The cottage cheese crackles like popcorn, emits a greyish smoke and finally goes up in flames, burning for an impressive 10 minutes, like a well-oiled torch.
The noxious experiment, filmed and posted last month by Russian news Web site Fontanka, concluded that some dairy sold around Saint Petersburg does not actually contain any milk and is “good only for filling kerosene lamps.”
Though authorities closed one factory making the combustible cheese, the problem of milkless dairy, meatless sausages and other questionable products worry both government agencies and Russian shoppers amid a recession and a food embargo that left shelves empty of Western food imports.
“We decided to show that it’s a systematic problem,” said Fontanka reporter Venera Galeyeva, on the quest to expose other fake foods since her cheese-burning video went viral.
“The problem is not one specific producer. Globally the problem is that Russia does not have enough milk,” she said.
Moscow has enforced an embargo on imports of most foods from the West since August 2014 in retaliation for Western sanctions imposed on Moscow over its involvement in the Ukraine conflict.
On Friday last week, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev officially signed off on extending the embargo until the end of next year.
Closing the market off from European parmesan and brie has created a booming domestic industry, but as milk production has not grown, many producers are forced to get creative, misleading consumers.
“There is a milk deficit,” said Vadim Semikin of the Institute for Agriculture Market Studies, giving a rough estimate of 8 million tonnes last year.
At the same time, palm oil imports grew by 25 percent last year, he said, and companies use it to substitute for milk.
Russia has claimed that the embargo is a good opportunity to support the country’s agriculture. On Thursday last week, Medvedev argued that extending it for another 18 months was dictated by the “need to create comfortable and predictable conditions for our farmers.”
However, the government’s own analytical department concluded in April that Russian consumers have been the losers, observing a trend of “falling quality” of products and “appearance of fake cheese products on the market.”
In a sign of the scope of the problem, Russia’s agriculture watchdog this year began to publish a List of Honest Ones of companies which actually use milk and cream to make their dairy foods.
Others use anything from water to “starch, chalk, soap, baking soda, lime” and even plaster to dilute and conserve milk, the watchdog said last week, scandalizing the milk industry.
“Most domestic producers take advantage of the non-competitive market and don’t rush to make good products,” said Irina Tikhmyanova, spokeswoman for Roscontrol, a non-governmental consumer protection organization.
Sixty percent of 46 Russian dairy products tested by the group were recently shown to contain surrogates, she said.
For meat products, the figure was even higher.
Though recent polls showed that people are noticing food quality go down, many Russians still embrace the embargo. Last month, a poll by Levada Center independent pollster, 40 percent of respondents said they were against allowing European products into Russia — up from 31 percent in March last year.
Galeyeva of Fontanka said Russians with shrinking disposable incomes would just have to keep buying fake cheese as prices grow.
“When you have just 300 rubles [US$4.70] to feed your family for the week, you won’t be so picky,” Galeyeva said.
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