Not
Milk and Uncheese: the Udder Alternatives
By Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD
SOY BEVERAGES:
LAND OF MILK AND MONEY
Soy drink--popularly known as soy milk--is a lactose-free dairy substitute
made from soybeans that have been soaked, ground, cooked and strained. Manufacturers
are now aggressively marketing this imitation food with everything short of a
soy mustache campaign, putting it in gable-top cartons and placing it right next
to dairy products in the refrigerated sections of grocery stores. Sales of soy
milks came to nearly $600 million in 2001 and are projected to reach $1 billion
by 2005.1
Soy milk drinkers might be startled to learn that the Chinese did not traditionally
value soy milk. Soy milk was nothing more than a step in the tofu-making process.
The earliest reference to soy milk as a beverage appears in 1866,2 and by the
1920s and 1930s, soy milk was popular as an occasional drink served to the elderly
and often mixed with shrimp or egg yolk.3-5 Credit for inventing a commercially
feasible method to manufacture soy milk goes to Harry Miller, an American-born
Seventh Day Adventist physician and missionary. Called the "Albert Schweitzer
of China," he built fifteen hospitals there and developed the soy beverage
not for Americans, but for the Chinese.6-8
Dr. Miller also found that soy milk was not traditional in Japan. In a 1959 article
for Soybean Digest entitled "Why Japan needs Soy Milk," he described
seven months spent as a surgeon and physician at the Tokyo Sanitarium and Hospital
and how his idea of a soybean beverage and milk from the soybean for soups and
cooking was something "altogether new." After setting up a pilot
plant to make soy milk, soy cream, soy ice cream and a soy spread, he came up
with the idea "of such additions to be made to the tofu plants."9
Despite Dr. Miller’s efforts, the Japanese found the flavor and odor of
soymilk undesirable and soymilk consumption did not pick up until the late 1970s
when the soy industry began advertising soy milk as a "healthful, pick-me-up ‘energy
drink’ for stressed workers and business people."10
Dr. Miller and his son Willis established the first soy dairy in Shanghai in
1939, but never had a chance to find out how it would succeed. Within months
Japan invaded China, bombed the factory and sent the Millers packing to Mt. Vernon,
Ohio, where they began converting heathen Americans to the virtues of soy milk.10Later in life he continued his work in China, Taiwan, India.
Dr. Miller’s medical practice, by the way, included a speciality in goiter
surgery,11 an interesting choice given current knowledge about soy’s damaging
effects on the thyroid gland.
It is a surprising fact that the very first soy dairy was not even founded in
Asia, but northwest of Paris in 1910 by Li Yu-Ying, a Chinese citizen, biologist
and engineer.12
SOY DRINK: MILKING THE BEAN
The old-fashioned soy milk-making process begins with a long, relaxing soak.
The softened beans are then ground on a stone grinder, using massive amounts
of water. The mush goes into a cloth bag, is placed under a heavy rock, and
pressed and squeezed until most of the liquid runs out. The soy paste is
then boiled in fresh water. Large amounts of filthy scum rise to the surface
and are carefully removed.13,14
The modern method is faster, cheaper--and retains the scum. It speeds
up the presoaking phase with the use of an alkaline solution, skips the squeezing
and skimming steps, uses common tap water, and cooks the soy paste in a pressure
cooker. The speed comes at a cost: the high pH of the soaking solution followed
by pressure cooking destroys key nutrients, including vitamins and the sulfur-containing
amino acids. The process also decreases the quality of the amino acid lysine
and may produce a toxin, lysinoalanine.15 Although levels of lysinoalanine
in soy milk are low, valid safety concerns remain.
Taste, not nutrition, is what most concerns the soy industry. As Peter Golbitz,
President of Soyatech in Bar Harbor, Maine, puts it, "The challenge for
the soy industry has been identifying and inactivating the components primarily
responsible for the undesirable beany flavor, aroma and aftertaste in soymilk."16 The guilty party is the enzyme lipoxygenase, which oxidizes the polyunsaturated
fatty acids in soy, causing the "beaniness" and rancidity. The
industry’s attempted solutions have included high heat, pressure cooking
and replacement of the traditional presoaking with a fast blanch in an alkaline
solution of sodium bicarbonate (baking soda). Major manufacturers have even "offed" the
off flavors using a deodorizing process similar to that in oil refining, which
involves passing cooked soymilk through a vacuum pan at extremely high temperatures
in the presence of a strong vacuum.17
To cover up any "beaniness" that remains, processors bring out
the sweeteners and flavorings. Almost all commercially sold soymilks contain
barley malt, brown rice syrup, raw cane crystals or some other form of sugar.
