dairy products Flashcards

1
Q

what is milk

A

The biological fluid secreted as the primary nutrient source for offspring

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2
Q

Why is milk important

A

It is produced and consumed at a large scale world-wide, Important for NZ economy as NZ produce 2% of the worlds milk. Offer optimal balanced nutrition from the protein, fat, lipid, vitamin and mineral contents.

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3
Q

What is milk structure and the 3 compositions

A

A complex multiphase emulsion (mixture of two liquids that are chemically incompatible) and suspension (mixture of a liquid and a solid that are chemically incompatible)
1. Aqueous phase – water, dissolved salts, soluble proteins, carbohydrates
2. Milk fat globules – emulsified w/. aqueous phase – contains lipids, proteins
3. Casein micelles – suspended in the aqueous phase, contains protein, calcium phosphate. Role is to solubilise (dissolve) calcium phosphate – is what surrounds the milk fat globule balls

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4
Q

Milk composition prior to processing

A

Massive variation from – feeding regime, geography, lactation period, and breed

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5
Q

Most commercially significant milk and dairy products

A

Whole milk powder, cream after standardising, skim milk powder, butter/casein/whey products, cheese/whey products

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6
Q

What is an important part of the milk structure when making cheese

A

Casein micelles on the outer layer of the milk fat globules

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7
Q

What is casein

A

Are a group of proteins found in the casein micelles

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8
Q

What is whey

A

The bi-product of cheese making, it is the liquid in the multiphase emulsion of milk

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9
Q

What is the process of raw milk handling

A

After milking needs to be cooled from body temp to below 4 degrees to prevent bacteria growth and minimise enzymatic reactions
During storage gentle agitation is needed to prevent cream separation. Process must minimise aeration and fat globule damage

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10
Q

What is the standardisation process

A

Separation process on the basis of density, size, and shape. the adjustment (raising or lowering) of the milk fat and solids not fat content of milk to prepare different varieties of milk. Involves adding or removing cream

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11
Q

How is the standardisation process conducted - machine

A

Using a Disc type of centrifuge

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12
Q

What are key food safety processes during pasteurisation

A

Inactivation of pathogenic and spoilage bacteria by heat
Inactivation of enzymes by heat

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13
Q

What is the pasteurization process

A

heating milk to specific temp. (round 65 degrees) and holding it there for a set period (30mins) to eliminate harmful bacteria and extend its shelf life and reduce risk of microbial contamination

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14
Q

Mechanisms of homogenization

A

Reducing the size and altering the composition of milk fat globules
prevent from separating to give more homogenous (same) texture

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15
Q

What is homogenisation

A

Prevention of ‘creaming effect’. Breaks down fat globules to more uniform sizes. Prevents that cream from separating and floating to the top, giving more consistent texture. Helps improve stability and enhances its mouthfeel

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16
Q

Place these unit operations in the correct order for the production of whole standardised milk

A

Standardisation
Pasteurisation
Homogenisation

17
Q

Milk powder production step

A

Standardisation
Pasteurisation
Evaporation – used to reduce water content and increase total solids content
Drying – final stage of moisture removal to form fine powder
Packing

18
Q

how is cheese made

A

by separation of curds and whey

19
Q

what is a cheap source of soluble protein and lactose. explain it in detail

A

whey, high perishable + protein fraction high is cysteine

20
Q

terminology of plant based dairy substitutes

A

currently no specific regulation in NZ around naming as long as product is not claiming to be cows milk

21
Q

total value and projected value of plant-based dairy alternatives

A

total $8.51 billion (USD)
projected - $25.6 billion (USD)

22
Q

common processing steps of plant-based dairy alternatives

A

soaking, grinding, separation, enzymatic or chemical hydrolysis, blanching, thermal processing, homogenisation, formulation