Off late I have been researching a lot on cheap but effective sources of protein and then I came across skimmed milk powder. It is perfect considering it provides 35g of protein for as low as 40-45rs, this is insane. Pretty much cheapest complete source of protein with good bioavailability. There’s a catch tho, it has ridiculously large quantities of carbs. 100g of powder has 48-52g of carbs in the form of lactose. Hence it also led to diarrhoea and extremely uncomfortable gas. So I thought about consuming it in curd form, now adding lactic acid bacteria to this reduces lactose and makes it easier to digest. Digestion issues were reduced by maybe 50%, at least I wasn’t experiencing explosive diarrhoea but still the bloating and gas was there. What I did was went one step ahead and let the bacteria do its magic for more than 5-6 hours. This time instead of refrigerating it after 5-6 hours, I went ahead with letting it ferment for an entire day i.e. 24 hours, now the bacteria flourished and pretty much turned most of lactose to lactic acid. I made sour curd basically, the large amount of lactic acid made it very sour which is a good sign the sourer it gets the lesser the carbs it contains. Boom no digestion issues, no bloating and just 35g of pure complete milk protein without much carbs because body doesn’t digest lactic acid.
A few problems regarding data - I wasn’t able to find any resources on internet that provided data regarding the rate at which bacteria converts lactose to lactic acid or how is lactic acid digested or metabolised through the digestive system. So I can’t accurately pin point how much carbs the curd might contain.
A few problems regarding data - I wasn’t able to find any resources on internet that provided data regarding the rate at which bacteria converts lactose to lactic acid or how is lactic acid digested or metabolised through the digestive system. So I can’t accurately pin point how much carbs the curd might contain.