The higher the sugar, the higher the acceptability among consumers. Flavors
such as "plain" or "original" are almost always sweetened,
although perceived by many consumers as unsweetened. Even so, a panel of professional "sensory
analysts" at the Arthur D. Little Company evaluated the taste, color,
viscosity, balance, fullness, bitterness and aftertaste of all the leading
soy beverages and found them wanting. The company helps the processed food
industry "translate the voice of the consumer into product specifications."18 The panel ruled that soy milk "does not currently meet consumer standards
for flavor quality and flavor consistency, and will not capture the mass market
until vast improvements are made."
The worst problems were: the darker, dirty-looking color of some brands of
soy milk (compared to the white of dairy milk); chalky mouth feel; musty or
burnt protein odors; and, beany and bitter aftertastes. None of the soymilks
evaluated came close to matching the flavor quality of dairy milk, though vanilla-flavored
soymilks fared best. Although consumers perceive refrigerated soy products
as fresher and better, these products did not score any higher than the shelf-stable
versions in the taste tests.19-22
Eliminating the aftertaste in soy milk poses the biggest challenge. The undesirable
sour, bitter and astringent characteristics come from oxidized phospholipids
(rancid lecithin), oxidized fatty acids (rancid soy oil), the antinutrients
called saponins and the soy estrogens known as isoflavones. The last are so
bitter and astringent that they produce dry mouth.23,24 This has put the soy
industry into a quandary. The only way it can make its soy milk please consumers
is to remove some of the very toxins that it has assiduously promoted as cancer
preventing and cholesterol lowering. The opportunity to profit from selling
both the soy milk and bottles of isoflavone supplements (that can be swallowed
rather than tasted) will surely prevail.
FORTIFICATION
Most soymilks are also fortified with calcium, vitamin D and other vitamins
and minerals inadequately represented in soybeans, and stabilized with emulsifiers.
This has been true at least since 1931 when a Seventh Day Adventist company
fortified soy milk with calcium.25
Even in health-food store foods, these added supplements are cheap, mass-produced
products. The soy milk industry puts vitamin D2 in soymilk, even though the
dairy industry quietly stopped adding this form of the vitamin years ago.
Although any form of vitamin D helps people meet their RDAs (Recommended Daily
Allowances), D2 has been linked to hyperactivity, coronary heart disease and
allergic reactions.26
Low fat--or "lite"--soymilks are made with soy protein
isolate (SPI), not the full-fat soybean. To improve both color and texture,
manufacturers work with a whole palette of additives. Several years ago, titanium
oxide, a form of white paint, was popular. Those who did not shake the containers
thoroughly often found watery soymilk with lumps of white glop at the bottom.
The soy industry has now moved on to less palette-able, more palatable, solutions
to the color-texture problem. Because soymilk made with SPI needs at least
some oil to provide creaminess, canola oil--not soy oil--is often
added. The soy industry knows that its own oil is not perceived as healthy.
YOGURTS, PUDDINGS AND
COTTAGE CHEESES
Soy-milk derived products such as soy puddings, ice creams, yogurts, cottage
cheese and whipped "creams" are entering the mainstream, though
they still earn poor reviews from taste testers. In 2003, Time magazine wrote, "The
soy-based yogurts we tried . . . were chalky, gritty and sour, with a chemical
aftertaste. You might go for them, but a typical reaction from one of our testers
was ‘awful.’"27
Most soy milk products include a thickener derived from red seaweed known as
carrageenan. This water-soluble polymer or gum often serves as a fat substitute.
For years it was assumed to be safe, but recently researchers discovered that
it caused ulcerations and malignancies in the gastrointestinal tract of animals.28 (Carrageenan is also added to all ready-mix baby formulas.)
CHEDDAR AND JACK:
WHO SOY-LED MY CHEESE?
Soy milk is the starting point for the manufacturer of soy cheese for pizzas,
Mexican foods and pasta. Soy cheeses can be artificially flavored to resemble
American cheese, mozzarella, cheddar, Monterey jack and Parmesan, and they’re
increasingly used by fast food operations like Pizza Hut.
Most soy cheeses are made with some casein, a cow’s milk protein that
helps make the ersatz product taste more like "real" cheese. Without
it, soy cheeses that are heated will soften, but not melt and stretch. The
taste and texture of totally vegan soy cheese products incur the wrath of both
professional reviewers and members of the public, who have described these
imitation cheeses as "barely edible," "yukky," "disgusting," "plastic," "rubbery," and "smelling
like old, stinky socks."29 Even the Center for Science in the Public
Interest, an organization that says it wants to recommend vegan cheeses to
its constituents, criticized the soy versions of Swiss, cheddar and jack cheese
for being "barely distinguishable from each other" and said "none
came close to even a decent store brand of cheddar, never mind havarti or Jarlsberg."30
Though often promoted as "healthful" with the phrase "no
cholesterol," many brands of soy cheeses contain dangerous partially
hydrogenated fats. The brands that taste the best often contain high levels.
