Different Stages Involved In The Dairy Industry

Different Stages Involved In The Dairy Industry

Cows are milked using vacuum cups which are attached to the cow's teats. The milk is sent through stainless steel pipes to large refrigerated vats, then stored at 5°C or less. Within 48 hours, milk is taken in tankers to a milk factory where it's pasteurized and homogenized.

Pasteurization

This technique heats milk to 72°C for no less than 15 seconds, then cooled immediately to destroy any harmful bacteria and micro-organisms. This also extends the shelf life. Read More.

Homogenization

Milk is put under pressure through fine nozzles, which evenly disperses fat globules. This stops the cream separating and rising to the top, allowing a more consistent texture and taste. Some manufacturers produce unhomogenized milk for people who prefer the cream to separate and rise to the top of the bottle.

Centrifugal separation

This removes some or all of the cream to make reduced-fat, low-fat or skim milk. Skim milk solids can be added back to improve the test and texture, and increase nutrients like protein and calcium. 

Ultrafiltration

This moves milk across a membrane under  moderate pressure, which holds back protein, fat globules, and a large amount of calcium complexes.
Water and lactose (the sugar in milk) pass through, leaving behind a very protein and calcium-rich product. The fat content can be adjusted to suit consumer preference.

Reverse osmosis

This is very similar to ultrafiltration, but the membrane holds back most of the milk solids and only lets water pass through. Lactose remains in the product. There is no impact on flavour.

Ultra osmosis

This is a combination of ultrafiltration and reverse osmosis, but it holds back milk solids and allows both water and salt to pass through.

Spray drying

This removes water from milk in order to make powdered milk products. Milk’s nutritional value remains the same.

Permeate

In order to standardize milk year-round, some manufacturers use a process called ultrafiltration where a membrane filter separates certain elements from milk (just like in the descriptions above). Milk is passed through a very fine filter, and the lactose (milk sugar), vitamins and minerals that filter through are referred to as "permeate".

Flow Diagram For Typical Dairy Plant


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