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Milky Mysteries

BREAD-AND-MILK, and nothing but bread-and-milk, from childhood to old } age, is the fate of hundreds of rats at the National Institute for Research in Dairying near Reading, Berks., where, with the aid of grants from the Empire Marketing Board, the products of cow and dairy are the life study ol about 30 specialised scientists (writes a contributor in the “New Zealand Herald”). Rats not only live on bread-and-milk alone; they thrive heartily and produce large families, even unto the fourth generation. There are rats whose fathers, grandfathers and great-grand-fathers knew no other food, and, far from being milksops, they are sharp-toothed, trim-whisker-ed young rodents, ready to match their wits against a eat any day. In the same shed are cages containing puny, emaciated rats half the size of their neighbours and too weak to rear families. They,too, have been brought up on bread-and-milk, but with this vital difference—the milk has first been sterilised. An interesting fact which has incidentally come to light is that rats who have been starved for vitamin B and are then given unlimited supplies in the form of yeast, do not eat enough to make up the deficiency and perish in the midst of plenty.

Captain Golding, the dairy chemist m charge of the rat experiments, believes he has proved the far-reaching fact that whereas whole milk is a perfect food, sterilisation destroys certain vitamins and other substances, and sterilised milk, therefore, loses much of its nutritional value.

This is, he thinks, of particular interest to New Zealand and Australia, where most of the milk used for cheese-making is pasteurised. A special study of this and other problems has been made at the Reading centre by a New Zealander, Dr. George Moir, who won a two years’ research scholarship in England and who has just returned to apply his knowledge in Now Zealand. While sterilisation and pasteurising are, of course, quite separate processes, certain changes may occur in the chemical composition of milk as a result of the “flash” method of pasteurisation, and it is possible that the vitamins may be affected. Another study of the vitamin content of milk and butter is being made in co-operation with Reading at the Lister Institute, as part of a general scheme of research into the vitamin properties of Empire produce under the Medical Research Council. The home of the research station, of which Dr. R. Stenhouse Williams is director, is an old manor house about four miles outside Reading (famous for biscuits and beer.). The house has been converted into up-to-date laboratories, and scientists now perform their titrations and analyses where the old squire may once have

Scientific Research

Strange Rat Colony

polished, oft’ his second bottle of port every evening. A mixed herd of 30 or 40 Shorthorns and Guernseys is kept and grade A tuberculin-tested milk of a high average butter-fat content is produced, both for sale and for experiments. What is the difference between a Cheddar and a Stilton? or a Cheshire and a Swiss cheese 1 This is otic of the problems that the Reading men are trying to solve. They cannot explain in scientific terms why such small differences in manufacturing processes should result in such very different products. Still less can they explain why exactly similar treatment of the same raw material —milk—in different parts of the, country, should produce cheeses with distinctly different flavours, textures and keeping quali ties

The real difficulty they are facing, as Mr A. T. Matticlc, the bacteriologist, explained, is that milk is so tremendously variable. Its chemical composition, for instance, varies not only according to district, cow, feed, season, etc., but even in different quarters of the same cow’s udder. One of the most remarkable pieces of work at Reading is a complete chemical analyses of “typical milk’' ’over a period of several years. The milk is analysed every day and a chart made of the fluctuations of its chemical contents. The chart now stretches right across the laboratory and the rise and fall in the proportion of butter-fat, minerals of various sorts, casein, etc., can be seen at a glance. What are the real causes of these fluctuations and how do they link up with feed, • age and health of the cow, season, etc.? These are the sort of problems being tackled. They lead on to broad questions of the influence of rations on the quality—for example, butter-fat content —of milk, about which practically nothing is known. . A fault which is being studied is “openness” in cheese, the most serious problem of the industry in New Zealand. It has been estimated to cause New Zealand a loss of £1,000,000 a year. The cause is still unknown, but Reading is co-operating on an extended scheme of research with the Palmerston North dairy research station, to which the Empire Marketing Board has just given a grant.

A large batch of cheese made at the Massey College wa§ recently sent over to Reading in refrigerated holds containing devices to keep a constant record of the temperature throughout the voyage. An exactly similar batch was kept at the Massey College. Samples of all the cheeses were analysed at Nelson, and again at Reading in the case of the exported batch. The object was to study the effect of transport and refrigeration on ripening. It was interesting to note that the temperature records for the whole voyage showed an absolutely level, steady temperature throughout and an almost complete absence of fluctuation.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HAWST19310110.2.134

Bibliographic details

Hawera Star, Volume L, 10 January 1931, Page 16

Word Count
913

Milky Mysteries Hawera Star, Volume L, 10 January 1931, Page 16

Milky Mysteries Hawera Star, Volume L, 10 January 1931, Page 16