Chattanooga Times Free Press

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

- BY CANDICE CHOI

NEW YORK — 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. A group that advocates for plant-based products, the Good Food Institute, countered this week by asking the Food and Drug Administra­tion to say terms such as “milk” and “sausage” can be used as long as they’re modified to make clear what’s in them.

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

DiGiorno’s frozen chicken “wyngz” were fodder for comedian Stephen Colbert. An eggless spread provoked the ire of egg producers by calling itself “mayo.” And as far back as the 1880s, margarine was dismissed as “counterfei­t butter” by a Wisconsin lawmaker.

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.

Those products often refer to themselves as “soymilk” or “almondmilk,” single words that the dairy industry says is a way to get around the guidelines for “milk.”

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, and consumers are gravitatin­g toward them, said Michele Simon, the group’s executive director.

The FDA says it takes action “in accordance with public health priorities and agency resources.”

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.

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