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Browsing by Subject "dairy alternatives"

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  • Järvinen, Saraleena (2024)
    Background: Dairy has a culturally and economically quintessential role in European countries while significantly contributing to GHG emissions. However, flexitarian dairy consumers are scarcely researched, especially in Finland, one of the world’s most dairy-intense countries. There is a rising need for comprehensive research on dairy consumption and the role of dairy in everyday life food consumption practices. Objectives: With a social practice theoretical approach, this study aims to understand the role of dairy and dairy alternatives in the food preparation practice of Finns in North Ostrobothnia’s countryside. Daily food preparation and its performances can be defined as routine-like behaviour that consists of several interconnected elements: bodily and mental activities, things and their use, and background knowledge such as understanding, know-how, emotions, and aspirations. The main research objective is divided into two sub-themes: a) what kinds of competences, materials and meanings support the use of dairy in people’s daily food preparation practice, and b) what kinds of competences, materials and meanings promote a change in food preparation practice regarding the use of dairy alternatives. Methods: The data consisted of semi-structured interviews (n=11) gathered through discretionary chain-referral sampling. The study’s participants were required to be born after 1980, live in the countryside of North Ostrobothnia and consume dairy products regularly. The transcribed data was analysed by structuring and coding it into themes formed by elements of competences, materials, and meanings and their interconnections. Results and conclusions: Dairy holds quintessential value in routinised food preparation. Dairy’s role in food preparation was significant as interviewees had a vast amount of silent knowledge and skills on using dairy products to achieve fulfilling and tasty meals approved by others around the same table. Interviewees were accustomed to using particular ingredients provided at home, and dairy was often used in food preparation alongside those foodstuffs. Regularly used recipes often included some type of dairy product. The taste and texture of dairy were highly valued, having a strong cultural meaning: foods containing dairy were considered as ‘proper’ food. Meanings to use dairy alternatives instead of dairy were sustainable and ethical issues, health-related concerns, pure curiosity, and taste. Dairy alternatives were used as dairy products, which made them facile to use as new skills or know-how were not needed. In contrast, a lack of proven recipes and competences to prepare food from dairy alternatives also prevented interviewees from using them. Interviewees did not want to compromise the taste of everyday meals, and dairy alternatives were only used if they did not affect the taste or texture of the food. Preparing food from dairy was intertwined with other food consumption practices, such as eating and shopping for food, which could be concentrated on in future research. More comprehensive cultural change in food consumption practices is required to shift from dairy to plant-based alternatives.
  • Järvinen, Saraleena (2024)
    Background: Dairy has a culturally and economically quintessential role in European countries while significantly contributing to GHG emissions. However, flexitarian dairy consumers are scarcely researched, especially in Finland, one of the world’s most dairy-intense countries. There is a rising need for comprehensive research on dairy consumption and the role of dairy in everyday life food consumption practices. Objectives: With a social practice theoretical approach, this study aims to understand the role of dairy and dairy alternatives in the food preparation practice of Finns in North Ostrobothnia’s countryside. Daily food preparation and its performances can be defined as routine-like behaviour that consists of several interconnected elements: bodily and mental activities, things and their use, and background knowledge such as understanding, know-how, emotions, and aspirations. The main research objective is divided into two sub-themes: a) what kinds of competences, materials and meanings support the use of dairy in people’s daily food preparation practice, and b) what kinds of competences, materials and meanings promote a change in food preparation practice regarding the use of dairy alternatives. Methods: The data consisted of semi-structured interviews (n=11) gathered through discretionary chain-referral sampling. The study’s participants were required to be born after 1980, live in the countryside of North Ostrobothnia and consume dairy products regularly. The transcribed data was analysed by structuring and coding it into themes formed by elements of competences, materials, and meanings and their interconnections. Results and conclusions: Dairy holds quintessential value in routinised food preparation. Dairy’s role in food preparation was significant as interviewees had a vast amount of silent knowledge and skills on using dairy products to achieve fulfilling and tasty meals approved by others around the same table. Interviewees were accustomed to using particular ingredients provided at home, and dairy was often used in food preparation alongside those foodstuffs. Regularly used recipes often included some type of dairy product. The taste and texture of dairy were highly valued, having a strong cultural meaning: foods containing dairy were considered as ‘proper’ food. Meanings to use dairy alternatives instead of dairy were sustainable and ethical issues, health-related concerns, pure curiosity, and taste. Dairy alternatives were used as dairy products, which made them facile to use as new skills or know-how were not needed. In contrast, a lack of proven recipes and competences to prepare food from dairy alternatives also prevented interviewees from using them. Interviewees did not want to compromise the taste of everyday meals, and dairy alternatives were only used if they did not affect the taste or texture of the food. Preparing food from dairy was intertwined with other food consumption practices, such as eating and shopping for food, which could be concentrated on in future research. More comprehensive cultural change in food consumption practices is required to shift from dairy to plant-based alternatives.