ARTIFICIAL COLORING MATTER
Annatto
Add acid sodium carbonate to a sample of the milk until it shows a slight alkaline reaction. Immerse a piece of filter-paper and leave it in for 12 or 15 hours. If annatto is present, there will be a reddish-yellow stain on the paper.
Caramel
Leach’s Method.—Warm 150 cc. of the sample and add 5 cc. of acetic acid, then continue heating it nearly to the boiling point, stirring while it is being heated. Separate the curd by gathering it with the stirring rod or by pouring through a sieve. Press out all the whey from the curd and macerate the latter for several hours (10 to 12 hours) in 50 cc. of ether. It is best to do this in a tightly corked flask, shaking it frequently. If the milk was uncolored or colored with annatto the curd when thus treated will be white. If the curd is a dull brown color caramel was probably used to color the milk. Confirm its presence by shaking a portion of the curd with concentrated hydrochloric acid (sp. gr. 1.20) and gently heating. If the acid solution turns blue while the curd does not change its color, caramel was used to color the milk. (Remember that the ether-extracted curd must be brown.)
Coal Tar Colors
Lythgoe’s Method.—Mix in a porcelain vessel about 15 cc. each of the sample of milk and hydrochloric acid (sp. gr. 1.20) and break up the curd into coarse lumps by shaking gently. If an azo-color was used to color the milk this curd will be pink, but the curd of normal milk will be white or yellowish.
Starch
The presence of starch in milk may be detected by heating a small quantity of the milk to boiling. When it has cooled add a drop of iodin in potassium iodid, and if starch is present there will be a blue coloration.
Gelatin
A. W. Stokes’ Method.—Dissolve 1 part by weight of mercury in 2 parts of nitric acid (sp. gr. 1.42). Add 24 times this volume of water. Mix equal volumes (about 10 cc.) of this reagent and the milk or cream, shake well and add 20 cc. of water. Shake again and, after standing 5 minutes, filter. When a great quantity of gelatin is present the filtrate will be opalescent instead of perfectly clear. To a little of this filtrate in a test tube add the same volume of a saturated aqueous solution of picric acid. If much gelatin is present a yellow precipitate is produced, smaller amounts produce a cloudiness. If the filtrate is perfectly clear gelatin is absent and picric acid may be added without producing any noticeable effect.