From the BBC:
“Canadian
farmers advised to ditch palm oil after 'buttergate' row”
Canadian
farmers have been advised to stop feeding palm oil to cows after foodies
claimed local butter had become harder due to the diet supplement. The Dairy
Farmers of Canada group has formed an expert panel to examine the matter and
has asked milk producers to temporarily halt the practice. Experts note many
factors, not just fat intake, determine butter consistency. The Canadian butter
controversy comes amid a rise in demand for baking goods during Covid
lockdowns. In a news release issued on Thursday, the Dairy Farmers of Canada
(DFA) lobbying group asked that while their investigation is ongoing, milk
producers "consider alternatives to palm supplements". "It's
just a precautionary [measure] to ensure that consumers maintain confidence in
dairy products across Canada," DFA board member Gordon MacBeath told CBC
News. DFA communications director Lucie Boileau told the BBC the working
group has not formally met yet, but individual farmers "have already reached
out to their animal nutritionist to identify alternatives". Adding
palm oil-based energy supplements to cow feed is a decades-old practice said to
increase the milk output of cows and increase the milk's fat content. Little
research has been done on the true impact of palm oil in dairy. With a
12% rise in butter demand last year amid pandemic lockdowns, according to the
DFA, many farmers increased their use of palm oil supplements to boost dairy
supply. The so-called "buttergate" row took off earlier this
month, when Canadian foodies took to social media to express problems with
too-hard butter that would not melt at room temperature. Agricultural
experts have said that butter made from cows with palm oil has a higher melting
point and may thus be harder to spread at room temperature.
^ Butter should
melt at room temperature. ^
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