fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 06 September 2022 10:55

Can't beat the goodness of milk

Written by  Staff Reporters
Riddet Institute Professor of Nutritional Sciences Warren McNabb. Riddet Institute Professor of Nutritional Sciences Warren McNabb.

Plant-based beverages are expensive and provide only a small fraction of the nutritional goodness of cow's milk, according to a new study done in Massey University.

The study, published in the Frontiers in Nutrition journal last month, assessed the nutritional profiles of a range of plant-based beverages, such as soy, oat, coconut, almond or rice drinks, and compared them to standard bovine milk. Researchers collected 103 plant-based products from supermarket in Palmerston North, New Zealand.

The drinks were found to have much lower quantities of the 20 nutrients measured, such as calcium and protein, and were significantly more costly than cow's milk.

The study was carried out by Riddet Institute scientists, from Massey University, in Palmerston North. The Riddet Institute is a Centre of Research Excellence (CoRE), hosted by Massey University, which focuses on fundamental and advanced food research.

One of the study's authors, Riddet Institute Professor of Nutritional Sciences Warren McNabb, says plant-based beverages were often marketed, as alternatives to ruminant milks such as cow's milk, and consumers could easily believe they were nutritionally interchangeable.

He says the new research demonstrated they were not the same and in fact it was "nutritionally risky" for consumers with high nutrient demands like pregnant women and young children to replace cow's milk with plant-based products.

"Milk, as a food, supplies 49% of the world's calcium," McNabb says.

"It's one of the most important things about milk."

The independently study first surveyed the prices and nutrition labels of the products and then nutritional content was analysed in an external accredited laboratory. Selected almond, coconut, oat, rice and soy products were tested for their macronutrient and mineral content.

"One of the researchers noticed that on storage you get a really thick layer of semi-solids on the bottom and then a watery layer on the top. He wondered what happened to the distribution of nutrients with sedimentation."

Further tests were done before and after shaking the products, and it was found that many of the nutrients like protein and calcium remained in the sediment in the plant-based beverages if you did not shake the product before consuming. This was not the case for the cow's milk.

The protein content of cow's milk was in the range of 3.3 - 3.9g per 100g and McNabb says only soy drink had a comparable content to cow's milk, with all other plant-based beverages containing less than 1.1g protein per 100ml on average.

Most plant products were ultra-processed and fortified with calcium and minerals with additives like sugar, fats, hydrogenated oils, hydrolysed proteins, flavours or thickeners. Oat and almond beverages contained as little as the equivalent of half a cup of oats or six almonds in 250g of product.

The plant-based beverages were often promoted as having no added sugar, but McNabb says milk also does not have added sugar.

"Lactose (in milk) is also poorly converted to glucose in the body which means milk is quite low in what we commonly call 'sugar'."

He says plant-based beverages have plant equivalents to 'sugar' that do convert to glucose in the body.

"And that is why plant-based beverages often have a natural sweetness and don't need added sugar. But they cannot be considered low in sugar."

McNabb says the argument for the alternatives being more environmentally sustainable also did not stack up when considered in the light of how much product would need to be consumed to achieve the same nutritional benefits as conventional milk.

With some plant-based beverages you would need to have eighteen serves to get the same amount of protein, for example, as a single serve of milk. This comes at a much higher cost to the environment - and the wallet.

But it was not all bad for the alternatives. McNabb say plant-based beverages do supply some nutrients that milk dows not, such as fibre.

"Our final conclusion was the plant-based beverages and bovine milk were not nutritionally similar in any way."

More like this

Farmers Lead Sustainability Push: Woodchip bioreactor cuts nitrate runoff in Manawatu

Claims that farmers are polluters of waterways and aquifers and 'don't care' still ring out from environmental groups and individuals. The phrase 'dirty dairying' continues to surface from time to time. But as reporter Peter Burke points out, quite the opposite is the case. He says, quietly and behind the scenes, farmers are embracing new ideas and technologies to make their farms sustainable, resilient, environmentally friendly and profitable.

Massey study tests impact of solar panels on grass growth

Many farmers have invested in solar energy for dairy sheds or houses, but little hard data exists on the viability of solar panels in open paddocks or the loss of drymatter this may cause. Massey University scientist Dr Sam Wilson is conducting research to get more information about this. Rural News reporter Peter Burke went to investigate.

Featured

Jack Jordan takes Stihl Timbersports gold for NZ

Going one better than a frustratingly close second place finish at last year's event, the country's top axeman, Jack Jordan of Taumaranui, last weekend won the Stihl Timbersports World Championship individual event in.

Canterbury A&P Show expands with new Wool Zone

Canterbury A&P Association (CAPA) show president Brent Chamberlain says a big development for this year is the Wool Zone, first introduced two years ago as a showplace for everything produced from wool, but now greatly enlarged with its own Wool Marquee and more than 30 trade sites.

National

Machinery & Products

New pick-up for Reiter R10 merger

Building on experience gained during 10 years of making mergers/ windrowers, Austrian company Reiter has announced the secondgeneration pick-up on…

Krone EasyCut B1250 fold

In 2024, German manufacturer Krone introduced the F400 Fold, a 4m wide disc front mower, featuring end modules that hinge…