The main ingredient of Tofutti brand soy cheese, for example, is water, followed
by partially hydrogenated soybean oil. The Citizens for Science in the Public
Interest found that "each 2/3 ounce slice contains 2 grams of artery-clogging
trans fats."31
Recently Kraft Foods patented a method for preparing "natural" cheeses
that contain 30 percent soy protein. The new method uses enzymes to turn soybeans
into soy protein hydrolyzates, basic amino acids that food chemists can fully
integrate into the structure of casein. This complex is then added to milk,
which is clotted with rennet to form curds and whey. Conventional cheese-making
techniques turn the curds into cheese. Without the initial enzyme treatment,
the soy would interfere with milk clotting and prevent the formation of a proper
curd.32 Regarding the possible dangers of hydrolyzates, the company is mum.
SOY ICE CREAM: THE BIG FREEZE
Soy ice creams have faired better than their casein cousins. Indeed, Peter
Golbitz of Soyatech credits Tofutti, the first commercially successful soy
ice cream substitute, as having "proved to Americans that a soybean-based
food product could actually taste good."33 Calling the product "tofu-based," however,
might be a bit of a stretcher. Indeed, in the 1980s, muckraking reporters
exposed the product as containing no tofu whatsoever. Today the first three
ingredients in the different flavors of Tofutti are water, white sugar and
corn oil, followed by soy protein isolate and sometimes tofu. Brown sugar
and high fructose corn syrup make up most of the rest. The ingredient list
for the flavor "Better Pecan" is "water, sugar, corn oil,
soy proteins, tofu, pecans, high fructose corn syrup, brown sugar, mod food
starch, veg mono and diglycerides, cocoa butter, guar, locust bean and cellulose
gums, carrageenan, nat flavors, salt, caramel and annatto colors." No
wonder the company prints its ingredients with abbreviated wording in tiny,
hard-to-read type around the top edge of the carton. Newer brands of soy
ice cream such as Soy Dream and Imagine contain fewer ingredients, consisting
mainly of water, some form of sugar, soy and more sugar.
NOT IN NATURE
Pleasing consumers--and milking more of their dollars -- remains
the challenge as the soybean industry seeks effective and economical ways to
improve the taste, color and texture of milk-like and cheese-like soybean products.
Plain, "natural" and traditional Asian products just won’t
pass muster in the marketplace, and there is nothing natural about what will
actually sell. As Peter Golbitz of Soyatech put it, "Soymilk is one of
those unique food products that doesn’t exist naturally in nature, such
as a fruit, vegetable or cow’s milk--it is, and always has been,
a processed food. Since there are many options available to processors today
in regards to process type, variety of soybean, type of sugar and an array
of flavoring and masking additives, product formulators need real guidelines
to follow to create winning products."34
About the Author
Kaayla Daniel is the author of The Whole Soy Story (NewTrends, Spring 2004).
Visit her website at www.wholesoystory.com.
REFERENCES
1. Soymilk: opportunity for the dairy industry? Posted 12/26/2001. www.soyatech.com.
2. Shurtleff, William, Chronology of soymilk worldwide: Part I, 220AD
to 1949, Special Exhibit, Museum of Soy, 2001, www.soydailyclub.com.
3. Guy RA. The diets of nursing mothers and young children in Peiping.
Chinese Med J, 1936, 50, 434-442.
4. Guy RA, Yeh KS. Roasted soybean in infant feeding. Chinese Med
J,
1938, 54, 2, 101-110.
5. Guy RA, Yeh KS. Soybean "milk" as a food for young infants.
Chinese Med J, 1938, 54, 1, 1-30.
6. Shurtleff.
7. Miller HW, Wen CJ. Experimental nutrition studies of soymilk in human
nutrition, Chinese Medl J, 1936, 50, 4, 450-459.
8. Moore, Raymond S. China Doctor: The Life Story of Harry Willis Miller
(Harper,1961). Summarized by William Shurtleff, Akiko Aoyagi in Bibliography
and Sourcebook on the Seventh .Day Adventists, 1866-1992. (Lafayette,
CA, Soyfoods Center). Reference #444.
9. Miller, Harry W. Why Japan needs soy milk. Soybean Digest, April 1959,
16-17. Summarized by Shurtleff, Aoyagi in Bibliography and Sourcebook
on Seventh Day Adventists, 1866-1992, Reference #419.
