China Daily

New mung bean spread holds hope for allergy sufferers

- By XINHUA in Melbourne, Australia

Australian scientists have developed a mung bean alternativ­e to peanut butter for people allergic to the popular spread.

The product, developed by the Australian Export Grains Innovation Center, could be offered on the menu at schools, hospitals and on airplanes where traditiona­l peanut butter is banned due to the high rate of peanut allergies.

Ken Quail, the company’ s general manager, headquarte­red in Perth, said the new mung bean spread could give individual­s peace of mind over allergies.

“It eliminates risk in a whole lot of ways,” Quail told the ABC on Wednesday. “Airlines can serve it to anybody, it takes out that enormous risk they face in serving any products with peanuts.

“What they do now is totally avoid them, and this could totally overcome that.”

Quail admitted that while the flavor of the mung bean paste was not a perfect reproducti­on of that of peanut butter, it is a healthier option with mung beans being a good source of protein.

“Both in color, texture and taste, it’s very similar,” he said. “Some people who don’t know what they’re trying can’t pick it from peanut butter.”

The discovery by the Perthbased scientists came in the wake of allergy experts at the 2016 Internatio­nal Conference of Immunology in Melbourne declared Australia as the allergy capital of the world.

Maria Said, president of Allergy and Ana phyla xis Australia, said she welcomed the introducti­on of the mung bean paste but that replacing all foods that produce allergic reactions with alternativ­es was not sustainabl­e.

“I think it’s great that we have companies thinking outside the square and providing food for people with special dietary needs, especially people with anaphylaxi­s,” Said told the ABC.

“But I think we need to be realistic about removal of other healthy nutritious foods from the marketplac­e and replacing them simply because of allergy .”

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