I know raw milk is illegal in NC ( ) but does anyone know of a local farmer that sells milk produced by pastured cows? I tried searching around online but couldn't really find anything. Only grass-fed milk I've seen in the supermarket around here comes from the Midwest and is ultra-pasteurized Thanks tdub
1/23/2011 1:55:04 PM
If you're dedicated, try any meetup.com group the looks promising and with enough elbow rubbing you'll find something.I had the chance to try some a little while ago. I was rather underwhelmed, and my intestines didn't particularly talk to me after the experience. I used to think that store bought milk I tried in Japan tasted so good because they omitted a process that we use here, but I've come to believe that was instead because they do some tricks like sweetening.
1/23/2011 2:18:38 PM
i don't feel like googling but whats better about raw milk? (i understand the grass fed part)i don't drink milk so i dont know about these things
1/23/2011 2:23:35 PM
pasteurization kills most of the life in the milk. The thing that people get all touchy and heated about is the health impact of the bugs in the milk (yes they are called bugs). If you believe, like most nutritionists, that humans only need organic compounds and minerals to live healthy, then consuming the teeming mass of bacteria that is raw milk is simply an unnecessary health risk.The other view is that your intestines are a jungle. Sanitizing everything that goes into the environment is what we do now. But like a jungle, the best way to protect it is to host a healthy balance between the organisms living there. And basically, raw milk is a zoo of bacteria - they get in there and play with each other and help keep everything in check. Your digestive system becomes that of superman and your health skyrockets, no longer being held down by our mistaken Western nutrition dogmas.There are problems with both of these arguments, for sure. But this should start us out pretty well.
1/23/2011 2:31:10 PM
^ahahahahah. i loved how you desribed it like i was in third grade so basically people think the probiotic effects of milk are lessened by pasteurization. thats an interesting concept.
1/23/2011 2:41:05 PM
Here is a website you may like. It gives a list of farms closest to you by typing in your zip code (it looks like about 4 farms in NC). You may not be interested because they do pasteurized all their milk....there is a section their website about that.http://www.organicvalley.coop/Here is a list of stores around Raleigh they sell at. I bet if you tried some of these stores there may be some more products that are exactly what you are looking for.Carolina, Christina P.O. Box 807Knightdale, NC 27545 Work (804) 647-3130 4.7 miles Lowes2900 E Millbrook RdRaleigh, NC 27604-2816 Work (919) 873-0722 5.1 miles Harris Teeter of Cameron Village 500 Oberlin RdRaleigh, NC 27605-1327 Work (919) 828-9216 6.9 miles Harris Teeter of Glenwood Village 2603 Glenwood AvenueRaleigh, NC 27608 Work (919) 787-5526 7.2 miles Lowes192 Milborn StRaleigh, NC 27609-7842 Work (919) 839-5552 8.3 miles Harris Teeter of North Hills 4421 Six Forks RoadRaleigh, NC 27609 Work (919) 786-4895 8.3 miles Harris Teeter of North Ridge Shopping Center 6024 Falls of the Neuse RoadRaleigh, NC 27619 Work (919) 872-5786 8.7 miles
1/23/2011 2:52:40 PM
It's complicated and what we've covered are warm-fuzzies compared to the mauling complicated discussion that would do the issue justice.Humans are made to live in a sea of life, granted. But it's difficult to identify all the ways this matters. And one argument against raw milk, to be sure, is that drinking milk isn't natural. Drinking milk that had an unnatural process (although heat) applied to it isunnatural + unnatural = who the fuck cares anymore?Most of our bacterial exposure in nature was probably through drinking water and directly through environment, but the impacts of meat consumption, which have way more in the way of microscopic creepy crawlies should be unclear. Humans are only eaten large game on-and-off in the Homo Sapien history.But either way, even parasitic organisms have beneficial effects of some type. By the very definition of parasite they really don't increase your fitness, but parasites have been shown with good confidence to account for the differences between the rampant allergies of the developed world versus the notable absence of allergies of the non-developed world.Some people on the forefront of science are seriously interested in pinning down the effects that bugs have on our functions and see major benefits from this. Craig Venture wants to engineer artificial life to replace the bugs in your gut (yes this is a totally valid phrase), which can give you all kinds of health benefits. The main difference between that and raw milk is that one might just prefer to know what we're doing. Drinking raw milk is taking a grab-bag from nature and throwing it at your guts. It's not hard to argue that it can have both good and bad effects. If we could actually figure out how the systems work then we really could engineer the benefits that naturopaths claim to have already gained.It'll take decades for modern medicine to prescribe remedies that are not sterile, but that's just because we can't reasonably control it yet. So what do we do with a part of nature's creation that is beyond our ability to control? Try to exude it from our environment of course.BONUS! Waterborne parasite for the win.[Edited on January 23, 2011 at 3:08 PM. Reason : ]
1/23/2011 3:07:36 PM
I like how she described it. Not everyone is a biologist/pharmacist/model
1/23/2011 3:09:29 PM
ahahaha. sorry. i didnt mean it mean. i figure most of the people on here are in the know about the bacteria in most dairy products but i could be 100% wrong. it's a great explanation! if i drank milk, i dont know how id feel about raw milk.i do believe i would give it a shot though.^^i can honestly say
1/23/2011 3:12:16 PM
^ lol, the image I posted was of a parasite that gets to us from water. There's lots of commentary that could be added on that species alone.The organism hangs out as a micro-organism in water. It can be easily filtered out with modern filters... but it evolved when we didn't have such filters. Then it grows in the body while following gravity down to the foot, then breaks out of the skin to get back into water as a slimy worm at which point it promptly lays more eggs that repeat the cycle.I find it interesting, for one, because it's fairly well tuned to humans living in a semi-aquatic environment. It expects to crawl out of the foot into wetlands basically. And it only preys on humans. That's an environment very rich with creepy crawlers of all sizes.
