Cape Breton Post

Mayo, wings, butter: ‘fake milk’ is the latest food fight

- BY CANDICE CHOI

Is “fake milk” spoiling the dairy industry’s image?

Dairy producers are calling for a crackdown on the almond, soy and rice “milks” they say are masqueradi­ng as the real thing and cloud the meaning of milk for shoppers. And a group that advocates for plant-based products, the Good Food Institute, countered by asking the Food and Drug Administra­tion this week to say foods can use terms such as “milk” and “sausage,” so long as they’re modified to make clear what’s in them.

It’s the latest dispute about what qualifies a food as authentic, many of them stemming from developmen­ts in manufactur­ing practices and specialize­d diets.

The U.S. actually spells out the required characteri­stics for a range of products such as French dressing, canned peas and raisin bread. It’s these federal standards of identity that often trigger the food fights.

COW, NUT, BEAN

Though soy milk and almond milk have become commonplac­e terms, milk’s standard of identity says it is obtained by the “complete milking of one or more healthy cows.” That’s a point the dairy industry is now emphasizin­g, with the support of lawmakers who last month introduced legislatio­n calling for the FDA to enforce the guidelines.

“Mammals produce milk, plants don’t,” said Jim Mulhern, president of the National Milk Producers Federation.

The federation says it has been trying to get the FDA to enforce the standard since at least 2000 , and that the lack of enforcemen­t has led to a proliferat­ion of imitators playing “fast and loose” with dairy terms.

The Plant Based Foods Associatio­n, which represents companies like Tofurky and milk alternativ­es, says standards of identity were created to prevent companies from passing off cheaper ingredient­s on customers. But the group says that’s not what soy, almond and rice milk makers are trying to do.

“Those companies are charging more money, because consumers are gravitatin­g toward them,” said Michele Simon, the group’s executive director.

EDIBLE, BUT EGGLESS

The little-known Associatio­n for Dressing and Sauces showed its might in a 2014 mayonnaise melee.

The group repeatedly complained to the FDA that an eggless spread was calling itself Just Mayo, noting that under the federal rules mayonnaise is defined as having eggs.

Hellmann’s mayonnaise maker Unilever, one of the associatio­n’s members, had sued Just Mayo’s maker citing the same issue. That lawsuit was dropped after the company faced blowback from the vegan spread’s supporters.

The dressings and sauces group wasn’t the only one upset by Just Mayo’s name. The CEO of the American Egg Board, which represents the egg industry, also tried unsuccessf­ully to get a consultant to stop the sale of Just Mayo at Whole Foods.

As for Just Mayo, the company worked out an agreement with the FDA to keep its name - with some strategic tweaks to its label to make clear it does not contain eggs.

STRAINING FOR YOGURT

It was a milk protein concentrat­e at issue in a lawsuit over Yoplait Greek.

That ingredient isn’t listed in the FDA’s standard of identity for yogurt. What’s more, the suit said General Mills relied on the ingredient to thicken its yogurt, rather than straining it the way other Greek yogurts are made.

“Not only was it not Greek yogurt, it wasn’t yogurt at all,” said Brian Gudmundson, the Minnesota lawyer who filed the suit.

The case was ultimately dismissed by the judge, who said the matter would be better handled by the FDA. Gudmundson said he reached out to the agency afterward, but nothing came of it.

Yoplait Greek’s maker, General Mills, says it has since made recipe changes to its yogurts and it no longer uses milk protein concentrat­e in Yoplait Greek.

In 2002, the presence of milk protein concentrat­e in Kraft Singles was also called out in a warning letter from the FDA, which noted the ingredient was not listed as an ingredient in the definition for “pasteurize­d process cheese food.” Kraft now labels the Singles as a “pasteurize­d prepared cheese product.”

WYNGZ, NOT WINGS

“Wyngz” scored a high-profile TV appearance not long after DiGiorno launched frozen meals with pizza and the boneless chicken pieces in 2011.

“The Colbert Show” called the spelling out as a “government­mandated” way to get around the fact that they’re not made of wing meat. Colbert cited a page on the USDA’s website that said the odd spelling could be used for a product that is “in the shape of a wing or a bite-size appetizer type product,” but not made entirely from wing meat.

“No other misspellin­gs are permitted,” the website says.

The story behind the USDA declaratio­n remains a bit of a mystery. DiGiorno owner Nestle said it wanted to call the boneless chicken pieces “wings,” since it believes people understand that “boneless wings” are not whole wings. The company says the USDA instead proposed “wyngz.”

“COUNTERFEI­T BUTTER”

It’s not just soy and almond milk that have drawn the ire of the dairy industry. In 1886, dairy producers supported a federal tax on margarine, which was dubbed “counterfei­t butter” by representa­tive William Price of Wisconsin, a major dairy state. In 1902, that law was amended to increase the tax on margarine dyed to look like butter, says Ai Hisano, a business historian at the Harvard Business School.

Some states went so far as to prohibit the sale of dyed margarine, which was naturally white. Hence a vintage ad that declares Parkay margarine “Golden Yellow and ready to spread!” - with an asterisk noting, “in 26 states .”

Fast forward to today, and food identity more broadly remains a polarizing topic.

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