10. Wilson, Lester A. Soy Foods. In Practical Handbook of Soybean
Processing and Utilization. David R. Erickson, ed. (Champaign, IL, AOCS Press, 1995),
432.
11. Kahn EJ Jr. Staffs of Life Part V: The Future of the Planet. The
New Yorker, March 11, 1985, 65.
12. Shurtleff.
13. Shurtleff.
14. Wallace GM. Studies on the processing and properties of soymilk.
J Sci Food Agric, 1971, 22, 526-535.
15. Liu, KeShun. Soybeans: Chemistry, Technology and Utilization (Gaithersburg,
MD, Aspen, 1999) 151-153.
16. Golbitz, Peter. Traditional soyfoods: processing and products, J
Nutr, 1995, 125, 570S-572S.
17. Liu, 147.
18. Golbitz.
19. www.adltechnology.com
20. Study by Arthur D. Little & Soyatech shows soymilk falls short
of taste standards. BUSINESS WIRE via NewsEdge Corporation, 8/21/01.
www.soyatech.com.
21. Producers struggle to make soymilk palatable. Boston Globe via NewsEdge
Corporation: August 25. www.soyatech.com.
22. Benchmarking soymilk flavor: US. market 2001: new soymilk flavor
study shows wide range in quality. Soyatech Press Release. 6/18/2001.
www.soyatech.com
23. Liu, 161-162.
24. Huang AS, Hsieh OAL, Chang SS. Characterization of the nonvolatile
minor constituents responsible for the objectionable taste of defatted
soybean flour. J Food Sci, 47, 19.
25. Shurtleff, Aoyagi. Product name: Madison Soy Milk. In Bibliography
and Sourcebook on Seventh Day Adventists, 1866-1992. (Lafayette, CA,
Soyfoods Center). Reference # 102.
26. Fallon, Sally’ Enig, Mary. Nourishing Traditions. Second Edition.
(Washington, DC, New Trends, 1999) 39.
27. Song, Sora. Beyond Brown Cow: Specialty yogurts are multiplying.
But do they taste any better? Time, March 31, 2003, 191.
28. Thickener used in soymilk may cause health problems, study says.
Environmental News Network, Sun Valley ID, via. NewsEdge Corporation,
Posted 10, 22, 2001. www.soyatech.com.
29. Words used to describe the taste of foods prepared from vegan recipe
books in book reviews posted by readers on www.amazon.com.
30. Hurley, Jayne. Liebman, Bonnie. The udder alternative: the soy dairy
case, Nutrition Action Newsletter, Nov 2002, 14.
31. Hurley, Liebman.
32. Kraft develops method for preparing cheese with high levels of soy
protein. Food Ingredient News, October 2002. www.soyatech.com.
33. Golbitz, Peter. Traditional soyfoods: processing and products. J
Nutr, 1004, 125, 570S-572S.
34. Soyatech. New soymilk flavor study shows wide range in quality. 6/18/2001.
Sidebar Article
RESPONSE TO THE SOLAE PETITION
In March, 2004, Solae, a joint venture of Dupont and Bunge, submitted
a petition to the FDA for a Soy Protein and Cancer Health Claim. In their
petition, they note that since the FDA authorized the Soy Protein and
Coronary Heart Disease Health Claim, per capita consumption of soy protein
increased from 0.78 g/day in 1998 to 2.23 g/day in 2002. Solae predicts
that consumption of soy protein will double with a cancer health claim.
Solae is one of the world’s largest producers of soy protein isolate
(SPI) and other processed soy products.
On April 14, the Weston A. Price Foundation submitted a rebuttal to the Solae
petition, urging the FDA to deny the company’s request. The report was
prepared by Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, who noted that "Solae was highly selective
in its choice of evidence and biased in its interpretations. It omitted many
studies that show soy to be ineffective in preventing cancer, emphasized favorable
outcome in studies when results were mixed and excused results of a few unfavorable
studies that they included to give the illusion of balance. Most seriously,
Solae omitted many well-designed studies that have suggested that soy protein
can contribute to, cause and accelerate the growth of cancer." Our 50-page
response lists numerous studies implicating soy protein as a contributor to
cancers of the breast, prostate and gastrointestinal tract.
The report is posted on our website at www.westonaprice.org.
The FDA must respond within 270 days, or by November 26, 2004.
This article appeared in Wise Traditions
in Food, Farming and the Healing Arts,
the quarterly magazine of the Weston A. Price Foundation, Summer 2004.
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This page was posted on 10/04/04 |