Friday, September 6, 2013

Milk: The Myth of Dairy Fat

Our family has gone back and forth over the past 20 years about milk - do we drink animal milks, nut milks, processed, not processed, homogenized, etc.......

How can a conventional gallon of milk cost close to what it did when I was a kid, let's just say quite a few decades ago? 

This week's local Smith's Grocery ad has Mountain Dairy Milk Gallons for 2 for $5.00.  That is $2.50 a gallon.  I know milk was ~$2.00 a gallon as a kid growing up, it stressed my mother out how was she going to buy enough milk for a family of 5 kids at $2.00 a gallon? 

What has possibly happened that milk can cost almost the same 35 years later?

We don't buy this milk, and I'm sure people don't understand why.  Their argument is, well, we can't afford organic.  People are willing to (and do) spend more money on a gallon of gasoline to take their cars 20-30 miles down the road vs. spending that on a gallon of milk that will take themselves, or their child, 30 miles to life.

Captain Paranoid, as I will lovingly refer to this close family fried, has turned Debashis on to a book called Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats, by Sally Fallon.  While I have not read the book myself (yet), Debashis has read excerpts and we have had discussions around certain topics, of which milk is the subject here.

Fallon asserts that whole, non-homogenized milk is the way to go.  She states in her book that skim and lowfat are in fact reconsituted from powders.  Well, I wanted to find out, so I emailed Organic Valley and asked.  Here is the question and response:


Customer (Allena Satpathi) - 09/05/2013 07:56 AM
My husband read a book a friend gave him which said all skim and nonfat milks are made from powdered, reconstituted milk products.  Is this true for Organic Valley? What is the process your skim and lowfat milk is made by?  Also, is your whole milk non-homogenized?

Here is their answer (I actually emailed back asking if I could post here, but have not heard back so I'm just going for it):

Recently you contacted Organic Valley for personal assistance. Below
the link is our personal response if you do not wish to login to an
account.

If this issue is not resolved to your satisfaction, you may reopen it
within the next 7 days.

Thank you for allowing us to be of service to you.

Subject
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Skim or 2% milk from powder?


Discussion Thread
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Response (Meghan) - 09/05/2013 11:25 AM
Dear Allena,

Thank you for contacting Organic Valley.

Our nonfat and lowfat milks are not made from reconstituted milk powders, but are produced from the whole milk that comes directly from our farmers.

The process that our fluid milk goes through once it reaches one of our processors is as follows: separation, standardization, homogenization, and pasteurization.

Separation is the removal of the cream from the fluid milk. This involves spinning milk through a centrifuge to force the cream to the surface so it can be easily skimmed off.

Standardization occurs after separation. The cream and remaining milk are remixed to provide the desired fat content for the different types of milk being produced.

We do not add dry milk powder to any of our cartons of milk, with one exception.  We add Organic Valley non fat dry milk powder to our California low fat (1%) and reduced fat (2%) milks.  We add Organic Valley non fat dry milk powder because the State of California has milk standards which exceed the Federal Standard of Identity for fluid milk products.  In order to sell milk in California - those products must meet the state's statutes.  (You can find out more about California Milk Standards at the website, http://www.cdfa.ca.gov/ahfss/Milk_and_Dairy_Food_Safety/Milk_Standards.html.)

Our pasture-raised line of whole milk is homogenized, but our Grassmilk, from 100% grass-fed cows, is non-homogenized. You can find out more about our non-homogenized Grassmilk here: http://www.organicvalley.coop/products/milk/grassmilk/.

If you have any further questions, please do not hesitate to contact me.

Regards,

Meghan H,       
Organic Valley / Organic Prairie            
Consumer Relations Associate          
1-888-444-6455  ext.3701

Auto-Response - 09/05/2013 07:56 AM
Thank you for contacting Organic Valley/Organic Prairie. 

Your inquiry is very important to us and we would like to offer you the opportunity to review relevant content from our self-service knowledge base. 

If you didn't find the answer to your question, one of our agents will assist you within the next 48 business hours.



Title: Organic Valley Buttermilk Blend Powder: What is it?
Link: http://organicvalley.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/organicvalley.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp.php?p_faqid=213&p_created=1219342993

Title: Nonfat Dry Milk Powder: What is it?
Link: http://organicvalley.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/organicvalley.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp.php?p_faqid=214&p_created=1219343152

Title: Reconstituting Organic Valley Nonfat Dry Milk
Link: http://organicvalley.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/organicvalley.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp.php?p_faqid=268&p_created=1231183656

Title: Ordering Products Direct
Link: http://organicvalley.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/organicvalley.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp.php?p_faqid=68&p_created=1215568037

Title: Milk Powder Storage Recommendations
Link: http://organicvalley.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/organicvalley.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp.php?p_faqid=253&p_created=1224877467




Question Reference #130905-000022
---------------------------------------------------------------
   Product Level 1: Product Information
   Product Level 2: Production Process
  Category Level 1: Milk & Cream Products
  Category Level 2: Milk, Unspecified
      Date Created: 09/05/2013 07:56 AM
      Last Updated: 09/05/2013 11:25 AM
            Status: Solved
    Date Purchased: 09/03/2013
        Plant Code:
      Sell-By Date:
      Product Code:
Pasteurization Type:
       Store Name :
    Store Location:
     Lot #/Sell-By:
            Est. #:
          Quantity: 1


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