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Carabao News:
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mikey
FARM MANAGER
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Posts: 4361
Carabao News:
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on:
March 21, 2008, 11:33:10 AM »
“I am a fan of gatas ng kalabaw (carabao milk) and its by-products. Being a local of Los Baños, where the Dairy Training Research Institute (DTRI) is located, carabao’s milk and its by-products like kesong puti (white cheese) and pastillas de leche (milk candy) sold along the streets is a common sight. I remember when I was a kid, carabao’s milk was sold in longnecked bottles carefully sealed with banana leaves. Even the white cheese was then packaged with banana leaf to keep its freshness.”
Today, these traditional means of packaging carabao milk and cheese are rare. What we have now are the dainty packaging we see in the malls, products displayed in stalls that sell chilled carabao’s milk in carefully sealed bottles, pastillas and cheese wrapped ornately in all their glamor. Yes, even my old time favorite carabao milk’s packaging did change. That “promdi” (provincial) touch is gone.
Carabao, Not Only a Farm Buddy
Carabao, an indigenous livestock resource in the Philippines, plays an integral component in every smallholder mixed farming systems. True to its nature, the carabao is a domesticated animal that is not only a farmer’s bestfriend but has become a symbolical source of power for every Filipino farmer. The advent of new technologies like high-powered tractors and other machines introduced in the field slowly displaced the carabao’s role in the field. There are areas in the country, though, where carabaos are still the farmer’s beast of burden. Or, maybe, these are the small farmers who cannot afford the expensive modern farming machinery.
The carabaos do not only play a lead role in traditional farming as they are also our main source of protein. The carabao meat (or carabeef) is an important ingredient in processed foods i.e., sausage, luncheon meat, meat loaf, etc. Even the canned corned beef is partly composed of carabeef. Manufacturers of processed meat are in dire need of carabeef because of its inherent high water holding capacity especially in processed form. The products containing carabeef are attractive to consumer because they do not lose much of their original form when cooked. Moreover, compared to beef, carabeef is cheaper, making the cost of production highly competitive.
More than the meat, carabaos are also a profitable source of milk either sold fresh or processed.
Milking Profit from the Carabao
According to the Philippine Carabao Center (PCC), carabao’s milk is considered the “most complete food” because it contains protein, fat, lactose, vitamins and minerals, and water. Carabao’s milk is richer and creamier than cow’s milk or goat’s milk due to its high percentage of milk fat which is a good source of energy. It contains riboflavin or Vit. B2 needed for normal growth, agent against skin swelling, inflammation of the lining of mouth and tongue, and dizziness. It has Vit. A for clear eyesight and Vit. D, calcium, and phosphorus for strong teeth and bones.
Carabao’s milk, when it’s still in the mamary gland is still clean and free of microbes. But once the milk has been secreted from the mamary gland, it easily becomes susceptible to bacteria that come from the surroundings, air, materials used in milking, or human interactions. Since the milk is highly nutritious, it becomes an efficient medium for the bacteria to spread. This is the reason why fresh milk are spoiled easily.
PCC identified three ways to maintain the freshness of carabao’s milk. Immediately after milking, fresh milk must be stored inside an ice box or refrigerator. Second, milk must be pasteurized or cooked to kill the microbes and be safe to drink. This is usually done by heating the milk for 30 minutes at 63°C or 15 seconds at 72°C. The milk should be chilled and maintained at 0 temperature of 4-8°C. The third and last means is proper storage. If not all consumed, milk must be stored in an ice box or refrigerator to control the spread of microbes that are not killed during the pasteurization process.
To avoid wastage, milk must be processed. Pasteurized milk, choco milk, pastillas de leche, kesong puti, milko-jel, condensed milk, cheese spread, ice cream, mozzarella, or rennet (coagulated milk) are just some of the many products from carabao’s milk.
Pastillas de leche is one favorite native delicacy or sweets. With a tinge of the Spaniards’ influence, as the name implies, it is made simply of milk and sugar. Since the ingredients are simple, the finest possible quality milk and sugar is absolutely very important. Bulacan is well-known for pastillas production but lately some of the best pastillas made from pure carabao milk come from Nueva Ecija.
