During my last trip to London a friend offered me some unpasteurized milk to drink. My friend had heard that I had trouble whenever I drank milk and suggested that my system might react more favorably to raw milk.
She was right.
Providentially I discovered that I knew someone who had a friend who had a cow, and every fortnight the cow has been faithfully providing me with fresh, unpasteurized milk. Yum!
The habit of pasteurizing milk began when cows were being kept in highly unsanitary conditions. It was a way to kill the diseases that were present in these cows who were not being looked after properly. However, for cows living in a healthy, clean, environments, the risk of disease is minimal and no greater than the risk in other animal products we routinely consume.
Many people who are lactose intolerant find that they can digest milk that hasn't been pasteurized. In the article "Raw Milk - Is it Healthier Than Pasteurized Milk?", the authors explain why this is. (And because most pasteurized milk has also been homogenized, I've also included their discussion about how dreadful homogenization is)
The habit of pasteurizing milk began when cows were being kept in highly unsanitary conditions. It was a way to kill the diseases that were present in these cows who were not being looked after properly. However, for cows living in a healthy, clean, environments, the risk of disease is minimal and no greater than the risk in other animal products we routinely consume.
Many people who are lactose intolerant find that they can digest milk that hasn't been pasteurized. In the article "Raw Milk - Is it Healthier Than Pasteurized Milk?", the authors explain why this is. (And because most pasteurized milk has also been homogenized, I've also included their discussion about how dreadful homogenization is)
Many people in modern societies are said to be lactose intolerant and therefore unable to digest milk properly. Lactose is a milk sugar that requires the enzyme lactase to break down disaccharides in milk into glucose and galactose, which can then be digested.
The milk nutrition facts are that heat Pasteurization destroys beneficial bacteria, and enzymes in milk including lactase which otherwise aids in the digestion of milk. Thus many people who drink pasteurized milk devoid of lactase have problem digesting it, however this is not the case with raw milk!
Homogenization
Homogenization of causes the globules of milk fat to be evenly distributed throughout the milk. When milk is pasteurized dead white blood cells and bacteria form a kind of sludge, and the homogenization process spreads this sludge throughout the milk.
The process of homogenization involves squeezing the fat globules through a filter under high pressure. This breaks up the fat globules and it has been theorized also increases the amount of xanthine oxidase that reaches your blood stream.
Xanthine oxidase is a very reactive enzyme and early research pointed to the possibility that this enzyme was instrumental in causing damage to artery walls that characterizes heart disease.
Although the research has not been able to definitively link xanthine oxidase to heart disease, the available evidence does seem to warrant concern over the effects of homogenization on both regular and organic milk.
Raw milk is inherently healthier and more beneficial than milk that has been processed. Fats are very delicate structures and prone to damage by all kinds of processing. In light of this it would be best to avoid milk that has undergone this kind of processing.
So whenever possible, drink raw, unpasteurized milk because (a) the lactase enzyme has not been destroyed, and this helps the digestive system to breakdown lactos, and (b) because raw milk hasn't been homogenized; (c) there are a bunch of nutrients in raw milk that are cooked out of milk when it undergoes pasteurization.
Given the personal benefits I derive from drinking raw milk (to say nothing of the fact that it has SO much more flavor!), you can imagine my surprise when I learned that our freedom to consume this wholesome and natural drink could soon be in danger. Click on the video below to learn more.
Further Reading
Freedom of Health: Does Uncle Sam Own Your Body?
Spokane Libertarian Examiner
Declaration of Health Freedom
Freedom of Health: Does Uncle Sam Own Your Body?
Spokane Libertarian Examiner
Declaration of Health Freedom
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We've been drinking raw milk since the girls were tiny.
ReplyDeleteJust watched that YouTube video documenting the raw milk raid...wow! I know this happens all the time, but most of all I'm surprised it happened in California. CA is one of only 3 states where Raw Milk is legal to sell in stores! Appalling.
ReplyDeleteIf you are the Brad who I think you are (in a world of so many Brads, one can never be sure) you will find it interesting that
ReplyDeleteCalifornia has recently begun holding the rest of the nation to ransom over the sale of kefir.
California law forbids any yeast from being present in kefir sold on the California market. Since most foods in the US are regularly shipped over State Lines, this means that for commercial kefir must be free from yeast. However, as you will know if you are the Brad I think you are, kefir grains are a combination of good bacteria and yeasts, which is why they are such a nutrient rich food. The problem now is that the instant that any Kefir appears in a California store, and has any yeast in it, California can and will crack down on the manufacturer, even though they may be a thousand miles away. The maker of the Kefir with some yeast in it will then be caught under the part of the Constitution that forbids any interference in Interstate Business. The means that California can keep Kefir with yeast in it from being sold commercially in another State. (My information comes from http://onibasu.com/archives/rkm/9215.html)
Thankfully, raw milk is still legal here in Washington state and we can buy it from our local health food store and even a few regular grocery stores sell it... But local dairies often face the same kind of problems that the video you posted talks about.
ReplyDeleteI like the idea of cow-shares that I've read about, where people collectively own cows and then can legally use the milk however they want.
Great article bro! :) Thanks for posting! :)