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Can Karachi’s camel milk shake the medical world?

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KARACHI: International campaigns are pushing the idea that camel milk is the world’s next super food and a small venture in Karachi is doing its bit to sell, promote and expand the consumption and distribution of the product.

Wondermilk, founded by Ambreen Jahangir and her daughter Sarah, was inspired by Ambreen’s lactose-intolerant husband’s quest to find an alternative to regular milk. “He started by Googling information about camel milk,” she told The Express Tribune. “He then found camel herders, bought it directly from them and started drinking two to three glasses a day.” She admitted being initially turned off by the idea.


But then, after her husband continually insisted she try it out, the diabetic Ambreen read up on the milk’s nutritional potential and gave it a try. “After drinking it regularly, I had my blood sugar level checked and surprisingly it had decreased,” she said. (Editor’s note: Please consult your physician before making any decisions if you have a health condition).

Ambreen says that one quart of camel’s milk can contain up to 45 units of insulin, and as a result many of Wondermilk’s customers are people with diabetes. She has also received requests from people with other conditions such as autism and cancer. “Many parents of autistic children are buying this milk because their bodies tend to reject a lot of other foods,” she said. “We have even heard reports of it helping in behavioural changes.” No independent local research was, however, available to back these claims.

For now, the simply packaged product’s revenue is going straight to the herders. The Jahangirs are not making a profit and are simply running it as “more of a service”. The milk is pricey, more than an average consumer can afford at Rs150 for 250 ml. But patients who will regularly consume it get a customised discount. It comes in flavours such as chocolate, strawberry, ice-cream soda, and coffee.

The Jahangirs have been trying to win aid and grants from international NGOs for their venture and the NGO What Took You So Long has approached Wondermilk to include them in their film documenting camel milk around the world, “Hot Chocolate for Bedouins”.

The entire operation works out of the Jahangir home and the milk is taken straight from the herders. The herders wear disposable gloves, the udders are washed, and sterilised steel buckets are used. No heat can be used in the process and the milk is neither pasteurised nor does it go through a process of homogenisation in order to retain the nutrients. The Jahangirs claim it has thrice the amount of Vitamin C than regular milk. Wondermilk employs a camel vet as well.

According to different online reports, camel milk contains nutrients that help battle anaemia, osteoporosis, allergies, auto-immune diseases, autism, Crohn’s disease and the side-effects chemotherapy.

Baloch camels in Pakistan are the most prized camels in Pakistan, according to the Jahangirs and buyers from the Middle East regularly come to buy them. Unlike cows, only camels that have recently given birth, can be milked. Out of a herd from 20 to 100 camels at times only a few may be able to produce milk. But the yield is high, as high as 40 litres a day, compared to that of cows.
The milk doesn’t curdle, so yoghurt cannot be made from it but cheese can be made, albeit in a difficult process. The Jahangirs have, however, managed to make a delicious mousse and are selling a kheer (rice pudding) made from camel milk.

Wondermilk is delivered through Khadim online and customers can also pick it up themselves. Another Jahangir family member will be opening a bakery in the coming days that will stock also Wondermilk’s products.

Aside from the nutritional aspects, Wondermilk says there are cosmetic properties to the milk as well. “It has slimming properties and a low percentage of fat, varying from 1.8% to 2%. It also is great for your skin because it includes natural lanolin,” says Ambreen.

When asked why camel milk hasn’t caught on in larger markets like the US, Sarah say that the Food and Drug Administration hasn’t approved it so far allegedly because of pressure from big business. Whether this is the truth behind the matter, nomadic tribes around the Middle East and the sub-continent have been consuming camel milk for centuries, and it still remains an untapped market.

An FAO report on camel milk states, “the prejudice against the camel stems from a misconception that it is of low economic value and is synonymous to under-development.” For those who can afford it, this perspective will have to be altered before this product can be milked for all it is worth.

http://tribune.com.pk/story/321230/...-karachis-camel-milk-shake-the-medical-world/
 
Some people are selling camel milk in europe too, they have camel farms in europe(Amazing the desert animal can survive European winter)

Good to have so many different milks.
 
Please stick to the topic instead of bringing up subject which are NOT allowed.
Apparently nobody reads the rules.. and will have to pay for that digression.
 
cmon to those guys who are saying its not possible there are many fruits and vegetables and many natural things that can cure and help people effected by different diseases ..... i am not shocked as cow milk is very good for bones so could be this milk
 
Nutritional value

Camel milk is a rich source of proteins with potential antimicrobial and protective activities; these proteins are not found in cow milk or found only in minor amount. Camel milk is a whole food meaning it has enough nutrients to sustain a person through the day. In many countries, camel milk is given to babies suffering from malnutrition. Compared to cow, buffalo and ewe milk fat, camel milk fat contains less short-chained fatty acids, but the same long-chained fatty acids can be found. Some researchers claim that the value of camel milk is to be found in the high concentrations of volatile acids and, especially, linoleic acid and the polyunsaturated acids, which are essential for human nutrition. Camel milk has a high vitamin and mineral content and immunoglobin content. The composition of camel milk depends on its feed and species: Bactrian milk has a higher fat content than Dromedary milk.


•Camel milk is low in lactose compared with cow's milk. However, levels of potassium, magnesium, iron, copper, manganese, sodium and zinc are higher than in cow's milk. •Cholesterol in camel milk is lower than cow or goat milk. •Camel milk is 3 times higher in vitamin C than cow’s milk and 10 times higher in iron. •It is also high in unsaturated fatty acids and B vitamins but less in vitamin A and B2. •The fat content in camel’s milk is similar to that of cow’s milk. •Camel milk is rich potassium, iron and minerals such as sodium and magnesium.


