Mar 20, 2017
Nicht überall wo „Bio“ drauf steht, ist auch wirklich „Bio“ drin
Cows don´t cook – Food scientists at TU Dresden develop new approach to define species-appropriate feeding of dairy cattle
“Organic” food might not always mean what you think it means. Food scientists from TU Dresden now developed a new method to distinguish organic from conventionally produced milk.
Conventionally fed cows usually get concentrated feed that has been heated more or less. During heating, the so-called glycation compounds are formed from reactions between sugar and proteins, which can be measured in the milk. Organic fed cows only get non-heated feed such as grass or silage. Thus, organic milk is supposed to contain fewer glycated proteins.
The research team headed by Prof. Dr. Thomas Henle is therefore able to prove “species-appropriate” feeding of dairy cattle by measuring the amount of glycated proteins in the milk. Heated feed is not supposed to be part of the “natural” diet of cows. According to Prof. Henle, the only species that cooks its food is the human being. Consequently, human milk usually contains a substantial amount of glycation compounds, depending on the diet of the mother,
PhD-candidate Thomas Hofmann is going to present the new method on 31 March 2017 in the course of the regional conference of the Lebensmittelchemische Gesellschaft. His research group has also filed a patent application for the method. The long-term perspective of their research is to discuss new parameters of the question “What is species-appropriate feeding?”
The scientific paper is published at:
Schwarzenbolz Uwe, Hofmann Thomas, Sparmann Nina, Henle Thomas:
Free Maillard Reaction Products in Milk Reflect Nutritional Intake of Glycated Proteins and Can Be Used to Distinguish "Organic" and "Conventionally" Produced Milk.
J Agric Food Chem. 2016 Jun 22;64(24):5071-8. doi: 10.1021/acs.jafc.6b0137
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