Archives for October 3, 2006

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Science breeds new ingredient markets, says Horphag

By  Jess Halliday

How does a company with just one ingredient continue to report growth on an annual basis? The answer, according to Horphag Research chief operating officer and executive vice president Victor Ferrari, is expanding applications through science.

Ontario pushes traditional medicine regulation

By  Clarisse Douaud

The credibility of traditional Chinese medicine has been called into question by a contentious bill that has passed to a second reading in the Ontario legislative assembly in Canada, with professional associations polarized over the issue.

The prehistory of prebiotics

By Stephen Daniells in Boston

Our plain-dwelling ancestors were big-time eaters of inulin-containing plants, and prebiotic consumption was significantly higher than today, an archaeologist told attendees at the 5th Orafti Research Conference in Boston.

Flavoured camel milk hits the Middle East

By  staff reporter

The launch of a date-flavoured Camel milk drink could strengthen the development of this product as a viable segment of the global dairy industry.

Still not enough folate despite fortification

By  Clarisse Douaud

Folate intake in the US has not met the FDA's targets following the mandated fortification of enriched grain products with the B vitamin that began in 1998, according to a recent study.

Curcumin could cut plaque build-up linked to Alzheimer's

By  staff reporter

Curcumin, found extensively in curries, could boost the body's ability to clear the build up of plaques in the brain that are linked to Alzheimer's disease, suggest results from a small laboratory study from the US.

GM bacteria could naturally sweeten dairy

By  Stephen Daniells

By adding a novel genetically engineered bacterial strain to dairy, the fermentation process is limited to converting lactose to glucose, a technique that could remove the need to add sweeteners to dairy products.