Dairy By-Products: A Review on the Valorization of Whey and Second Cheese Whey

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The search for new food products that promote consumers health has always been of great interest. The dairy industry is perhaps the best example regarding the emergence of new products with claimed health benefits. Cheese whey (CW), the by-product resulting from cheese production, and second cheese whey (SCW), which is the by-product of whey cheese manufacture, have proven to contain potential ingredients for the development of food products with improved nutritional characteristics and other functionalities. Nowadays, due to their nutritional quality, whey products have gained a prominent position among healthy food products. However, for a long time, CW and SCW were usually treated as waste or as animal feed. Due to their high organic content, these by-products can cause serious environmental problems if discarded without appropriate treatment. Small and medium size dairy companies do not have the equipment and structure to process whey and second cheese whey. In these cases, generally, they are used for animal feed or discarded without an appropriate treatment, being the cause of several constraints. There are several studies regarding CW valorization and there is a wide range of whey products in the market. However, in the case of SCW, there remains a lack of studies regarding its nutritional and functional properties, as well as ways to reuse this by-product in order to create economic value and reduce environmental impacts associated to its disposal

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Foods 2021, 10(5), 1067; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10051067

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This work was supported by national funds through the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development and co-financed by the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development, through the partnership agreement Portugal2020-PDR, under the project PDR2020-101-030768: LACTIES. Partial funding was obtained through FCT—Foundation for Science and Technology—project UIDB/00681/2020 and by Xunta de Galicia (grant number GPC ED431B 2019/13)

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© 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
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