Food Regulation Table




4522
NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE
No. 170

Table to clause 3 (Continued)

Column 1 Column 2 Column 3 Column 4 Column 5
Food Reference Quantity Vitamins & Minerals That May Be Added Maximum Claim Per Reference Quantity (proportion RDI) Maximum Permitted Level of Vitamin or Mineral per Reference Quantity
Dairy products
Dried milks 200mL vitamin A
riboflavin
vitamin D
calcium
110 µg (15%)
0.4 mg (25%)
2.5 µg (25%)
400 mg (50%)
125 µg
3.0 µg
Modified milks and skim milk 200mL vitamin A
vitamin D
calcium
110 µg (15%)
1.0 µg (10%)
400 mg (50%)
125 µg
1.6 µg
Cheese and cheese products 25g vitamin A
calcium
phosphorus
vitamin D
110 µg (15%)
200 mg (25%)
150 mg (15%)
1.0 µg (10%)
125 µg
1.6 µg
Yoghurts (with or without other foods) 150g vitamin A
vitamin D
calcium
110 µg (15%)
1.0 µg (10%)
320 mg (40%)
125 µg
1.6 µg
Dairy desserts containing no less than 3.1% m/m milk protein 150g vitamin A
vitamin D
calcium
110 µg (15%)
1.0 µg (10%)
320 mg (40%)
125 µg
1.6 µg
Ice cream and ice confections containing no less than 3.1% m/m milk protein 75g calcium 200 mg (25%) 125 µg
Cream and cream products containing no more than 40% m/m milkfat 30mL vitamin A 110 µg (15%) 125 µg
Butter 10g vitamin A
vitamin D
110 µg (15%)
1.0 µg (10%)
125 µg
1.6 µg
Edible oils and spreads
Edible oil spreads and margarine: 10g vitamin A
vitamin D
110 µg (15%)
1.0 µg (10%)
125 µg
1.6 µg
- containing no more than 28 % total saturated fatty acids and trans fatty acids vitamin E 3.5 mg (35%)
Sunflower oil and safflower oil
- other edible oils -
containing no more than 28 % total saturated fatty acids and trans fatty acids
10g vitamin E 7.0 mg (70%)
3.0 mg (30%)


Next Page →



Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 2000, No 170


Gazette.govt.nz PDF NZ Gazette 2000, No 170





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🏥 Regulation of Vitamins and Minerals in Foods (continued from previous page)

🏥 Health & Social Welfare
Vitamins, Minerals, Food regulation, Claims, Labelling, Permitted additions