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Dairy Manufacturing

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Dairy Video. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kIbVwE5zb1Y. Original Hand Milking Processes ... which the cow is housed indoors for most of the lactation period ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dairy Manufacturing


1
Dairy Manufacturing
  • Presented By
  • Mathieu Angers-Goulet
  • Kurt Colling
  • Jim Jackson

2
Agenda
  • General overview
  • Economics
  • Equipment and technology
  • Quality control
  • Products and processes
  • Case study
  • Conclusion

3
When and where it all started?
  • History
  • - Between 9000 and 8000 BC
  • First used as human food (Middle East)
  • - Around 7000 BC
  • Cattle being herded (Turkey)
  • - 1878
  • Milk bottles are first delivered (Milk Day)

4
Dairy product categories
  • -Natural products
  • Cream
  • Butter
  • Yogurt
  • Ice cream
  • Cheese
  • -Industrial products
  • Casein
  • Whey protein
  • Condensed milk
  • Powdered milk

5
Sources of milk
  • Cow
  • Goat
  • Sheep
  • Yaks
  • Water buffalo
  • Horse
  • Camel
  • Zebra
  • Moose
  • Humans

6
Dairy cows
  • Types of cattle
  • Holstein (90 in USA, 80 in Great Britain)
  • Ayrshire
  • Brown Swiss
  • Jersey
  • Milking Shorthorn

7
World consumption
  • -Consumption (USA)
  • 83.9 litres of liquid milk
  • 16.0 kg of cheese
  • 2.1 kg of butter

8
Economics
  • Statistics (USA)
  • Produces 80,150,000 metric tons
  • Market value is 21.315 billions
  • 65,000 dairy farmers which represents the second
    largest agricultural commodity industry in the
    United States by value.
  • The average yearly salary for a dairy director
    is 58,550 (depending on the size and products).

9
World production
-United states is the leader for cow milk.
10
Dairy farm profile (Massachusetts)
Farmers Days cows are milked 365 days per year
Average operator hours worked 90 per week
Average work day 13.8 hours Number of days
worked 6.5 per week Hourly wage rate 3.65 per
hour Farms Family owned dairy farms 262 Average
herd size 67 cows Milk Production Total annual
production 38 million gallons Consumers served
by an average dairy farm 6,000
11
Market
  • Price Increasing
  • Competition biofuel production vs. feedstocks.
  • Price above the estimated prices of the
    financial analysts.
  • Demand Increasing
  • General increased in worldwide prosperity.
  • The continuously increase in China dairy product
    consumption.

12
Economic concerns
  • Transportation costs due to the increase of oil
    prices.
  • Alternative products to milk
  • Soy milk
  • Rice milk
  • Almond milk
  • Coconut milk
  • - Labor liability and availibility

13
Dairy Video
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vkIbVwE5zb1Y

14
Original Hand Milking Processes
  • Until the late 1800s, the milking of the cow was
    done by hand
  • Milking took place indoors in a barn with the
    cattle tied by the neck with ropes or held in
    place by stanchions.
  • With the availability of electric power and
    suction milking machines, the production levels
    that were possible increased but the scale of the
    operations continued to be limited by the labor
    intensive nature of the milking process.

15
Modern Milking Parlor Operations
  • Milking machines held in place by vacuum. The
    vacuum is also used to lift milk vertically into
    the receiving can
  • Milk is extracted from the cow's udder by
    flexible rubber sheaths. The vacuum inside the
    inflation causes the inflation to collapse around
    the cow's teat, squeezing the milk out in a
    similar fashion as a baby calf's mouth
  • It takes the average cow three to five minutes to
    give her milk. Slow-milking cows may take up to
    fifteen minutes to exhaust themselves of milk.
    The milker can only process a group of cows at
    the speed of the slowest-milking cow
  • The extracted milk passes through a strainer and
    plate heat exchangers before entering the tank,
    where it can be stored safely for a few days at
    approximately 42F

16
Milking Shed Layout
  • Bail-style sheds About 50 cows an hour can be
    milked in a shed with 8 bales by one person.
  • Herringbone Milking ParlorsLarge herringbone
    sheds can milk up to 600 cows efficiently with
    two people.
  • Swingover Milking ParlorsThe advantage of this
    system is that it is less costly to equip,
    however it operates at slightly better than
    half-speed and one would not normally try to milk
    more than about 100 cows with one person.
  • Rotary Milking shedsThe rotary system is capable
    of milking very large herdsover a thousand cows.
  • Automatic Milking shedsCurrent automatic milking
    sheds use the voluntary milking (VM) method. The
    entire process is computer controlled.

17
Surge Bucket Milker
  • Invented in 1922
  • Large roasting pan would hang under the cow
  • Natural surging action as the milker moved back
    and forward while milking
  • Tug-and-pull movement was similar to the tugging
    and pulling of a calf
  • Easy to clean and sanitize
  • Increased income by harvesting more milk

18
Modern Milking Machine
  • The machine includes
  • Teat cups that contact the cows teats and
    remove the milk
  • Claw where milk pools as it is removed from the
    four teats
  • Vacuum tubes that provide vacuum to the teat cups
  • Milk tube that removes milk away from the claw
  • Vacuum for the machine
  • Pulsator that regulates the on-off cycle of the
    vacuum
  • Automatic take-off (ATO or detacher) device
    removes machine from cow when milking is
    completed
  • Computer system regulates machine and generates
    data about the cow and its milk

19
Lely Astronaut A3 robotic milking system
  • Robust robot arm controlling entire milking
    process
  • 4 Effect pulsation unit for tailor-made milking
  • On-line somatic cell count measuring system
  • Advanced dairy farm management program
  • Maximum cow comfort in spacious robot box

