About Milk For Health in Life
About Milk For Health in Life
Most of us have been raised on milk. Not only that, many of us have been raised with the âBasic Four Food Groupsâ and other dietary guidelines that recommend milk as one or our daily food needs. However, there is much we need to understand about milk and how if affects our bodies, what it does and does not provide, and how todayâs dairy milk differs from the milk that used to be found on the farm or in the past.
Letâs first understand that we as humans are mammals. We are the only mammals who drink milk after we are weaned. We are the only mammals who drink milk from another mammal. We are the only mammals who drink pasteurized milk!
Humans and other mammals were created to produce nourishment for their young. Thatâs how it was meant to be and thatâs how it should be. Horses produce milk to feed their young. Sheep produce milk to feed their young. Cows produce milk to feed their young. Humans produce milk to feed their young too. That is natureâs way of starting a baby on the right and proper nourishment. But none of the mammals are meant to produce milk forever. We/they begin to dry up after a year or so. In order to produce more milk, it takes producing another baby. Yes, cows and goats have to be bred on a yearly basis in order to continue to produce milk â it wouldnât happen any other way. (And by the way, Iâm glad I am not a cow having to get pregnant on a yearly basis for my milk production, with my new baby yanked away from me as soon as it arrives!)
Todayâs dairies greatly differ from the farm milk cow when I was a child. I remember my father going out and rounding up our milk cow, morning and evening, to milk her. A dairy milk cow today does not need to be rounded up twice daily. They will usually come in voluntarily three or more times a day! Why? Because they are fed hormones as well as their own bi-products to increase milk production and are so engorged that their milk bags often drag, or almost drag, the ground. They come to get milked to find relief. And just as engorgement causes breast infections in humans, it will likewise in cows. They are given good doses of antibiotics and vaccines to âkeep them healthyâ. If not, there is blood and pus that will show up in the milk. All milk is tested in every dairy before it is taken each time. They will know where the blood and puss level is. Donât worry though. You wonât be drinking anything but âGrade Aâ milk from the store. However, any âGrade Bâ milk (which can have up to 5% blood and pus) will be made into cheese. Rest assured, if your cheeses, sour cream, cream, etc. does not say âGrade Aâ, then you know it is most likely from âGrade Bâ milk.
Nut, soy and rice milks have often been discounted in being termed âsubstitutesâ to the real thing. However, it is all in how you look at it. Would you rather be nursing from the utter of a cow to get that milk to pour on your cereal, or would you rather get it from raw nuts, soybeans, rice or other vegetable proteins? These other âmilksâ do differ in protein, calcium, fat, and nutritional content, but they can be great sources of nutrition.
If we would focus more on these kinds of foods in our diets â leafy greens, whole grains, beans, sprouts, raw nuts and seeds âinstead of the meat, milk, fast foods, processed and prepared foods (that are high in calories yet lacking real digestible nutrition) we would not only feel better, but we would look better (having better weight control), and not have to experience all the diseases and disorders that we do as a people. Good sound nutrition from wholesome foods is the real key to better health!
Understanding Milk’s important in life For Health in Life.
Related posts:
- The Whole Life Nutrition Cookbook: Whole Foods Recipes for Personal and Planetary Health, Second Edition
- Raw Milk Health Benefits and Facts
- Health Benefits of Milk
- Raw Milk 32 Symposium at U of Toronto Ontario Canada Jan 31 2009
- The Real Health Deal In Drinking Raw Milk
