Page:Pure milk - a lecture delivered in the lecture room of the exhibition, July 30th, 1884 (IA b28525140).pdf/13

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PURE MILK.
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extent, upon cheese with a quantity of bread, and not only do they thrive on the food, but perform an amount of physical work which most of us in this room would be quite incapable of undertaking. It is therefore fair to look upon caseine as being the work-sustaining portion of milk, and to say that if a sample of milk is deficient in caseine, it is deficient in a constituent most necessary for securing health.

Albumen constitutes nearly the whole of the remainder of the nitrogenous matter in milk. It is difficult to define the exact position which this albumen holds in the dietetic value of milk. It forms a small proportion, only about one quarter, of the nitrogenous matter present, but owing to its more soluble form, and the greater difficulty with which it is coagulated, it appears to me extremely probable that its real food value may be higher than the other nitrogenous constituents. There is some amount of evidence, although not yet a certainty, that this form of albumen is peculiar to milk, and that it differs from the albumen present in eggs, but it seems probable, that like the volatile acids present in the fat of milk, this substance has a special nutritive value of its own, and that without this albumen milk would not be a perfect or complete food.

Of course in the case of whey, which is not unfrequently used as a diet, the albumen forms a very important part, because the caseine, containing some three-fourths of the nitrogenous matter, has already been separated, and the albumen, with a trace of Lacto-Protein, form the only nitrogenous matter available.

Sugar of milk is a very peculiar sugar, differing from most other sugars. Nearly all its properties, both chemical and physical, differ from cane sugar, in not being so sweetening in its properties, and yet it has a pleasant taste, perhaps more agreeable in flavour than most of the glucoses and other uncrystallizable sugars. Sugar of milk itself, however, is crystal lizable, but with a different form of crystallization to cane sugar or beet sugar, and its solution in water behaves differently during concentration,