Aside from pastillas, there is also the ever famous kesong puti which is the Philippines’ version of the salty cottage cheese made from carabao’s milk. Another ingenious product of cheese making in the country is our very own carabao mozzarella. The appearance is somewhat similar to the typical mozzarellas of the Italian, but our version has slight grey pastiness when sliced.
source: Rita T. dela Cruz of http://www.bar.gov.ph
«
Last Edit: March 26, 2008, 09:18:56 PM by mikey
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mikey
FARM MANAGER
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Posts: 4361
Re: Carabao Milk:
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Reply #1 on:
March 26, 2008, 11:09:37 AM »
Technology-Livestock
Upgrading buffaloes, improving lives
by Ma. Eloisa E. Hernandez
When we see a farmer, in our minds is also a carabao since they are partners in the farm. They till the soil. The carabao is his beast of burden, pulling the plow and harrow and hauling farm produce when market time comes.
With the current carabao population of 3.33M, 99.9% is raised at backyards by small-hold farmers, while only 0.1% is found at commercial farms.
The Philippine water buffalo locally known as carabao not only serves as a multi-purpose animal but also as good source of meat and milk.
Technologies to improve the buffalo not only as a source of draft but more importantly of milk and meat have been developed to increase its population and its profitability.
The Philippine Carabao Center (PCC), an attached agency of the Department of Agriculture, has organized and extended its services to improve the genetic potential of the native carabao for meat, milk, and draft through its Carabao Development Program. Various reproductive biotechnologies were developed and utilized which resulted in improved carabao for the country.
The Artificial Insemination (AI) technique in upgrading buffalo is a technology being practiced by the Center. This started through the UNDP-FAO funded project for carabao upgrading in 1980. At first, PCC sourced out frozen semen contained in ampule from India. They provided trainings for technicians at National Artificial Breeding Center (NABC) for one month to further facilitate AI. This led to the establishment of our own semen laboratory in the country.
Thirteen centers of the PCC network lead in the nationwide implementation of AI activities. These are at: Mariano Marcos State University (Batac, Ilocos Norte); Cagayan State University (Piat, Cagayan); Don Mariano Marcos Memorial State University (Rosario, La Union); Central Luzon State University (Muñoz, Nueva Ecija); University of the Philippines at Los Baños (Los Baños, Laguna); Leyte State University (Baybay, Leyte); West Visayas State University (Calinog, Iloilo); La Carlota Stock Farm La Granja (La Carlota City); Ubay Stock Farm (Ubay, Bohol); Mindanao Livestock Production Complex (Kalawit, Zamboanga del Norte); Central Mindanao University (Musuan, Bukidnon); Mindanao State University (Marawi City); and University of Southern Mindanao (Kabacan, North Cotabato).
To further disseminate information on AI, the Expanded AI program had been launched. This initiates the privatization of the AI services, tapping the village-based private technicians to do the insemination activity. PCC provided training on AI for these technicians.
PCC provides them with the needed AI equipments which include the liquid nitrogen tank, semen straws and AI gun. Semen from the stored frozen semen is also provided at no cost. The liquid nitrogen required to maintain and preserve the frozen semen in the field is being provided by the national and the local government. The farmers will later on be charged for these services when the Localized or Privatized Expanded AI program becomes a viable approach for a wide-scale improvement of the carabao.
Changing Lives
The expanded AI service has reached farmers all over the country. Mr. Sosimo Ma. Pablico, an agricultural journalist featured personal accounts in buffalo dairying by farmers assisted by PCC. The book titled, “Changing Lives…Beyond the Draft Carabao”, also revealed success stories of farmers who have availed either of PCC's 25-dairy buffalo module or AI services.
Farmers were able to source out additional income as well as generate employment for other people in their respective communities. In some of the personal accounts revealed in the book, the families were able to pay debt, send children to school, formed cooperatives, and so on.
For instance, Mr. Elpidio Balino a farmer from Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija has been practicing AI since 1983. “Iyong isang anak ko nakagraduate ng nursing, iyong isa naman nasa Singapore na ngayon. Commerce naman ang natapos,” Mr. Balino shared. (One of my children is now a nursing graduate and the other one is now in Singapore, finished commerce). All these he attributes to milk produced by their AI breeds. His wife would sell every morning about six liters of milk produced to their neighbors giving her a daily income of P400.00.
The AI technology show great impact to the livestock sector. These upgraded buffaloes can change and improve our lives as well.
Source:
This article was based on the study, “Reproductive Biotechnology in Water Buffaloes in the Philippines: Recent Developments and Future Perspectives” by Eufrocina P. Atabay of the Philippine Carabao Center, National Headquarters and Genepool, Muñoz, Nueva Ecija.
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