Introduction to the symposium on milk lipids
- 1 June 1973
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Oil & Fat Industries
- Vol. 50 (6) , 175-177
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02640486
Abstract
Milk lipids, often referred to as “milk fat,” have been of interest to man for centuries. Milk fat is a major component of bovine milk and most dairy foods and has the highest economic value of any of the milk constituents. In 1970, over 4 billion pounds of milk fat were produced by 12 million cows in the U.S. Practically all this fat was used in food products and provided ca. 16% of the total visible and invisible fat consumed by Americans. Although milk fat has been the subject of many investigations in the past, there is continuing interest in its complex composition and its chemical, physical and nutritional properties. The purpose of this symposium is to review contemporary knowledge of milk lipids and to focus attention on recent developments of interest to individuals associated with the field of edible fats and oils.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Triglyceride structure of milk fatsJournal of Oil & Fat Industries, 1973
- Composition of bovine milk lipidsJournal of Oil & Fat Industries, 1973
- Origin of the milk fat globuleJournal of Oil & Fat Industries, 1973
- Trends in Fat Disappearance in the United States, 1909–65Journal of Nutrition, 1967