About
Acidified milk or acidulated milk is the food produced by adding one or more food-grade acids to milk, cream, or buttermilk, with or without the addition of microorganisms. In the United States, acids used to manufacture acidified milk include acetic acid, adipic acid, citric acid, fumaric acid, glucono-delta-lactone, hydrochloric acid, lactic acid, malic acid, phosphoric acid, succinic acid, and tartaric acid. Acidified milk lacks certain nutritional benefits that fermented milk has.
Composition
2 compounds identified — cross-referenced scientific databases
Highlighted compounds are flavor-active · "~pred" marks predicted edges · click to view molecular profile
Research Evidence
The Geist can be wrong. Some flavor, taste, and pairing values are model-predicted, not lab-measured.