1/23/2011 5:00:52 PM
im thinking about prehistoric man, and how we evolve and that a lot of it had to do with unclean drinking water. there are a million reasons to say that we (as humans) "cheat" evolution but i honestly never thought of this one! >.<and its a big one!
1/23/2011 5:18:59 PM
1/23/2011 5:28:42 PM
1/23/2011 5:47:26 PM
in this certain case-by purifying our water. i mean, im mostly talking about more developed countries here (obviously )i can guarantee you that the worlds population would be much lower if we didn't purify and clean it.[Edited on January 23, 2011 at 5:52 PM. Reason : ^i'm talking about human evolution! ]
1/23/2011 5:51:59 PM
oh, right on.I think that's just one of the things that 'held down' the human population right up until mass agriculture. If you think about it, if we didn't have major health issues that could be resolved so easily, then human population would have been much greater to start out with and we wouldn't have observed the same explosion, and in addition to that, Earth would have been better adapted to such a large mass of people.This particular parasite can be filtered out with a fairly ordinary nylon cloth. But that still doesn't reach some areas of the world. Also a reason we are expecting such large population growth in Africa for the next 50 years.
1/23/2011 6:04:50 PM
i buy the organic valley stuff, i don't drink enough milk to mind the price and having grown up with milk from the grandparents dairy i can't stand the taste of the normal stuff. i used to buy maple view but i think their milk has hormones and antibiotics and i try to stay away from that. but i don't understand the aversion to pasteurization. dairy milk isn't natural for us anyways, i don't buy into the pro-biotic argument. my purchase decision is based on grass vs. grain and hormones and antibiotics. [Edited on January 23, 2011 at 6:42 PM. Reason : .]
1/23/2011 6:35:03 PM
I've never read one credible scientific journal that showed any benefits from raw milk consumption, but drinking raw milk is known to have severe health risks. The arguments for raw milk consumption make about as much sense as the claims that immunizations cause autism and should be avoided.[Edited on January 23, 2011 at 6:38 PM. Reason : grass fed vs. corn fed dairy cows is a completely valid argument though.]
1/23/2011 6:37:39 PM
there was a time when pasteur was considered a hero...
1/23/2011 6:44:17 PM
^aha. winner.
1/23/2011 6:46:15 PM
1/23/2011 6:52:47 PM
^4 maple view doesn't use hormones but they do use antibiotics. And they feed the cows corn, which is what I'm really trying to stay away from.I'm interested in raw milk mainly because a few studies haveshown it to help alleviate asthma. But since I'm not willing to drive to Virginia to legally buy raw milk, my main mission is finding at least grass fed milk, pasteurized or otherwise
1/23/2011 6:58:00 PM
I've always loved milk from fast food places. I was convinced it was cause it was like hyperultrasuperpasteurized.Then finally I realized it was just whole milk, something I never drank otherwise. Fat tastes gooooood.
1/23/2011 7:10:11 PM
Whole milk is better for you too!
1/23/2011 7:32:45 PM
1/23/2011 7:50:34 PM
1/23/2011 9:11:11 PM
milk doesn't eat grass
1/23/2011 9:17:36 PM
Kris is very intelligent and handsomely endowed with wit. I know this from his posts in The Soap Box.
