Police reported that an unidentified blue chemical compound was added to the mixture. This addition caused it to curdle, resulting in a paneer-like texture. After being cooled and strained through a cloth, it took on the appearance of real paneer blocks.
Late on Friday night, a Mahindra pickup truck driving through Noida’s Sector 63 caught the attention of local police. Acting on a tip-off that the truck was carrying 14 quintals of adulterated paneer, a police team intercepted the vehicle. What they found inside unraveled an alleged interstate racket. For at least six months, this racket had been quietly pumping adulterated paneer into Delhi-NCR’s food markets.
The truck driver, Gulfam — a 32-year-old from Aligarh’s Shajapur village — was taken in for questioning. By morning, he led the police to a plant in Sahajpura village in the district. At this plant, the adulterated paneer was being produced. Here, the police arrested three more men. They arrested 36-year-old Guddu alias Rish, who was running the plant. They also arrested Ikhlaq (30) and Naved (20), who were the distributors. All four arrested men belong to the same region in Aligarh, said officers.
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Swift Action by Police
According to police, the racket has been operating for the last six months. The adulterated paneer was sold to street vendors in Delhi and Noida. It was sold to small eateries and priced between Rs 180 and Rs 220 per kilogram. The actual price is nearly double.
Police said that the process of making the adulterated cottage cheese is extremely methodical. At the plant, large sacks of starch-heavy agricultural beans were labelled as “Red Bull Sortex Clean.” These beans were soaked in water. They were then boiled. Chemical whiteners and poster colours were added to mimic the characteristic milk-like colour and texture. A blue chemical compound — still unidentified — was then added to curdle the mixture, giving it a paneer-like consistency. Once cooled and strained through a cloth, it resembled blocks of real paneer.
Another batch was found. It was made using milk powder instead of beans mixed with water or a liquid referred to as “saprota.” Palmolin oil, commonly used in industrial food processing, was then stirred into the mix, giving it a creamy appearance. Again, chemicals were added to solidify it into blocks.
A case has been registered at Sector 63 police station. It is under sections 274, 275, and 318(4) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita. More arrests are likely, said police. Officers said that the process is ongoing to trace vendors and buyers linked to the operation.
Severe Health Hazards
Food safety officers, who were brought in following the arrests, called the ingredients a serious health hazard. “Palm oil and poster colour are not just adulterants. They are harmful to human health,” said one official. The official added that samples of the seized paneer had been sent for lab analysis. Legal action under the Food Safety and Standards Act is expected once the lab reports are in.
“The accused prepared adulterated paneer from the recovered material. They then sold it as real paneer by deceiving shopkeepers in the NCR,” the police said in a statement.
Adulterated paneer can sometimes be detected using iodine tincture. When dropped on real paneer, there’s no change. But when dropped on adulterated paneer made with starch, the iodine turns black.
Videos from the police operation show officers unwrapping the adulterated paneer from its cloth packaging. The plant was located inside a nondescript building in Sahajpur. It was stocked with sacks of powder and drums of oil. A machine processed the mixture into cheese-like blocks.
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