
A research project headed by the Technical University of Denmark, DTU, has come up with a formula. It is for a freeze-dried starter culture that African camel milk farmers can use to make safe, fermented milk products.
The majority of the world’s camels are located in East Africa, where they are a common dairy animal. Camel milk constitutes upwards of 9% of the total milk production of Africa. The farmers, who milk the animals, sell much of the milk as fermented product in local markets or roadside stalls.
The fermentation process occurs spontaneously as the farmers have no cooling facilities. Given that the level of hygiene is often poor, the milk often also contains disease-causing microorganisms . Such as E.coli and salmonella, which have the opportunity to multiply in the lukewarm milk.
The researchers have isolated new strains of lactic acid bacteria from raw camel milk. This can be used in a starter culture that both acidifies the milk. And further kills off even very large amounts of various disease-causing microorganisms in the milk. To the researchers’ knowledge, this is the first time research has shown that these bacteria can be used to make camel milk products safer to consume.
The trio’s experiments have shown that five liters of milk can make enough starter culture to produce half a million liters of safe, fermented camel milk. However, the researchers responsible for the camel milk project recommend that farmers heat-treat the milk to reduce the amount of disease-causing microorganisms in the milk as much as possible before adding the starter culture.
The three students-Line Kongeskov Frimann, Laura Pontoppidan and Louise Marie Matzen-found it to be an exciting and stimulating challenge to conduct a project of engineering relevance in a cooperation between two such different universities.
African researchers estimate that food poisoning kills 137,000 people on the continent annually. For Haramaya University, the project is an important element in the university’s work to develop sustainable solutions and increase food safety in Ethiopia.
First author Esben Bragason wrote the article during the last semester of his Masters course, while the research laboratories at the DTU were closed down during the spring of 2020–along with much of the rest of Denmark. The article is based on his research, which documents the bacteria strains’ antimicrobial effect.
The project has received approximately 1.1 million Euro in funding from DANIDA. It also received funding from e.g. Laurits Andersen’s Fund. Read about the project in DTU’s research database