News Feed
|
|
RSS Feed |
|
If you want have last news about
enzyme treatment may remove peanut allergens, suggests study
in your rss reader , you can use this link . |
|
|
|
|
| |
 |
arla propels permeate, lactose development with new business unit
|
|
|
arla food ingredients is sharpening its focus on the potential of permeates and lactose, with the establishment of a dedicated business unit to develop more products. the company has long offered a range of permeates of different grades – by-products of whey concentrate production, and consist of lactose, sugar and milk minerals – and lactose to the food industry. however it now sees permeate and lactose as gaining more importance in the food industry, given the battle against high raw material prices. permeates in particularly are said to help reduce costs, not least in their use as fillers in snack foods, as they are reportedly cheaper than alternatives like pure lactose, whey powder, dextrose and maltodextrin. a spokesperson for arla told foodnavigator.com that permeates have been prioritized in the company’s five year strategy. the idea of the new, dedicated business unit it to spear the development of more value-added ingredients of this type. in november 2008 it unveiled a new generation of whey permeate called variolac 960 – a range of free flow permeates with 96 per cent lactose content – significantly higher than the percentage in standard permeate. technical manager soren norgaard told foodnavigator.com at the time that this brings a more appealing, sweeter flavour, and expands the uses of the ingredient. klaus kristiensen, who will head the new business unit as business development manager, said: “our philosophy has always been to develop new generation products that offer even more functionality than their predecessors”. as demand has grown for whey permeates, arla has sourced more raw materials through external partnerships. an example of external partnerships is its agreement with norwegian dairy firm tine one year ago, intended to expand its capacity of whey protein concentrates through an agreement with norwegian dairy firm tine. tine had previously sold the whey generated by its cheese operations as animal feed. but a new plant refines it into whey protein concentrate for the food and nutrition industry, which commands a higher price. arla took on selling the tine's ingredient to food industry customers outside europe, which meant a ten per cent increase in the wpc it can offer to the market. organisation arla food ingredients’ activities are divided into two areas: trading and industrial ingredients. trading is centered on supplying dairy commodities to the food industry, such as whole milk powder, butter and cheese. industrial ingredients is the home of milk-based ingredients. in addition to the new businesses unit for permeate and lactose, the company has three others: functional milk proteins, nutrition and bakery.
Source :Food Ingredients Food Science - Additives, Flavours, Starch
Date :
29
January
2009
Category :
Dried Foods
|
|
the world is changing - that much few now deny. while businesses of all sorts are striving to clean up their act, the food supply is one area where the impact of climate change could be felt most keenly. how climate change could affect global food supply no-one yet knows whether climate change will be reversible - or indeed what all its effects could be.
|
|
|
a new method of emulsification, based on a pre-heat treatment of whey protein and microfluidization techniques, has produced a cold-set gelled emulsion for use in foods, say researchers. scientists from the south china university of technology report that the technique could extend the application of gels to allow for the incorporation of heat sensitive food ingredients. writing in the journal food chemistry, the authors said that until now, techniques have relied on heat-setting techniques to produce gelled emulsions, but noted that heat treatment of the emulsion limited the uses of the gels, due to the heat sensitivity of certain bioactive food ingredients.
|
|
|
wacky food products are nothing new - take heinz’ launch in 2000 of green tomato ketchup - but the recent development of flavour-changing chewing gum still leaves the question: which trends will stick? as part of our special series on food in the future foodnavigator.com asked david jago, director of trends and innovation at market research firm mintel, to help us separate out the latest mad launches from the potentially mainstream, and to predict possible trends.
|
|
|
food formulators looking for novel gelling agents may soon be offered whey protein isolates and concentrates modified by supercritical carbon dioxide, suggests a new study. using supercritical carbon dioxide (scco2) processing, researchers from the university of tennessee report in the journal of dairy science that a range of novel whey protein ingredients with increased gel strength.
|
|
|
whey protein is increasingly hitting the mainstream. this year saw numerous studies published exploring the potential of the ingredient to encapsulate value-added ingredients. here, foodnavigator reviews the progress from 2007. 3d hydrogels in august, sundaram gunasekaran and co-workers at the university of wisconsin-madison reported that whey proteins hydrogels have the potential to encapsulate sensitive ingredients, suggests a new study.
|
|
|
Coca.Cola
|
PEPSI
|
Mcdonald
|
Nestle
|
Mars
|
Baskin & Robins
|
Nutrika
|
Mumika
|
Chika
|
|