA standard that each 1 gallon container must weigh 4.5 # and contain 1.6 # of total milk solids.

  17. Cultured Dairy Products • Are produced by adding specific cultures to fluid diary products. • The bacteria convert the milk sugar lactose to lactic acid, giving the products their body and tangy, unique flavors. • The acid retards the growth of undesirable microorganisms; thus cultured products have been used for centuries to preserve milk. • Buttermilk: liquid remaining after cream was churned into butter. Adding (Streptoccus lactis) to pasteurized skim or low-fat milk. • Sour Cream: produced by adding (Streptoccus lactis) to homogenized light cream. • Crème Friache: Thinner than sour cream. • Yogurt: custard-like product made from milk (either whole or non-fat) cultured with Lactobacillus bulgaricus. Contains the same amount of milkfat as the milk from which it is made.

  18. Aeseptic packaging • Package has been sterilized prior to filling with UHT (Ultra High Temperature) treated food, resulting in a product which is shelf stable for over 6 months. • Method passes flat, unformed packaging material through a heated hydrogen peroxide bath. A hydrogen peroxide concentration of 30% is heated at 70°C for six seconds. Hydrogen peroxide is then eliminated from the packaging material using pressure rollers or hot air. • The environment where food is handled and sealed must also be free of potentially contaminating bacteria. That means filling and sealing machinery must be sterile before packaging and during the production process. • This can be achieved using hot air and steam or by combining heat treatment with hydrogen peroxide chemical sterilization.

  19. Climate Change & the Dairy Sector • Generates a footprint associated w/ greenhouse gas emissions. • Dairy farms = large contributor from farming operations, manufacturing process to transport to market/consumers. • Methane contributes most to the global warming impact of milk - about 52% of GHG emissions – from both developing and developed countries. Source: www.fao.org (food and Agriculture Association of the United Nations

  20. Things you should know • FDA approves cloning: "clones and the offspring of any animal cloned are as safe as food we eat every day,“ • In 2003 = voluntary ban on use meats/dairy produced but not sale. • Countries consume the most dairy products are also the countries with the most wealth: including the US, the EU, Australia, New Zealand and Japan • While organic milk makes up only 1% of the dairy market, demand has increased 477% between 1997 and 2003. • Milk products labeled "Certified Organic" or "USDA Organic" ensure consumers that the product meets U.S. Department of Agriculture organic standards, and are certified by a USDA-accredited private certification organization. • The use of breeding, unnatural feed and new technologies, including hormone injections (rBGH), led to a quadrupling of the average amount of milk produced per dairy cow between 1950 and 2005 because of demand for cheap cost.

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