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Author Topic: Danisco supports science of probiotic juices  (Read 141 times)
MiraD
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« on: February 03, 2012, 11:22:04 AM »

Um...yes...wouldn't this be things like juice kefir, kombucha or kvass?  Silly people think they're inventing something new.

http://www.nutraingredients.com/Research/Danisco-supports-science-of-probiotic-juices

Breaking News on Supplements & Nutrition - Europe
Danisco supports science of probiotic juices
By Stephen Daniells, 14-Jun-2010

Related topics: Dosage forms, Probiotics and prebiotics, Gut health, Research, Probiotics

Antioxidant-rich fruit juices  can support probiotics , say new findings  from Danisco  that support the
potential of juices to offer an interesting alternative to dairy-based products.
Levels of the company’s Howaru strains were unchanged after formulation in a juice containing extracts of grape
seed and green tea extract, and vitamin C, according to findings published in the Journal of Food Science.
Researchers from Victoria University in Australia, Danisco France and Danisco USA tested Howaru Lactobacillus
rhamnosus HN001, Howaru Bifidobacte rium lactis HN001, and Lactobacillus paracasei LPC 37 in juice fortified with
a variety of antioxidants. Results showed that the Bifidobacte rium strain showed good viability after six weeks of
storage, with 89 per cent of the bacteria still viable.
The antioxidant ingredients “may promote a more favourable environment for probiotic bacteria and may prove
useful in developing a new and novel fruit juice based functional foods”, they wrote.
Commenting on the significance of the findings, Peggy Steele, global business director, Health & Nutrition,
BioActives for Danisco told NutraIngredients: “These findings show that there are ingredients that can be added
to juice to improve stability. It plays an important role in achieving required probiotic dose in the product
throughout shelf life."
From dairy to fruit
Yogurts and fermented dairy drinks have long been considered an ideal vehicle for delivering probiotic bacteria
to the human gastroinstestinal tract, which explains the widespread use of probiotic cultures in dairy products but
adding probiotics to juices is more complex.
In January, a spokesperson for Danisco told this website that great tasting juices with scientifically documented
effects on consumer's health have great commercial potential. The company  said that it has developed two
probiotic juice concepts, both containing an effective dose of the Bifidobacte rium lactis HN019 strain.
The new study supports such statements. The researchers prepared juices with each of the probiotics strains at a
level of about 8.3 log CFU/ml, and added a variety of health ingredients, including vitamins B2, B3, B6, C and E,
and extracts of white grape seeds and green tea.
The juice made with no added ingredients was not friendly to the gut-friendly bacteria, with very poor viability
scores reported. However, “the model juice containing vitamin C, grape extract, and green tea extract showed
better survival of probiotic bacteria”, wrote the researchers.
Market potential
Danisco’s Steele supported the potential of probiotic juices. “Juices have been identified through market research
as a key delivery vehicle for probiotics,” she said. “Probiotic juices have shown a significant growth between 2003
and 2008 with 108 probiotic juice launches according to Mintel's GNPD.”
Recently we reported that sales of the world’s first probiotic juice, ProViva, have not been dented by the raft of
probiotic strain negative opinions flowing from the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), with sales jumping
eight per cent in the first quarter of 2010.
ProViva, owned by Sewedish dairy Skånemejerier, records sales of about €55m per year retail, the majority in
Sweden with low-leve l sales in Denmark  and Finland.
Source : The Journal of Food Science
Published online ahead of print, doi: 10.1111/j.1750-3841.2010.01628.x
“Improving the Stability of Probiotic Bacteria in Model Fruit Juices Using Vitamins and Antioxidants”
Authors: N.P. Shah, W.K. Ding, M.J. Fallourd, G. Leye r

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blujay
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« Reply #1 on: February 05, 2012, 10:39:20 PM »

Well when Danisco is funding the research of course it will turn out favorable. I like how they only talk about the viability of the probiotic strains, and none of the in vivo benefits or drawbacks...very scientific indeed!

There is a huge difference between the traditionally fermented drinks (they are actually fermented with the native probiotics, not just added just prior to bottling and hope they stay viable) and the commercially produced one. The strains they have identified and cultured in sterile isolation then combined as they see fit in the products of choice does not come close to the wild jungle of biota that is a traditional fermentation and your gut. Its like dropping a class of middle school kids in the middle of the Amazon with a bottle of hand sanitizer and hoping for the best...its just bad advice any way you look at it.

I'm guessing that these "Juices" that they are trying to jazz up for the market are pretty sugary, so even if they could deposit a host of added probiotics the sugar is going to feed the other native biota and kill off any hope of their precious inhabitation or benefits.

So I just see this as another savvy marketing ploy to sell more "juice" to the consumers...don't believe the hype...Ferment your own!

-Just another Therapeutic Chef and product developer,
  Jay
 
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