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September 14, 2006
Healthy Ice Cream That Tastes Good?
Is such a thing possible?
Julia Moskin explored new wave ice creams in a story which appeared in the July 26 New York Times; it follows.
- Creamy, Healthier Ice Cream? What's the Catch?
In its quest to create ice cream as voluptuous as butter and as virtuous as broccoli, the ice cream industry has probed the depths of the Arctic Ocean, studied the intimate structures of algae and foisted numerous failures on the American public.
''I have tried them all as they came down the pike: dairy-free, fat-free, sugar-free; with tofu, yogurt, rice, whatever,'' said Linda Calhoun, a teacher who lives near Flagstaff, Ariz., cataloguing the disappointments she has tasted over the years. ''They always make me sad.''
For Americans who spend each summer wrestling with temptation, there is fresh hope in the freezer case. New industrial processes, including one that involves a protein cloned from the blood of an Arctic Ocean fish, have allowed manufacturers to produce very creamy, dense, reduced-fat ice creams with fewer additives. The new products appeal to those who have acquired a taste for superpremium high-fat ice cream but cannot stomach its fat content.
Edy's (branded as Dreyer's west of the Rockies) has tripled sales in its reduced-fat line since replacing its Grand Light with Slow Churned in 2004. Breyers introduced Double Churned flavors last year and has nearly doubled its product line. More than just marketing-speak, slow-churned and double-churned each refers to a process called low-temperature extrusion, which significantly reduces the size of the fat globules and ice crystals in ice cream.
Banking on the creamy mouth-feel of these new formulations, even Häagen-Dazs launched a line of Light ice creams last year to complement its butterfat-rich line. ''We waited years and years for this technology,'' said Gulbin Hoeberechts, a marketing manager for the company. ''Before, our only choices would have been adding air, water or ingredients that don't belong in ice cream.''
Almost all commercial ice creams contain industrial ingredients that mimic the luxurious effects of butterfat and egg yolks: some are natural, like carrageenan, extracted from algae plentiful in the Irish Sea; others are synthetic, like mono- and diglycerides.
But using new technologies can be risky for manufacturers. The other new method for making supercreamy ice cream was caught up last month in the global debate over genetically modified foods. In June, Unilever, the Anglo-Dutch conglomerate, applied to Britain's Food Standards Agency for permission to use a new ingredient in its frozen desserts -- a protein cloned from the blood of an eel-like Arctic Ocean fish, the ocean pout.
Instead of extracting the protein from the fish, which Unilever describes as ''not sustainable or economically feasible'' in its application, the company developed a process for making it, by altering the genetic structure of a strain of baker's yeast so that it produces the protein during fermentation.
This ingredient, called an ice-structuring protein, has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration and is used by Unilever to make some products in the United States, like some Popsicles and a new line of Breyers Light Double Churned ice cream bars.
''Ice-structuring proteins protect the fish, which would otherwise die in freezing temperatures,'' said H. Douglas Goff, professor of dairy sciences at the University of Guelph in Ontario. ''They also make ice cream creamier, by preventing ice crystals from growing.''
In Britain, where Unilever's Cornetto cone is as iconic as the Fudgsicle is in the United States, the news media have leapt in with headlines about ''vaneela'' ice cream. Britain, like the rest of the European Union, requires labeling for any food that has contact with genetically altered material, even if that substance is not present in the finished product. In its application Unilever stressed that no DNA or other ''material from fish'' is used in the process. But genetically modified foods have yet to gain wide acceptance from the European public, and Unilever has found itself the unwilling center of attention.
''It's unfortunate that this happened to come out during our so-called summer when people are interested in ice cream,'' said Trevor Gorin, head of media relations for Unilever in the United Kingdom. ''I can't tell you how many times I've had to explain that no, the Cornetto will not taste fishy.''
The United States has no regulations requiring the labeling of genetically modified food, which has become increasingly common at every point in the food chain. Until recently, its practical applications were mostly in developing strains of crops, like soybeans and corn, that are more resistant to stresses like disease, weather and insects.
But research by people like Professor Goff is beginning to bear fruit for the processed-food industry: proteins like the ones found in the ocean pout are an example.
For consumers, the benefit is that ice-structuring proteins and low-temperature extrusion have raised the ''creaminess'' bar for the ice cream industry.
''The ice creams produced with the new methods are simply better than any ice creams have ever been,'' Professor Goff said. ''Quite definitely better in texture, and much better tasting.''
A tasting by the staff of the Dining section found the Breyers Light Double Churned chocolate ice cream bar with the ice-structuring protein very creamy, even dense. It was the favorite of five ice cream bars tasted. The Häagen-Dazs Light and the Breyers Light chocolate ice cream, using low-temperature extrusion, were also very creamy and did not seem to be low-fat. But tasters found that the new ice creams still lagged behind full-fat versions in flavor.
''The quest has always been for the taste and texture of full-fat ice cream,'' said Tyler Johnston of Edy's. ''Since the 1980's it's been about adding ingredients,'' he said, referring to the gels and gums that commercial producers churn into reduced-fat ice cream to improve and stabilize its texture. ''Now we have a complicated process, but the recipe can be simplified,'' he added, referring to the industrial freezers that reduce the ice cream from minus 5 to minus 25 degrees Celsius for low-temperature extrusion.
The public seems persuaded. Shelf space for Dreyer's/Edy's Slow Churned, Breyers Light Double Churned and Häagen-Dazs Light has consistently expanded since they appeared. The category to which they belong, reduced fat, is the only part of the ice cream market that has been increasing in sales. As defined by the F.D.A., light or reduced-fat products can contain up to half the fat grams and two-thirds the calories of the original. (For a product like Häagen-Dazs dulce de leche ice cream, this means a reduction from 18 fat grams to 7 in the Light line; a low-fat product can have no more than three fat grams per serving.)
While full-fat ice cream still makes up more than 65 percent of the total market, the International Dairy Foods Association says that sales in the category have been flat for three years and that sales of low-fat and nonfat ice cream have gone down in the same period.
Professor Goff said that outside the United States the significance of the new technologies would be noted not on the palate but on the pallet. ''American companies are getting ready to export ice cream to China, India, the Philippines,'' he said. ''These are places that have very real cold-chain issues,'' he said, referring to the challenge of keeping ice cream consistently frozen throughout the shipping process.
Products produced with the new technologies are less affected by partial thawing than traditional ice creams, which become dry, sticky and hard in fluctuating temperatures. (This is why letting a container of ice cream thaw on the counter before scooping it is a bad idea.)
''Ice crystals are everyone's enemy in ice cream,'' said Arnold Carbone, the head of the Ben and Jerry's research lab in South Burlington, Vt. (Ben and Jerry's, now also owned by Unilever, does not use either new process.) ''Ice cream is an emulsion of air, fat and water, and emulsions are always fragile because the elements want to separate.''
Every time ice cream thaws slightly, the emulsion is compromised and the ice crystals combine into larger, jagged crystals that destroy the ice cream's texture. ''This is the drama of the cold chain,'' he said. ''Every minute that ice cream sits on a loading dock, it suffers incredible abuse.''

Professor Goff, whose lab is working on a process of extracting ice structuring proteins from winter wheat, has a low-tech solution for those trying to avoid crystallization. ''It's simple,'' he said. ''Never leave a container of ice cream unfinished.''
Correction (August 2, 2006, Wednesday): The article above, about new techniques for making lower-fat ice cream, inaccurately described a government labeling requirement. A product that contains no more than half the fat and two-thirds the calories of the original can be labeled light, not reduced fat. (To be reduced fat, the product cannot contain more than three-quarters of the fat of the original.)
September 14, 2006 at 12:01 PM | Permalink
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Comments
Thanks. I am doing a search and taste testing for my new ice cream shop. I am looking for the ice cream that you can eat yourself healthy. I will start a chain of these stores which also has healthy sandwiches. Bread made out of flax seed and soya. Flax seed for healthy skin and joints and soya for protein and and no fat the least amount of carbs.
To our health.
THE DOE
Posted by: Dorothy Liu | May 27, 2007 4:08:32 PM
Great STUPID idea for the man, may of us who have an allergy to seafood.
Idiots!
Posted by: D Alan | Oct 10, 2006 10:57:30 AM
Thanks for the great article. It is good to know that there are great tasting things that are good for us.
Posted by: Chocoholic | Sep 19, 2006 3:57:49 PM
carrageenan, extracted from algae plentiful in the Irish Sea -- almost a poem.
My beef with ice cream is two-part:
one: not enough of the pieces inside, even in premium creams like B and J and HDazzz.
two: so many of the lower fat varieties substitute sweets to compensate.
Where is the US version of a gelato -- cool, creamy goodness with just enough sweet --
O BoJ, where art (thou = ice cream)?
I bet your buddies (and you) will respond before the ice cream season ends....in about three weeks.
Posted by: Mb | Sep 14, 2006 3:31:59 PM
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