Northeast Dairy Magazine | Q3 2021

Page 69

FoodSafety

FDA Issues Final Ruling to Modernize Identity Standard for Yogurt

T

he U.S. Food and Drug Administration is issuing a final rule to amend and modernize the standard of identity for yogurt by allowing for greater flexibilities and technological advances in yogurt production, according to its Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition Constituent Update released June 9, 2021. This initiative is part of the FDA’s Nutrition Innovation Strategy. Standards of identity set requirements related to the content and production of certain food products. One of the goals of the Nutrition Innovation Strategy is to modernize food standards to maintain the basic nature and nutritional integrity of products, while allowing industry flexibility for innovation to produce more healthy foods. The FDA began establishing standards of identity around 1938 to

promote honesty and fair dealing in the interest of consumers and since this time has established more than 280 standards for a wide variety of food products. Currently, the FDA has separate standards of identity for yogurt, low-fat yogurt, and nonfat yogurt. Under the final rule, low-fat yogurt and non-fat yogurt will be covered under FDA’s general definition and standard of identity, which allows nutritionally modified versions of traditional standardized foods. The final rule expands the allowable ingredients in yogurt, including sweeteners, such as agave, and reconstituted forms of basic dairy ingredients. It establishes a minimum amount of live and active cultures that yogurt must contain to bear the optional labeling statement “contains live and active cultures” or similar statements. For yogurt treated to inactivate viable microorganisms,

the statement “does not contain live and active cultures” is required on the label. Additionally, the final rule supports the many innovations that have already been made in the yogurt marketplace, including continuing to allow manufacturers to fortify yogurts, such as by adding vitamins A and D, as long as they meet fortification requirements. The rule also allows various styles or textures of yogurt, as long as they meet requirements in the standard of identity. The action responds, in part, to a citizen petition submitted by the National Yogurt Association, which is now part of the International Dairy Foods Association. The FDA issued a proposed rule on Jan. 15, 2009. The compliance date of this final rule is January 1, 2024, which is the uniform compliance date for final food labeling regulations issued in 2021 and 2022.

NED Magazine | Third Quarter 2021 • 67


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Research Says Most Americans Can Consume Chocolate Milk Daily

2min
page 73

OSHA UPDATE: Fire Safety Is Vital in the Workplace

2min
page 72

OSHA UPDATE: Keeping Employees Safe in the Heat

4min
pages 70-71

FDA Issues Final Ruling on Identity Standard for Yogurt

2min
page 69

I Get By With a Little Help From My Friends: NDFA, NDSA Hold First Events of 2021

3min
pages 66-67

Leanne’s Kitchen Watermelon Salad

0
page 68

NDFA Co-Sponsors Virtual Dairy Day

3min
page 65

MEMBER PROFILE

3min
pages 60-61

Member and Industry News

6min
pages 62-63

Welcome New Members

1min
page 64

MEMBER PROFILE

9min
pages 56-59

Social Media Basics Learn to Market Your Brand, Build Relationships with Audience

6min
pages 50-52

THE DEBATE ON DAIRY VERSUS PLANT-BASED ALTERNATIVES

4min
pages 47-48

Study Shows No Connection Between Milk Consumption and High Cholesterol

3min
page 49

Powering Through History

1min
page 41

Solar Farms in Ag Areas A New Challenge for Land Use Planning

8min
pages 44-46

Not Sure How to Benefit from Solar Energy? NDSA Partner Can Help

1min
page 42

Who Discovered Solar Energy?

2min
page 43

Shade and Energy: Solar Panels Use Shade in Grazing Pastures

1min
page 40

What Is Agrivoltaics?

1min
page 39

Calendar of Dairy Events

2min
page 35

Autonomous Vehicles Are Others Ready to Share the Road With Them?

1min
page 34

THE BUSINESS OF DAIRY

2min
page 28

Lack of Drivers Top the List of Trucking’s Obstacles

5min
pages 29-30

What Does It Take to Qualify a New Driver?

5min
pages 31-32

Solar Farms Opportunity or Threat?

5min
pages 37-38

Oldest State Fair to Resume in 2021

3min
page 27

PAMD NAMES NEW EXEC DIRECTOR

4min
pages 18-19

Impact of Proposed Changes to the Class I Price Formula

9min
pages 24-26

PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE, NDFA

2min
page 6

PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE, NDSA

3min
page 7

ECONOMIC OUTLOOK

8min
pages 14-17

EXECUTIVE VP MESSAGE

4min
pages 8-9

LEGISLATIVE REPORT

11min
pages 10-13

ASK A BOARD MEMBER

8min
pages 20-23
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.