Scottish Daily Mail

Dairy -free drinks with 30 times the fat of cow’s milk

- By Susie Coen TV and Radio Reporter

Dairy-free drinks are often touted as a healthy substitute for regular milk.

But the products can contain more than double the number of calories, 30 times the fat and more sugar than cow’s milk, research has found.

The growing trend for dairy-free lifestyles has seen a surge in the range of flavoured milks such as almond or hemp.

But customers are not just paying more – they are not doing their bodies any favours.

a grande oat latte from Starbucks contains 22.8g of sugar – six grams more than the same drink made with skimmed milk.

it also has more than twice the number of calories – 269 compared with 128 – and 30 times the amount of fat. and a coconut latte from the same vendor contains 9.9g of fat compared to 0.3g in a skimmed milk version – as well as 22 more calories.

at Costa a medium soy latte contains 6g of fat – more than six times that of a medium skimmed milk latte – and 134 calories compared with 103 in the milk option.

and although the dairy-free milks at Costa contain less sugar than the chain’s drinks made with real milk, the sugar in cow’s milk is naturally occurring lactose rather than added sugar.

Lucy Jones, a dietitian, told anna richardson of Channel 4’s Super- shoppers that just because something is dairy-free does not mean it is better for you. you shouldn’t be thinking this is necessaril­y a healthier choice,’ she said. Speaking about how dairy-free milks are often labelled as organic, she said: ‘Whilst

organic may appeal in terms of having better health credential­s, when it comes to dairy alternativ­es this often isn’t the case. That’s because nearly always across the board organic products aren’t fortified with those essential things we need – things like protein, things like calcium.

‘Dairy has its place in a healthy, balanced diet.’

Many of the dairy-free milks, such as almond, contain a small percentage of nuts, often no more than 2 to 3 per cent. On average, 100ml of almond milk contains the equivalent of just 2.5 nuts, while the same amount of coconut milk is just 3.5 per cent raw coconut.

Miss Jones added: ‘Mostly you are getting very expensive water’.

The market value for free-from products grew by 40 per cent to £806million last year.

Representa­tives of Costa and Starbucks made no comment. Channel 4’s Supershopp­ers

airs tonight at 8pm.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom