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by Jim Becker » Wed Mar 28, 2007 10:15 am
Rudi wrote:Afraid of the pathogens?? -- I guess we never thought about that... it was just how things wer done, and we loved it. I used to be lucky enough to get real fresh milk.. ahhhhh the taste of fresh buttermilk too still lingers in me brain and on me taste buds.
Pasteurization was introduced mainly to prevent spread of tuberculosis through raw milk. If you knew anyone unlucky enough to get that, you would think about it.
If you had milk from your own cows and the cows were free of it you would probably be safe. I would NEVER bet on it from anyone else's cow. When we had milkers at home, my mother used a home pasteurizing machine. It was a lot of work to turn raw milk into something safe.
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by RustyVT » Wed Mar 28, 2007 12:47 pm
For a normal healthy adult, I don't know that fresh from the bulk-tank milk is a true walk on the wildside, but I do know that most of my neighbor farmers go to the store like the rest of us and buy skim (!) milk. The whole time I was growing up, we used to go to a friend's farm and just pull the plunger on the tank over one of those big yellow or brown Tupperware gallon jugs. Cream rose to the top by the next morning and the first boy up (usually me) could skim the cream for frosted flakes. Wow! What a way to start the day (when you're a kid and the calories end up on the playground).
A lot of farmers here will still sell you raw milk if you buy enough to make it worth while for them to mess with dispensing it. There are also a few places still doing old-time dairy- that is pasteurized, but not homogenized, as mentioned above. Goat and sheep dairies are much more likely to sell raw milk regularly it seems.
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by Dan England » Wed Mar 28, 2007 1:25 pm
I remember from many years ago when very young children would be fed on goats milk if they could not digest milk from cows. I have never heard of milk from sheep being consumed by humans. What good features does sheep milk have to make it desirable for human consumption? Dan
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by RustyVT » Thu Mar 29, 2007 2:59 pm
Like any other kind of milk- sheep's milk is good if you're trying to sell sheep!
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by Rudi » Thu Mar 29, 2007 4:04 pm
Jim Becker wrote:Rudi wrote:Afraid of the pathogens?? -- I guess we never thought about that... it was just how things wer done, and we loved it. I used to be lucky enough to get real fresh milk.. ahhhhh the taste of fresh buttermilk too still lingers in me brain and on me taste buds.
Pasteurization was introduced mainly to prevent spread of tuberculosis through raw milk. If you knew anyone unlucky enough to get that, you would think about it. If you had milk from your own cows and the cows were free of it you would probably be safe. I would NEVER bet on it from anyone else's cow. When we had milkers at home, my mother used a home pasteurizing machine. It was a lot of work to turn raw milk into something safe.
Jim:
Em's Aunt spent 2 years in a TB Sanitorium.. so yeah we know. But the point I was making was that years ago, we did not know and did it anyways.... not now, but back then we did.
My ruminating on the good ole days is for the tastes and the experiences.. there is no way I am going to run any of those risks today.. especially with my medical issues.. that just isn't sane.. however, again, ruminating about the taste is what I was doing..
And also... we used our goat's milk raw as our kids were lactose intolerant. We took the proper precautions and kept our milk cold as well. It was always fresh.
When we got more than we could use, the animals got lucky.... 
Confusion breeds Discussion which breeds Knowledge which breeds Confidence which breeds Friendship  "Before beginning a hunt, it is wise to ask someone what you are looking for before you begin looking for it." - Winnie Cub Manual Server
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by Rudi » Thu Mar 29, 2007 5:18 pm
Mike:
I know.. but for some reason that is what the Doc's back in the late 80's labeled it. All I know is that they could tolerate goat's milk. Now we find out that one of them can't handle soy either.. so.. oh well.. No Milk Today, Daddy's Gone Away (what tune  )
Confusion breeds Discussion which breeds Knowledge which breeds Confidence which breeds Friendship  "Before beginning a hunt, it is wise to ask someone what you are looking for before you begin looking for it." - Winnie Cub Manual Server
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Rudi
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by Jim Becker » Thu Mar 29, 2007 5:31 pm
Rudi wrote:oh well.. No Milk Today, Daddy's Gone Away (what tune  )
You thinking of Herman's Hermits?
"No milk today, my love has gone away
The bottle stands for lorn, a symbol of the dawn"
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