Pasteurized milk: what is it and how to store it, the benefits and harms of the product
Whole milk today can be bought not so often - it is sold only in bazaars. Specialists who massively insist that it is too risky to drink an unprocessed product also influence the number of outlets selling such a natural drink. But in the dairy departments of stores, packaged milk is sold in a wide variety of options - here it is pasteurized, and sterilized, and normalized, and other buzzwords, from which it usually does not become easier for the consumer to choose.
Often a person simply does not fully understand what he is acquiring. The realities of the modern world are such that in fact, you need to choose food products as carefully as possible, because your own health and the health of households depend on it. To better navigate the choice of dairy products, let's figure out what such a popular pasteurized milk is.
What is pasteurization and what are the types?
Every housewife knows that it is advisable to boil fresh milk before drinking, because high temperature helps to kill various microorganisms, for which the milk environment can become an ideal breeding ground.At the same time, it is logical to assume that beneficial microorganisms can also die with significant heating, while some components contained in milk can change their structure, decomposing and losing the ability to benefit the human body.
If heating is beneficial for the properties of milk, then excessive heating is harmful to it. It becomes obvious that it is necessary to find a certain golden mean. It is difficult to say when humanity came to the idea that milk should be heated strongly, but not brought to a boil (after all, competent housewives do just that), but the Frenchman Louis Pasteur proposed industrial production technology a century and a half ago. Today, the process of heating perishable foods to increase their durability is called pasteurization after its inventor. This does not mean that the process is maximally standardized - when processing the same milk, the process can have its own subtleties.
It should be noted that drinking pasteurized milk is made at different temperatures, and heating takes a different time. Ordinary pasteurized milk is heated at a temperature of 60 to 98 degrees, not allowing the liquid to boil, while there is an inverse proportion of temperature and heating time. At a modest 60 degrees, processing can last for an hour, while at a temperature close to boiling, the drink is considered pasteurized after 3-4 minutes.
There is also the so-called ultra-pasteurized milk, which in practice is no different from the product that is called sterilized.It arose from criticism of pasteurized milk, which, contrary to popular belief, does not destroy all potentially harmful bacteria, but at best only 90%. UHT milk is heated to a temperature of about 140 degrees using special equipment that heats up very quickly, and is kept under such conditions for only about 20 seconds. In the process, not only harmful, but also beneficial microorganisms die, but the shelf life of the product grows tenfold, therefore, for residents of remote regions, such a solution is the only possible one.
In order not to destroy the structure of the components of the milk drink, after heating it must be cooled as soon as possible to a temperature of about 5 degrees, because this processing method requires a solid technical base.
If the difference in the production of pasteurized and sterilized milk lies only in the temperature values of the processing processes, then the pasteurized version differs from the normalized one to a greater extent. The fact is that according to the legislation it is necessary to write the degree of fat content of the drink on the packaging, however, even the same cow is not able to give milk of the same fat content - this moment depends on too many factors. Small enterprises have to artificially make milk more or less fat so that it matches what is written on the package - this is the so-called normalization of the product.
As for heat treatment, normalized milk does not involve it - theoretically, it may not go through such a procedure at all.
Composition and calories
Not a single GOST accurately regulates BJU and other features of the composition of pasteurized milk - the main thing is that it matches what is indicated on the package. Even for fresh milk, these indicators can vary significantly, therefore it is not surprising that the indicators vary markedly for different producers. For this reason, our figures will only be approximate, and the consumer is obliged to double-check the information by reading the exact content of the substances he needs on a particular package.
Most varieties of pasteurized milk have the least amount of protein - its amount is in the range of 2.5-3%. Carbohydrates, on the contrary, are the most present in the composition - 4.5-5.5%, with the most popular value being 4.7%. As for fat content, this component is the most variable, because, as mentioned above, many manufacturers even regulate it artificially - it can vary between 1-6%. Useful components in the form of trace elements and vitamins in all types of milk are approximately the same, especially calcium and iodine, copper and strontium, as well as B and D vitamins.
If we talk about the calorie content of a natural drink, then it largely depends on the balance of BJU, especially on the amount of fat. As a result, the energy value can be a very modest 44 kcal, and a much more serious 71 kcal, so those who strictly monitor the calorie content of the foods they eat should be on the lookout.
Benefit and harm
A pasteurized dairy product is a kind of golden mean between whole, fresh milk and the complete absence of this component in the diet. Drinking milk is useful in principle, and if there is no access to fresh village milk, you can drink at least pasteurized milk. - despite the loss of part of the microorganisms necessary for the human body, most of it is still preserved, and for harmful microbes, in most cases, heating is detrimental. At the same time, pasteurized milk is definitely more useful than ultra-pasteurized, which in terms of benefits is only a mineral cocktail in the complete absence of a living component.
