This document provides methods to detect common adulterants in milk and milk products, oils, and fats. It lists 10 methods to detect adulterants in milk such as water, starch, urea, vanaspati, formalin, and detergent. Another section lists 4 methods to detect adulterants in milk products like sweet curd, rabdi, khoa, and chhana. The final section provides 6 methods to detect adulterants in oils and fats like ghee, butter, edible oils, and coconut oil. Common adulterants include vanaspati, margarine, mashed potatoes, and prohibited colors. The methods describe using acids, iodine solution
This document provides methods to detect common adulterants in milk and milk products, oils, and fats. It lists 10 methods to detect adulterants in milk such as water, starch, urea, vanaspati, formalin, and detergent. Another section lists 4 methods to detect adulterants in milk products like sweet curd, rabdi, khoa, and chhana. The final section provides 6 methods to detect adulterants in oils and fats like ghee, butter, edible oils, and coconut oil. Common adulterants include vanaspati, margarine, mashed potatoes, and prohibited colors. The methods describe using acids, iodine solution
This document provides methods to detect common adulterants in milk and milk products, oils, and fats. It lists 10 methods to detect adulterants in milk such as water, starch, urea, vanaspati, formalin, and detergent. Another section lists 4 methods to detect adulterants in milk products like sweet curd, rabdi, khoa, and chhana. The final section provides 6 methods to detect adulterants in oils and fats like ghee, butter, edible oils, and coconut oil. Common adulterants include vanaspati, margarine, mashed potatoes, and prohibited colors. The methods describe using acids, iodine solution
This document provides methods to detect common adulterants in milk and milk products, oils, and fats. It lists 10 methods to detect adulterants in milk such as water, starch, urea, vanaspati, formalin, and detergent. Another section lists 4 methods to detect adulterants in milk products like sweet curd, rabdi, khoa, and chhana. The final section provides 6 methods to detect adulterants in oils and fats like ghee, butter, edible oils, and coconut oil. Common adulterants include vanaspati, margarine, mashed potatoes, and prohibited colors. The methods describe using acids, iodine solution
1 Milk Water The presence of water can be detected by putting a drop of milk on a polished slanting surface. The drop of pure milk flows leaving a white trail behind, whereas milk adulterated with water will flow immediately without leaving mark 2 Milk Starch Add a few drops of tincture of iodine or iodine solution. Formation of Iodine solution is easily available blue colour indicates the presence of starch in medical stores 3 Milk Urea Take a teaspoon of milk in a test tube. Add teaspoon of soybean or arhar powder. Mix up the contents thoroughly by shaking the test tube. After five minutes, dip a red litmus paper in it. Remove the paper after half a minute. A change in colour from red to blue indicates the presence of urea in the milk. 4 Milk Vanaspati Take 3 ml of milk in a test tube. Add 10 drops of hydrochloric acid. Mix up one teaspoonful of sugar. After 5 minutes, examine the mixture. The red colouration indicates the presence of Vanaspati in milk. 5 Milk Formalin Take 10 ml of milk in a test tube and add 5 ml of conc. Sulphuric acid Formalin enhances the life of from the sides of the wall without shaking. If a violet or blue ring milk and thus is added for appears at the intersection of the two layers then it shows presence preservation purpose. of formalin. 6 Milk Detergent Shake 5-10 ml of sample with an equal amount of water, lather indicates the presence of a detergent. 7 Milk Synthetic Milk Synthetic milk has a bitter after taste, gives a soapy feeling on rubbing between the fingers and turns yellowish on heating. 8 Milk Synthetic milk- The milk can easily be tested by urease strips because synthetic milk is test for protein devoid of protein. 9 Milk Glucose/ Milk does not contain glucose/inverted sugar, if test for glucose with If it is made synthetically by Inverted sugar urease strip is found positive. It means milk is adulterated. adding colour, water, paint, oils, alkali, detergent etc.Glucose/ inverted sugar syrup is added to milk to increase consistency and test. 10 Ghee, cottage Coal tar dyes Add 5 ml of dilute sulphuric acid or conc. Hydrochloric acid to one teaspoon cheese, full of melted sample in a test tube. Shake well. Pink colour (in case of condensed sulphuric acid) or crimson colour ( in case of hydrochloric acid) indicates coal milk, khoa, tar dyes. If hydrochloric acid does not give colour, dilute it with water to get milk powder colour. etc. S. no Food article adulterant Method for detection Remarks 1 Sweet Curd Vanaspati Take 1 teaspoon full of curd in a test tube. Add 10 drops of hydrochloric acid. Mix up the contents shaking the test tube gently. After 5 minutes, examine the mixture. Red colouration indicates the presence of Vanaspati. 2 Rabdi Blotting paper Take a teaspoon of rabri in a test tube. Add 3 ml of hydrochloric acid and 3 ml of distilled acid. Stir the contents with a glass rod. Remove the rod and examine. Presence of fine fibres to the glass rod will indicate the presence of blotting paper. 3 Khoa and Starch Boil a small quantity of sample with some water, cool and add a few drops of its products iodine solution. Formation of blur colour indicates the presence of starch. 4 Chhana or Starch Boil a small quantity of sample with some water, cool and add a few drops of Paneer iodine solution. Formation of blue colour indicates the presence of starch. S. no Food article adulterant Method for detection Remarks 1 Ghee Vanaspati or Take about on teaspoon full of melted ghee with equal quantity of conc. The test is specific for sesame oil Margarine Hydrochloric acid in a stoppered test tube and add to it a pinch of sugar. which is compulsorily added to Shake for 1 minute and leave for 5 minutes. Appearance of crimson colour Vanaspati and Margarine. Some coal in lower (acid) indicates presence of Vanaspati or margarine. tar colours also give a positive test. If the test is positive i.e. red colour develops only by adding strong hydrochloric acid (without adding crystals of sugar) then the sample is adulterated with coal tar dye. If the crimson or red colour develops after adding and shaking with sugar, then alone Vanaspati or margarine is present. 2 Ghee Mashed The presence of mashed potatoes or sweet potatoes in a sample of ghee can potatoes, be easily detected by adding a few drops of iodine, which is brownish in sweet colour turns to blue if mashed potatoes/sweet potatoes/other starches potatoes are present. and other starches 3 Butter Vanaspati Take about one teaspoon full of melted sample of butter with equal quantity The test is specific for sesame oil or margarine of conc. Hydrochloric acid in a stoppered test tube and add to it a pinch of which is compulsorily added to sugar. Shake for i minute and let it for 5 minutes. Appearance of crimson Vanaspati and Margarine. Some coal colour in lower (acid) of Vanaspati or margarine. tar colours also give a positive test. If the test is positive i.e. red colour develops only by adding strong hydrochloric acid (without adding crystals of sugar) then the sample is adulterated with coal tar dye. If the crimson or red colour develops after adding and shaking with sugar, then alone Vanaspati or margarine is present. 4 Butter Mashed The presence of mashed potatoes or sweet potatoes in a sample of butter potatoes can easily be detected by adding a few drops of iodine (which is brownish and other in colour), turns to blue. starches 5 Edible oil Prohibited Take 5 ml of sample in a test tube and add 5ml of conc. Hydrochloric acid. colour Shake gently; let it stand for 5 minutes. Colour will separate in the upper layer of the solution. 6 Coconut oil Ant other oil Place a small bottle of oil in refrigerator. Coconut oil solidifies leaving the adulterant as a separate layer. Methods for detection of common adulterants in milk and milk products MILK MILK PRODUCTS OILS AND FATS Source: Food Safety and Standard Authority of India
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