How is this non-dairy creamer really non-dairy when it has sodium caseinate?

How is this non-dairy creamer really non-dairy when it has sodium caseinate? - Brown Wooden Wall Decor on Brown and Black Floral Area Rug

I was at a hotel recently, and naturally I had brought home those little packets of free coffee by the sink in the room. I noticed a packet of coffee additives--sugar, Splenda, and most importantly for this question, a supposed non-dairy creamer with the following ingredient list (in order):

  • Corn Syrup Solids
  • Partially Hydrogenated Soybean Oil
  • Contains 2% or less of the following:
    • Sodium Caseinate (a milk derivative)
    • Dipotassium Phosphate
    • Mono and Diglycerides
    • Sodium Silicoaluminate or Silicon Dioxide (anti-caking agent)
    • Sodium Tripolyphosphate
    • Diacetyl Tartaric Acid Esters of Mono and Dyglycerides
    • Artificial Flavors
    • Beta Carotene, Riboflavon, and Titanium Dioxide (artificial colors)

Given the presence of the ingredient I highlighted, how is this allowed to be called non-dairy creamer?



Best Answer

Title 21 (Food and Drugs) of the Code of Federal Regulation states

"(d) When foods characterized on the label as "nondairy" contain a caseinate ingredient, the caseinate ingredient shall be followed by a parenthetical statement identifying its source. For example, if the manufacturer uses the term "nondairy" on a creamer that contains sodium caseinate, it shall include a parenthetical term such as "a milk derivative" after the listing of sodium caseinate in the ingredient list"

According to this page on the University of Nebraska-Lincoln's website, the term "non-dairy" is actually a by-product of the dairy lobby's efforts to make sure that substitute milk and cream products could not use the term dairy rather than the FDA trying to specify that something didn't contain any dairy.




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Why is sodium caseinate in non-dairy creamer?

It stated that a product labeled as non-dairy can contain 0.5% or less milk by weight, in the form of casein / caseinates (milk protein). The idea wasn't to protect dairy-free consumers, but to prevent dairy consumers from mistaking very low-milk, dairy-like foods for dairy products.

Is sodium caseinate non-dairy?

Because sodium caseinate is derived from cow's milk, it's not appropriate for vegan or dairy-free diets. This can be somewhat confusing, as many processed foods labeled \u201cnondairy\u201d contain sodium caseinate.

Is there casein in non-dairy creamer?

Non-dairy is commonly used on coffee creamers made from caseinate, a milk protein, rather than milk or cream.

Why is casein non-dairy?

Lactose, the component of milk that many humans have trouble digesting, is milk sugar; casein is milk protein. This non-dairy creamer has casein extracted from milk in it, but not as much lactose as if it were a container of milk or cream.



What is NON-DAIRY CREAMER? What does NON-DAIRY CREAMER mean? NON-DAIRY CREAMER meaning




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