A concise review of millet milk development
Access Status
Authors
Date
2025Type
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Source Title
ISSN
Faculty
School
Collection
Abstract
There is a growing global shift from dairy milk to plant-based milk alternatives (PBMAs) due to environmental, ethical, and health concerns. PBMAs such as oat, soybean, and nut milk are commercially available, whereas millet milk is notable for being allergen-free. Millet is a nutrient-dense and cost-effective option, providing essential amino acids, minerals, and antioxidants. However, factors such as millet type, extraction methods, and processing techniques significantly impact the nutritional quality of the millet milk. A standardized processing pathway is essential to achieve an optimal nutritional profile, yet the lack of such a pathway remains a significant challenge in millet milk production. Therefore, this comprehensive review explores the impact of various preprocessing techniques and extraction methods for millet milk, as well as the application of novel stabilization techniques such as high- and ultrahigh-pressure homogenization, ultrasound, microfluidization, and pulsed electric fields on other PBMAs, proposing their potential for millet milk. Additionally, the existing millet milk processing techniques are compiled to a framework, and the nutritional composition of millet milk is compared to other PBMAs and cow milk. Lastly, the recommendations for future research, focusing on the development and nutritional optimization of millet milk, are presented.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
McLeod, Gemma; Sherriff, Jill; Nathan, Elizabeth; Hartmann, Peter; Simmer, Karen (2013)Aim: Preterm nutritional audits have previously been conducted using assumed milk composition. We audited protein and energy intakes in the first 28 days of preterm life using both assumed milk composition and milk analysis ...
-
McLeod, G.; Sherriff, Jill; Hartmann, P.; Nathan, E.; Geddes, D.; Simmer, K. (2015)The variable content of human breast milk suggests that its routine fortification may result in sub-optimal nutritional intakes and growth. In a pragmatic trial, we randomised infants born below 30 weeks of gestation to ...
-
Ayonrinde, Oyekoya; Oddy, W.; Adams, L.; Mori, T.; Beilin, L.; de Klerk, N.; Olynyk, John (2016)Background & Aims: The pathway to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in adolescents may have its origins in adiposity gains, nutrition and sedentary lifestyle established during childhood. There is inadequate ...