Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

FDA looks to regulate use of term ‘milk’

- CANDICE CHOI

NEW YORK — Soy and almond drinks that bill themselves as “milk” may need to consider alternativ­e language after a top regulator suggested the agency may start cracking down on use of the term.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion signaled plans to start enforcing a federal standard that defines “milk” as coming from the “milking of one or more healthy cows.” That would be a change for the agency, which has not aggressive­ly gone after the proliferat­ion of plant-based drinks labeled as “milk.”

FDA Commission­er Scott Gottlieb talked about the plans last week, noting there are hundreds of federal “standards of identity” spelling out how foods with various names need to be manufactur­ed.

“The question becomes, have we been enforcing our own standard of identity,” Gottlieb said about “milk” at the Politico event Tuesday. “The answer is probably not.”

Standards of identity have been the source industry spats as American diets have evolved, including fights about what gets to be called mayonnaise and yogurt. More recently, there are disagreeme­nts over what to call meat grown by culturing cells, a science that’s still emerging.

The FDA can’t just change the way it enforces a standard without warning, Gottlieb said. Since it plans to take a different approach to enforcemen­t, he said the FDA will have to first develop guidance notifying companies of the change and ask for public comment. That guidance will probably be issued in a year, he said.

Gottlieb said the agency expects to get sued, since dictionary definition­s are broader and say milk comes from a lactating animal or a nut.

The National Milk Producers Federation said it welcomes Gottlieb’s recognitio­n that the labeling practices of many “plant-based dairy imitators” violate federal standards. The industry group had recently renewed its push for the FDA to crack down on nondairy drinks calling themselves “milk.”

The Good Food Institute, which advocates for plantbased alternativ­es, says the term “milk” should be permitted with modifiers for nondairy drinks.

“For the same reason that you can have gluten-free bread and rice noodles, almond milk and soy milk are the most clear and best terms for describing those products,” said Bruce Friedrich, the group’s co-founder.

The FDA declined to comment on whether the agency would enforce other standards, such as for yogurt.

 ?? Bloomberg News/DAVID PAUL MORRISS ?? Dairy cows eat in a feeding barn at Lafranchi Ranch in Nicasio, Calif., earlier this month.
Bloomberg News/DAVID PAUL MORRISS Dairy cows eat in a feeding barn at Lafranchi Ranch in Nicasio, Calif., earlier this month.

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