The composition of pasteurized milk, in any case, is such that it turns out to be useful in all cases without exception - both during pregnancy, and during breastfeeding, and for a child, not to mention an ordinary adult. It contains a high percentage of protein, which is necessary for maintaining muscle mass and many other body systems. Just two glasses of milk is enough to drink a day to fully meet the daily need for calcium, which is vital for healthy and strong bones. There are also many other chemical elements and vitamins that allow you to comprehensively enrich the body, strengthening the health of various systems.
At the same time, milk belongs to dietary products, which means that it can be consumed even by those who strictly monitor their own figure.
At the same time, the use of pasteurized milk suggests that the habit of constantly heating the drink must be discarded. Heating, as mentioned above, adversely affects the live component of the drink, which in itself can benefit a person. Normal pasteurization involves the destruction of most harmful microorganisms, therefore, home boiling of pasteurized milk is unlikely to improve the positive effect, but it can hit the useful components remaining in the composition.
In a word, it is not worth boiling such a drink - it will not become more useful from this.
But in some cases, milk, like the vast majority of food products on our planet, instead of the expected benefits, can harm the human body. Of course, there are not so many contraindications, but they exist, so you should never ignore them. The main and obvious contraindication to the use of any kind of milk is lactose intolerance. Nature has laid down that the human body is able to digest lactose (the main component of milk) only in infancy. And only over time, representatives of some ancient civilizations, experiencing a lack of food at certain periods, literally learned to do this in adulthood.
Today, this ability is considered normal for a person and is inherited, but there are two important caveats. Firstly, in some people the body fails, they still do not perceive lactose. Secondly, some peoples, for example, the Chinese and the peoples of the North, do not have a tradition of drinking milk, and therefore their bodies are not accustomed to this at the genetic level.
If a person is not able to drink milk in any form, including pasteurized, he probably knows about it. However, lactose can be included in, for example, baked goods. For this reason, you can accidentally create huge problems for a person by treating him to homemade pastries made with pasteurized milk.
Another problem is even more banal, but still very common. Many people overestimate the importance of pasteurization for the shelf life of a drink, and some simply confuse pasteurized milk with ultra-pasteurized milk, while the difference in shelf life differs tenfold.At the same time, the refrigerator, contrary to popular belief, is far from the most reliable protection for a product that can turn sour very quickly, as will be discussed below.
Of course, fermented milk products also have the right to exist, especially since they are very useful, however, the unforeseen souring of milk turns the latter into a completely different drink. It’s good if a person doesn’t feel bad from such perturbations. The fact is that kefir and other lactic acid products must reach readiness so that they can be consumed without harm. Whereas milk, only half sour, can provoke fermentation processes in the gastrointestinal tract, and then severe diarrhea and flatulence will become the most harmless consequences.
How much is stored?
Fresh milk is characterized by a very short shelf life, so many consumers sincerely hope that the pasteurized version, which they perceive almost as conservation, will last much longer. Such people will have to be disappointed, because ordinary pasteurized milk in a sealed form is usually stored for no longer than 3-4 days, and in printed form it is advised to use it within a day.
Moreover, even such a short period of time assumes storage conditions in the refrigerator, while at elevated temperatures ripening can occur much faster.
You can somewhat extend the life of the product by pouring it into a sealed consumer container or boiling. In the first case, lactic acid bacteria can “start up” in the liquid even at the time of transfusion, and in the second, the product must be boiled in advance, before it has deteriorated, and such an operation has not adversely affected the usefulness of milk.
With ultra-pasteurized milk, the situation is radically different - it heats up much more, so there is absolutely no “life” left in it. Thanks to this, such a drink is optimal for delivery to any distance, and even more so, it can be stored in the refrigerator. In warehouses and other specialized places, such a drink can be stored for several months, although it should be clarified that a colony of lactic acid bacteria can still form quickly in an open package.
At the same time, you need to understand that the expiration date is an abstract value, if you do not know the release date. Ordinary pasteurized milk belongs to perishable products, therefore this point must be clarified - the date must be indicated on the package in a prominent place. By the same expiration date, at the same time, you can determine how useful the drink is, because it follows from all of the above that a truly natural and most useful product cannot be stored for a long time.
At the same time, from a package with an expiration date literally tomorrow, one should not expect safety in the refrigerator for 3-4 days, standard for pasteurized milk. Most of this time fell on the delivery from the factory to the store and being on the counter.
For information on which milk to choose: pasteurized or homemade, see the following video.
Thanks, very good article.