Sorry for the newbish question. I’ve never been good with names of things.
If a tub of protein powder says “hydrolyzed whey protein isolates” is that the same as “whey protein hydrolysate”?
A simple yes or no will do.
Thanks.
Sorry for the newbish question. I’ve never been good with names of things.
If a tub of protein powder says “hydrolyzed whey protein isolates” is that the same as “whey protein hydrolysate”?
A simple yes or no will do.
Thanks.
Maybe.
The truth is that many companies are taking advantage of the popularity hydrolyzed protein by bending the truth on their labels to make consumers think a protein contains WPH or CH.
As far as I know yes, they’re same. I did a quick google search and it told me I was right… but then again the internet has lied to me before.
[quote]chimera182 wrote:
As far as I know yes, they’re same. I did a quick google search and it told me I was right… but then again the internet has lied to me before.[/quote]
They should be the same, but we’ve seen companies spike whey with as little as 1% WPH and call the final product hydrolyzed whey protein isolate.
One of the biggest sports-supplement protein companies is infamous for doing this.
Sure send the PM. Thanks
I bought some ON Hydro Whey because I’m running low on Grow! because I wasn’t paying attention. My friend used his GNC discount so I got it pretty cheap. The vanilla tastes like marshmellow and is terribly sweet. I doubt I’ll notice a difference. Regular whey isolate works fine for me. One day I’ll switch to casein hydrolysate.
Pure hydrolyzed proteins can taste very bitter. Make sure you get/make a blend with some isolate and or/concentrate to mellow it out.
I would generally trust ON.
I’ve been ‘pulsing’ in the mornings with HydroWhey, and then using Oats n’ Whey 20 minutes later.