Camel milk - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
Some more info about camel milk and related products:

.:CAMELICIOUS:.

Al Ain Dairy - The No 1 dairy in the UAE

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UAE camel milk set for Europe

May 2, 2011

The UAE might not seem short on camels, but camel milk farmers are planning to import them from central Asia regardless.

They are doing so because they have an eye on a potential explosion of demand if Europe decides to give the go-ahead to camel milk imports from the UAE.

Last July, the European Union approved the UAE's plans to demonstrate the safety and quality of the milk. Later this year, a team of inspectors will arrive to verify that those plans are being put into practice.

If their report is positive, the European Commission and the European Parliament will have to approve the UAE as a country that can sell camel milk to Europe.

But the country's two producers, Al Ain Dairy and Emirates Industry - which markets its camel milk products under the Camelicious brand - already struggle to keep up with domestic demand.

Emirates Industry produces 5,000 litres of camel's milk a day. Struggling to meet domestic demand, it would have to drastically boost production to supply Europe in any meaningful quantities.

The problem, producers say, is that while the camels are fast on their feet, they do not produce nearly as much milk as cattle.

While cows can produce up to 40 litres of milk a day, an Arabian camel makes eight litres.

They are unlikely to match the cows' productivity as a result of lacking udder cisterns, meaning they only produce milk when their teats are being suckled, but there is plenty of room for the camels to improve. Other breeds yield up to twice as much, experts say.

Part of the answer is selective breeding, which over the decades has greatly helped increase the yield of cattle and many other animals and crops.

To that end, Ulrich Wernery, the scientific director of the Central Veterinary Research Laboratory, plans to visit Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Kenya, where he will buy stock to bring back.

He is considering, too, buying semen from the US. Like the dairy industry, camel milk producers rely on artificial insemination.

Turkmenistan adopted dromedary camels during the Arab conquest in the eighth century, and since bred both native Bactrian - two-humped - camels and the Arabian dromedary - one hump - for their milk and meat.

According to Mr Wernery, that long history of breeding has allowed Turkmenistan's camels to yield nearly 50 per cent more milk than the UAE's. "It was the same process for people starting dairy farms 50 years ago," he says.

They are much cheaper, too. While a racing camel costs around Dh20,000, Turkmeni camels bred to produce milk cost US$300 (Dh1,100).


And the potential could be huge. The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation estimates the world market for camel milk at US$10 billion (Dh36.7bn), with hundreds of millions of potential customers.

Tests have shown the milk has less than half the fat and 40 per cent of the cholesterol of cows' milk - as well as three times the vitamin C. It can be digested by people who are intolerant to lactose, and can even ease food allergies. All this, Emirates Industry believes, gives it the scope to be marketed as a health food.

Camelicious, however, sees opportunities for ice cream, cheeses and an expansion of camel chocolate production.

For now, though, not all of the dairy producers are enthusiastic. Al Rawabi farm in Dubai has 10,000 cattle but no camels.

It considered it, says general manager Ahmed Rahem al Mansouri, but decided the market was too small.

UAE camel milk set for Europe - The National
 
Products made with camel milk:

Al Nassma - first and finest camel milk chocolate

16 August 2011

Camel-milk chocolate set for Swiss debut

Dubai's Al Nassma, the world's first brand of chocolate made with camels' milk, is set to debut in Switzerland next month as global demand for the product soars, its general manager said.

The confectionary is already available in Japan and Europe, in addition to Gulf states Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and the company hopes to begin distribution in Egypt in September.

“[Demand] is very big really. Starting next month we will be available in 60 outlets all over Switzerland, in the motherland of chocolate,” said general manager Martin Van Almsick.

“People love milk chocolate but they long for something new and we provide that. We provide a new story, a new taste and we are from Dubai and that stirs up some images in the minds of the European customers, as it does the Japanese customers.”

At its coffee shop in Mall of the Emirates, Al Nassma already sells camel-themed hot drinks such as Camelattes and Camelcinos and has plans for more spin–off products.

“You will see [camel-milk] ice-cream next month in Mall of Emirates,” said Van Almsick, but added the speed of Al Nassma’s growth was limited to the quality of the camel milk sourced.

“Our growth is limited to the camel milk we have available. There is just one company in the world we can use. It is outstanding. Anything else we cannot use as we cannot use [camel milk] from Oman or Saudi Arabia as it is not processed.”

Though demand for camel-milk products may be strong, UAE dairies suffered a set-back after the European Union said it was unlikely to give permission for the export of fresh camel milk before 2013, citing concerns over disease and import controls.

The trade bloc had sent inspectors to review camel farms in the Gulf state in late January, but declined to allow exports until a list of recommendations were met.

The UAE has two camel farms, Al Ain Dairy and the Emirates Industry for Camel Milk and Products, which produce the Camelait and Camelicious brands respectively. The product was launched on to the UAE market five years ago.

If granted, a green light from the EU could open doors to supplying camel milk to the US and Canadian markets, as well as China and Hong Kong.

An industry source told Arabian Business that UAE authorities were in talks with distributors in countries including Malaysia, Brunei, Singapore, South Africa, Jordan and the Maldives.

Van Almsick said the ban on milk exports did not affect chocolate sales in Europe.

“As chocolate manufacturers we are not affected by this,” he said. “This is just concerning milk. You can imagine if you ship milk with a shelf life of four days to Europe I mean what is going to be the market success of this of fresh milk?”

Camel milk contains five times more vitamin C than cow milk, less fat, less lactose and more insulin, making it a good option for diabetics and the lactose intolerant, he said.

Camel-milk chocolate set for Swiss debut - Food - ArabianBusiness.com
 

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