5 Dairy Products That Won’t Give You Bubble Guts
The majority of Black adults in the U.S. are lactose intolerant. But avoiding dairy can be nutritionally risky. Here’s how to manage the problem.
In my family, milk had two distinct functions: As a source of nutrition for us kids, and as a laxative for my dad.
While we were holding our noses and obediently gulping down a glass each morning, my father would be dosing himself with the goal of—how should I put this?—getting the train to leave the station.
That’s because my dad, like more than 6 in 10 Black people, is lactose intolerant.
Lactose intolerance is a condition in which the body doesn’t produce enough lactase, the intestinal enzyme that breaks down lactose, the main sugar in milk.
According to the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, about 36 percent of people in the U.S. have some lactose malabsorption, with the highest prevalence among people of color. In addition to between 60 and 80 percent of Black people, as many as 90 percent of those from Eastern Asia, 80 percent of Indigenous Americans, and half of Hispanics are lactose intolerant. About 80 percent of white people, on the other hand, can consume dairy without complications.
5 Dairy Products With Less Lactose
Experts say these dairy items are less likely to trigger symptoms in lactose intolerant people.
Kefir. Kefir is a tangy drink made from milk that’s been fermented with kefir grains. Remnants of cheese created with kefir have been found in a 3,500-year-old cemetery in Xinjiang, China, where Bronze Age peoples used the technique to preserve milk without refrigeration. Kefir can usually be found near the milk and yogurt in the dairy aisle. Some people like to drink it on its own, but it can also be used in a smoothie, as a base for overnight oats, or frozen as an alternative ice-cream base.
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Ghee. Ghee is simply butter that has been melted and heated to the point where the water content evaporates. What’s left separates into liquid fats and milk solids, a process called clarification. When those milk solids are strained out, they take some of the lactose with them, turning butter—which is already a very low-lactose food—into a super-low-lactose ingredient. (Ghee is also usually cooked to the point where it begins to brown, giving it a subtle, nutty flavor.)
As fatty as butter, ghee should be consumed in moderation. A staple of Indian cooking for thousands of years, Ghee is shelf-stable and can be found on supermarket shelves across the country. Its burning point of 485 degrees is well above the temperature at which butter will burn (350 degrees), making it suitable for frying and sautéing. Some people also use ghee to add creaminess to coffee or hot chocolate.
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Aged, Hard Cheese. The longer a cheese ages, the more time there is for bacteria to break down the lactose, so hard, aged cheeses like Parmesan and cheddar generally contain less lactose than fresh soft cheeses like cream cheese and cottage cheese. There are some outliers, however: Brie and Camembert are both soft and creamy but typically have lower levels of lactose than cream cheese because of their aging processes. Feta also has relatively little lactose.
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Yogurt. The bacterial fermentation process that turns milk into yogurt converts lactose into lactic acid. Greek yogurt—which is made by straining the liquid whey, resulting in a thicker, creamier product—contains even less lactose.
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Heavy Cream. If whole milk upsets your stomach, you may think heavy cream would be worse—but you’d be wrong. Its high-fat, lower-lactose content may keep discomfort at bay for those sensitive to lactose.
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