Article 6954W Sour fight ends with FDA ruling soy and nut milks can still be called “milk”

Sour fight ends with FDA ruling soy and nut milks can still be called “milk”

by
Beth Mole
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6954W)
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Enlarge / Containers of plant-based milk. (credit: Getty | Justin Sullivan)

Back in the simpler times of 2018-before the US Food and Drug Administration had to grapple with emergency authorizations in a deadly pandemic, before it scrambled to address a scandalous baby formula shortage, and before it largely bungled oversight of vaping products-the regulator dove into a sour struggle over dairy labeling.

At the time, the dairy industry was curdling as it watched the cold aisles of grocery stores fill with plant-based imposters-soy "milk" and almond "milk," rice and coconut "milks." In 2010, a fifth of US households were buying such non-moo juices. But by 2016, it was up to a third of households, with the defrauding dairy products slurping up $1.5 billion in annual sales. (And the trend went on; in 2020, sales hit $2.4 billion.)

With the issue simmering in 2018, the FDA stepped in to extract some truths and skim the fat. In a particularly clarifying statement, then-FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb noted that the FDA, in fact, has a definition for the "standard of identity" of milk-and it appears to exclude liquids squeezed from plants.

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