Milk processing system and uses of milk products in the middle highland of Ethiopia

  • HIRATA Masahiro
    School of Agriculture, Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine
  • ONIKI Shunji
    Social Sciences Division, Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Science
  • KAGATSUME Masaru
    Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University
  • UCHIDA Kenji
    Research Center, Yotsuba Milk Products Co., LTD.
  • KATANO Naoya
    Research Center, Yotsuba Milk Products Co., LTD.

Bibliographic Information

Other Title
  • エチオピア中高地における乳加工体系
  • エチオピア ナカダカチ ニ オケル ニュウカコウ タイケイ

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Abstract

For the purpose to analyze characteristics of milk processing system in Ethiopian middle highlands, field surveys were conducted on Afar pastoralists and Oromia Pastoralists in middle highlands and also farmers and city-side dwellers who speak Tigrinya and Amharic in highlands. The characteristics of milk processing system in the middle highland were that the technique of fermented milk processing series was adopted, fat was extracted and preserved as butteroil from fresh milk, but protein wasn't extracted and preserved from fresh milk. Butter was used for cosmetic purpose, but wasn't used for a food material. Butteroil was consumed as the food. Buttermilk was only used for drinking directly. In the highland side, the characteristics of milk processing system were that the technique of fermented milk processing series was adopted, fat was extracted and preserved as butteroil from fresh milk, and protein was also extracted as fresh cheese from fresh milk, but wasn't preserved for long periods. It was considered that the reason why the extraction and preservation of protein as cheese are lacked and fat as butteroil are developed in the Ethiopian middle highlands is 1) since the fresh milk is produced from sheep, goat, cow and camel through a year, protein is always supplied from fresh milk without extracting and preserving protein from milk, and 2) the necessity of betteroil for their food material made the butteroil processing developed from milk.

Journal

  • Milk Science

    Milk Science 62 (1), 1-10, 2013

    Japanese Dairy Science Association

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