By Luke Runyon
Dairy farmers say the makers of plant-based milks -- like almond milk, soy milk and a long list of other varieties -- are stealing away their customers and deceiving consumers. And they’d like the federal government to back them up.
A war is brewing over what you pour on your breakfast cereal. At its heart, the fight boils down to the definition and use of one simple word: milk.
Dairy farmers say milk comes only from a mammal, which is backed up by longstanding Food and Drug Administration rules. But the FDA has not banned plant-based milk makers from using the term. And the plant-based milk companies argue that foods amount to much more than their legal definitions, and should be judged on how they are used by consumers.
Over the last five years, sales of non-dairy drinks have been on a dramatic rise in grocery stores across the country, while sales of old-fashioned cow’s milk are dropping.
At a Natural Grocers store in Lakewood, Colorado for example, the faux-dairy products section is bigger than the actual dairy section.
“That’s because we have a greater number of our customers asking for the non-dairy alternatives,” says Karen Falbo, director of nutrition education for the Western grocery chain.
Customers at Natural Grocers have their choice of old classics like almond and soy milk, and new varieties like macadamia, hemp and quinoa milk.
In 2015, the research firm Nielsen calculated almond milks sales at $894 million, and soy milk at $297 million. Dairy milk still makes up the lion’s share of the market -- research firm Mintel puts it at $17.8 billion in sales in 2015 -- but fluid milk sales have been slipping for decades, and the shift has put dairy farmers on high alert.
Mary Kraft is one of those farmers. Her dairy cows in rural Morgan County, Colorado churn out roughly half a million pounds of milk every day. Standing in one of her milking parlors, she can’t even bring herself to say the words “almond milk.”
“Because it’s a juice, right?” Kraft says. “It’s a juice that’s coming from any fruit or vegetable. It’s not a milk.”
Dairy milk is naturally packed with nutrients, she says. Like many dairy farmers, she’s upset the word milk has been co-opted by food marketers to sell imitation products.
“It upsets me that somebody’s trying to steal our halo and act like us when plainly you try the beverage it doesn’t taste like us,” she says.
“I can’t find a teat on a soybean. It’s just not there.”
FDA rules are on Kraft’s side, at least for now. The FDA says for something to be called “milk” it has to come from an animal -- more specifically it must be a “lacteal secretion” -- not just be milk-like.
The agency has yet to wade into the milk fight, though it soon may have to. Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin from America’s dairyland, Wisconsin has introduced a new law called the Dairy Pride Act, which would bar non-dairy beverage companies from calling their products “milk” and require the FDA to enforce the rules on the books.
The move has riled up plant-based food makers who say they already bend over backwards to find the right wording for their labels. The reason they use words like milk and cheese on their packages isn’t to steal away customers, they say, but to use language everyone understands.
“Why would you call it a juice if the way that you treat it is as a milk?” asks Matthew Sade, the CEO of Kite Hill, a California-based company that makes yogurt and cream cheese out of almond milk, no cows involved.
Foods are defined by their cultural attributes and uses, Sade says, not some archaic legal definition.
“I would argue that from a regulatory standpoint those are antiquated regulations and absolutely the FDA needs to step up and clarify a definition that’s in the best interest of the public,” he says.
If the FDA forces plant-based dairy alternative manufacturers to take words like milk and cheese off product labels, consumers will be even more confused, he says.
“People understand what almond milk is, people understand what soy milk is -- no one thinks it came from an animal,” Sade says.
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