1/23/2011 9:44:28 PM
^^^ There have been several studies now showing that skim milk, or even the low fat fad as a whole, is not as good for you as the government likes you to think. Milk has several fat soluble vitamins that we can benefit from. I'd rather drink whole milk in moderation than gallons of skim milk personally but it's really up to you what you want to drink One study showing benefits of whole milk/cheese/etchttp://www.annals.org/content/153/12/I-56.fullAnother study on while milk and its effects in regards to prostate cancerhttp://aje.oxfordjournals.org/content/166/11/1259.abstract
1/23/2011 10:34:43 PM
This might be better for another thread, but I am interested in these topics. To be honest, I doubt the 2nd study there, which claims to find a positive effect on prostate cancer from milk consumption. I haven't heard that particular effect before, but I do know one thing milk doesn't do - give you strong bones. But the reality is that all of these studies are not blind trials, and it would be impossible to do blind trials for milk and there are so many things wrong with any study that does a non-blind trial since the independent variable is conflated with so many other lifestyle things. Nutrition simply can't be studied in the way the we do drugs.I'm looking into these books, and hoping to find some interesting things:Eat, Drink, and Be Healthy: The Harvard Medical School Guide to Healthy EatingThe China Study: The Most Comprehensive Study of Nutrition Ever ConductedI haven't read them yet but I understand that the bottom line is that, on a strength-of-evidence basis, the truth is there and it's what we already knew. Eating animal products in general makes you less healthy and vegetables is pretty much the only thing that makes you more healthy that we can prove. There's a lot of other stuff that we can kind of suspect, such as Omega-3s which has a pretty good case, and some of the pro-biotic arguments in these thread have somewhat of a weak case. But we still can't really say to know any of these have positive effects.
1/23/2011 10:56:47 PM
Why cow milk though?What evolutionary reason is there to believe the bugs in cow milk are somehow good for humans?I wouldn't be surprised if early cultures boiled their water (not knowing exactly why) before drinking it, whenever possible.
1/23/2011 11:18:34 PM
1/23/2011 11:29:34 PM
You can use a hollowed out log for a pot.
1/23/2011 11:30:39 PM
That just seems like a lot of effort for people who already have built a sufficient tolerance to water bacteria, especially when you consider the benefit would be dubious and there would be little case for experimentation in the first place which would have to be maintained over a long period of time to observe effect (if any is observed).I could be convinced they did soup though. I'd want a big bowl of soup if I had nothing but fibrous plant matter and bulbs that taste terrible raw. I mean, shish kabobs would get old after a while.
1/23/2011 11:37:30 PM
it wouldn't make sense for a society without an understanding of any kind of germs to boil water to sterilize it. even fairly modern societies were still often using alcohol as a water substitute because it kept better.
1/24/2011 12:04:16 AM
1/24/2011 12:37:36 AM
1/24/2011 3:01:15 AM
1/24/2011 7:06:19 AM
^ i could understand the first part. sort of like the black plague doctors. wearing masks and long coats so that the "evil" would not get inside them. they were partially right [Edited on January 24, 2011 at 7:36 AM. Reason : ps the 2nd im done with my book now, im checkingout those 2 books you posted. ]
1/24/2011 7:36:25 AM
1/24/2011 8:27:40 AM
1/24/2011 9:36:36 AM
this thread is better than most
1/24/2011 10:31:34 AM
its Craig Venter just fyi.and yes, there are several schools of thought on this.one the one hand our sterile/anti-biotic way of life is screwing up our immune system, and we are weaker as defined by everything from allergies to cancer; but on an individual level this may reduce the incidences of acute trauma caused by germs and hence reduce the risk of death or debilitating illness in the context of that particular germ incident.
1/24/2011 11:35:03 AM
anti-biotics are like bug zappers.Some bugs are biting me, this is a problem.I know, I'll make a death trap for bugs and put it near my house.Wait, you mean some other bugs are important for the balance of the ecology?--By the way, on the subject of evil geniuses, Nathan Myhrvold's company has been working on a death laser that kills mosquitoes and spares the rest of the flying insects. I imagine this is what nanobots will do in out guts in the future.
1/24/2011 12:13:43 PM
1/24/2011 12:22:54 PM
cite source
1/24/2011 1:31:07 PM
milk is probably the biggest scam around.there is no need for it at all. makes you shit. screws your cholesterol, makes you fat, makes your money go down the drain.you people dont need any meat/dairy to live a good life.[Edited on January 24, 2011 at 1:35 PM. Reason : ]
1/24/2011 1:34:44 PM
Dairy is probably better than meat but both can be said to be bad for your health.The bottom line is that the more vegetables you eat the longer you'll live.Note this only applies for industrialized nations today. We don't have a problem obtaining sufficient calories. In other cases both milk and dairy can help you get the calories you need.
1/24/2011 1:47:10 PM
1/24/2011 1:47:25 PM
1/24/2011 1:53:29 PM
Moderation is key Now back to the subject at hand, where can I get dat 190% pasture-raised moo moo juice?
1/24/2011 1:54:24 PM