“…During the last decade, the PCR-RFLP technique has been widely used for species identification in meat and dairy products (Branciari et al, 2000;Pfeiffer et al, 2004;El Rady and Sayed, 2006;Fajardo et al, 2006); however, if dairy products are prepared by mixing milk from 2 or more species, the interpretation of PCR-RFLP is almost impossible because of the overlap of restriction patterns (Bottero et al, 2003;Dalmasso et al, 2012). Recently, sensory analysis combined with PCR (Golinelli et al, 2014), allelic discrimination (Dalmasso et al, 2011(Dalmasso et al, , 2012, high-resolution melting analysis (Sakaridis et al, 2013), and analysis of short species-specific mitochondrial DNA targets (Cottenet et al, 2011;Gonçalves et al, 2012) have been proposed as new and interesting methods that may be used in species identification of dairy products, but none of them used a cut-off of 1% that unambiguously differentiates between unintentional and fraudulent contamination with cow milk, as reported in the Commission Regulation (EC) No. 273 of 5 March 2008(European Commission, 2008.…”