20
Advantages
  • Elimination of labor - The farmer is freed from
    the milking process
  • Increased milking frequency - Milking frequency
    may increase to three times per day. Higher
    frequency milking increases milk yield per cow
  • Perceived lower stress environment - Elective
    milking schedules reduce cow stress
  • Herd Management - The use of computer control
    allows greater scope for data collection. Farmer
    can improve management through analysis of trends
    in the herd

21
Disadvantages
  • High initial cost - VMS systems cost
    approximately 120,000 per milking unit
  • Low return on investment - A VMS takes longer to
    pay for itself than a conventional parlor
  • Increased complexity - Increased complexity of
    the VMS milking unit over conventional systems
    reduces the ability of the farmer to perform
    repairs, increasing reliance on manufacturer
    maintenance services and possibly increasing
    operating costs
  • Difficult to apply in pasture systems - VM works
    best in zero-grazing systems, in which the cow is
    housed indoors for most of the lactation period
  • Lower milk quality - A high somatic cell count
    (SCC) indicates reduced udder health and implies
    lower milk quality. A high plate loop count (PLC)
    indicates bacterial contamination, usually
    through poor sanitation or cooling and similarly
    implies low milk quality
  • Possible increase in stress for some cows - Cows
    are social animals, and it has been found that
    due to dominance of some cows, others will be
    forced to milk only at night
  • Decreased contact between farmer and herd -
    Illness may go unnoticed for longer periods and
    both milk quality and cow welfare suffer
  • Environmental concerns - Concentration of animals
    in zero-grazing VM systems increases the
    accumulation of excrement that must be collected
    and treated by the farm

22
Quality Control
  • Inspection and grading activities are carried out
    through four major programs which help to improve
    the quality, manufacture, and distribution of
    dairy products
  • 1) Plant Inspections and Equipment Reviews
  • 2) Inspection and Grading
  • 3) Dairy Product Grades and Quality Control
  • 4) Resident Grading and Quality Control

23
Plant Inspection
  • Inspection and grading services assure the
    quality of dairy products and are offered to the
    dairy industry on a voluntary basis.
  • Official approval of a manufacturing plant is a
    prerequisite for grading.
  • Only after an inspection shows that a plant has
    substantially met the requirements can the plant
    qualify for the other services of grading,
    sampling, testing, and certification of its
    product.

24
Inspection Grading
  • Grades are based on nationally uniform standards
    developed by Dairy Programs' experts in
    cooperation with industry representatives.
  • Sellers can request grading services to assure
    that products meet specific grade or contract
    requirements and have good keeping quality
    properties.
  • Buyers can request grading services to assure
    that products have uniform high quality.

25
Dairy Product Grades
  • Almost all dairy products can be graded, but the
    service is used most widely for butter, Cheddar
    cheese, instant nonfat dry milk, and regular
    nonfat dry milk.
  • For cottage cheese, or any other dairy product
    for which no U.S. grade standards have been
    established, there is a USDA program for official
    quality approval.
  • Such products may earn the "Quality Approved"
    rating, which is based on a USDA inspection of
    the product and the plant where the product was
    made.

26
Resident Grading
  • Resident grading and quality control service is
    available to approved plants.
  • This service is a combination of the plant
    inspection, laboratory programs, and inspection
    and grading.
  • It provides for quality checks on sanitation,
    grading, and certification of the finished
    product by an inspector stationed at the plant on
    a full-time basis.

27
Butter
  • Butter is made by churning pasteurized cream.
    Federal law requires that it contain at least 80
    percent milkfat.
  • There are three grades for butter U.S. Grades
    AA, A, and B. The ratings are assigned on the
    basis of flavor, body, and color.
  • U.S. Grade AA Butter has a delicate sweet
    flavor, with a fine, highly pleasing aroma, is
    made from fresh sweet cream, andhas a smooth,
    creamy texture with good spreadability

28
Cheddar Cheese
  • Cheesemaking consists of separating most of the
    milk solids from the milk by coagulating with
    safe bacterial cultures and rennet or a microbial
    enzyme. The curd is then separated from the whey
    by heating, stirring, and pressing.
  • There are four grades for Cheddar cheese U.S.
    Grades AA, A, B, and C. As with butter, all
    grades may be used in the wholesale trade, but
    only the top grade is used at the retail level.
  • U.S. Grade AA cheese has fine, highly pleasing
    Cheddar flavor smooth, compact texture uniform
    color and attractive appearance.

29
Milk
  • Milk available in stores today is usually
    pasteur-ized and homogenized. Very little raw
    milk is sold today.
  • In pasteurizing, milk is heated briefly to kill
    pathogens and harmful bacteria. Then, it is
    rapidly chilled.
  • Homogenized milk has been processed to reduce the
    size of the milkfat globules so the cream does
    not separate and the product stays uniform
    throughout.
  • The Grade A rating designates wholesomeness or
    safety rather than a level of quality.

30
Dairy Facts
  • Of all milk products, milk, yogurt, and cheese
    are the best sources of calcium.
  • Some milk products contain added sugars.
  • Some are high in sodium or fat, especially
    saturated fat, while others are low.
  • Although butter is made from cream, nutritionally
    it is a fat and is not in the milk group of the
    Food Guide Pyramid.

31
Dairy Facts(continued)
  • The Food Guide Pyramid suggests 2 to 3 servings
    each day of food from the milk, yogurt, and
    cheese group.
  • Choose a diet low in fat, saturated fat, and
    cholesterol to help reduce the risk of getting
    certain diseases and to help maintain a healthy
    weight.

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