This is certainly different. We have a quality ice cream based on proteins
and fats produced from sweet blue lupin seeds.
That is just about the last feed stock I might have guessed.
What is important is that it
provides a product that is antiallergenic at least and hopefully tasty also.
The product may have legs. Time will tell.
Dairy-free ice cream alternative developed for allergy sufferers and
vegans
By Darren
Quick
22:05 July 10, 2011
Fraunhofer researchers have developed a non-dairy ice cream alternative
called Lupinesse
While the researchers at Fraunhofer have been toiling away on all
manner of important technologies, from electric vehicles and printable batteries to antibacterial
film and water conservation technologies, it's good to see they've
also turned some of their expertize towards the equally important task of
bringing the joy of ice cream on a summer's day to those with a milk allergy or
lactose intolerance. A new plant-based ice cream alternative developed by
Fraunhofer researchers called Lupinesse has already hit store shelves in Germany
and is apparently pretty close to the real thing.
The purely plant-based product is made from the seeds of the blue
sweet lupin and is completely free of lactose, gluten, cholesterol and animal
proteins and fats, which also makes it ok for vegans and those sensitive to
gluten due to celiac disease. The researchers say that attempts to create
food products from lupins were all but abandoned in the late 1990s, until a
suggestion from Gerhard Kloth, a lupin expert, to use the blue sweet lupin.
The researchers claim it this specific lupin variety combined with a
special production method that is the secret behind the ice cream's flavor. The
blue sweet lupin is particularly rich in protein and it is this high quality
protein from the seeds that is responsible for the product's creamy
consistency. Additionally, the lupin protein also has cholesterol-regulating
effects. But unfortunately for ice cream lovers everywhere, the new ice cream
has about the same amount of fat as regular ice cream.
Lupinesse comes in four flavors: Vanilla-Cherry, Strawberry-Mousse,
Walnut Dream and Choco-Flakes. It is currently only available on the shelves of
the Germany 's largest
supermarket chain, Edeka, in Southern Bavaria
and the Southwest, where it retails for 2.99 euro (approx. US$4.20) for a 450
ml (0.47 quart) tub. Judging by the only online review I could find (and
relying on Google Translate), the stuff apparently tastes pretty good.
If that's the case then don't be surprised if Lupinesse starts getting a wider
release.
The Fraunhofer Institute
for Process Engineering and Packaging IVV in Freising, Germany has created a
spinoff company, Prolupin
GmbH, which is in charge of producing and marketing Lupinesse.
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