Milk: Perfect Food or Toxic Soup? Part 1

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Mmm, whole milk. Anything else is just gross.

Except while eating meals. I can’t see how anyone can drink creamy milk with food. Then, it has to be sweet tea. Sweetened with sugar, mind you, not that nasty Splenda stuff.
 
Mmm, whole milk. Anything else is just gross.

Except while eating meals. I can’t see how anyone can drink creamy milk with food. Then, it has to be sweet tea. Sweetened with sugar, mind you, not that nasty Splenda stuff.
Splenda is worse than white sugar. Older people and blacks have difficulty digesting milk.
 
CPA2;6669529:
Not buckwheat honey. I have heard of it, but I have never had it because there’s no buckwheat around here. There are, however, a lot of fall wildflowers, principally in the mixed pasture/woods areas. Usually starts in late September and lasts into November. Big honey flow, almost as big as May/June. I don’t know what, exactly, the bees get it from, but whatever it is, it’s in those mixed pasture/woodlands. Very possibly some of it comes from fruit that pops its skin. I know persimmons will do that and wild grapes, and I have seen bees on both in the fall.
You must live in the south.
 
Didn’t anyone like my Archie Bunker joke?

Does honey come regurgitated from the front end or defecated from the back end of bees? Not processed huh?
 
Just wondering… How are you getting vitamin B12 then? You know thhe energy vitamin. All major sources of that are animal!
Good question! B12 is not in vegatables or fruits. However, it is in flax seed which I eat every day.
 
I use almond milk every day. I buy it at Wal-Mart. I also make my own almond milk.
How do you make your own almond milk? If it’s too off topic, could you please PM me your directions and recipe please?
 
How do you make your own almond milk? If it’s too off topic, could you please PM me your directions and recipe please?
Soak raw almonds in distilled water for 24 hours. Put soaked almonds and distilled water into blender. Strain.

Check www.hacres.com for more information.
 
Didn’t anyone like my Archie Bunker joke?

Does honey come regurgitated from the front end or defecated from the back end of bees? Not processed huh?
Nectar is processed by bees and made into honey. Honey bees are like tankers. They have a clear nectar sack located in front of their gut.

Honey lasts forever; it does not spoil. Bacteria cannot live in honey. Some very expensive Makua honey is now used in some hospitals for burn patients.

Archie was on the SAD diet (Standard American Diet). I enjoyed watching Archie Bunker.
 
Ayup, beef from the grocery store is generally from cows which have been fattened up by high-grain diets before slaughter. That diet turns their “good” fats into “bad” fats, so that type of meat is bad for people. But “real” meat has a lot of stuff which is very good for us 🙂

And milk is also very good for humans. I don’t see any general prohibitions against either meat or milk in the Bible, just not to eat certain types of meat, and not to mix milk with the meat of the calf, each of which shows that the Jews were permitted to drink milk and eat other dairy products along with meat.

Weston Price Foundation

Raw Milk Campaign
Actually, most beef in the grocery store is not from cows that have been fattened up by high-grain diets before slaughter. The “low end” of beef is from cows, bulls, etc that have not been fed grain, but also some Holstein steers that have. The “high end” is from beef breed steers or heifers about a year to a year and a half old that have been grass-fed except for the last 80-120 days of their lives. I’ll grant that for that last period, they are fed grain. But you have to remember that cattle eat “grain” even when they’re grass fed in a way. Grain is just seeds. Cattle on pasture will eat seeds of all kinds of things; grass, clover, lespedeza, whatever’s there. They’ll eat acorns too.

But I’ll grant that pushing grain at the end does make the meat fattier than it would be if they were “grass-fed” from beginning to end. Aussies, I’m told, prefer grass-fed. I’ve butchered totally grass fed, and it’s a bit less juicy, but it’s otherwise really good. My family prefers it. I’m a bit leery of heavy marbling myself.

Back to acorns. Every fall I turn cattle into the woods to eat the white oak acorns. (They’re not bad…not bitter like red or black oak acorns) That really fattens them up, which is good for the mother cows for winter. I’m told it’s a different kind of fat, though from fat from grain. 🤷
 
Soak raw almonds in distilled water for 24 hours. Put soaked almonds and distilled water into blender. Strain.

Check www.hacres.com for more information.
You know, I have read that you can make a delicious “milk” from hickory nuts. Also, you can get hickory oil from them, for salad dressing. Indians used to crack them, then put the hulls and all into a cauldron and boil them; skim the oil off the top, then strain the “milk” from the hulls. It’s supposed to be really good. I have been meaning to try it. Maybe this fall I will.

Has to be the big hickory nuts, though. There are several kinds of hickories, and some of the nuts are bitter and horrible. The really big ones with the super-hard shells are the good ones. I love them, but it’s hard to pick the meat out of them.
 
Actually, most beef in the grocery store is not from cows that have been fattened up by high-grain diets before slaughter. The “low end” of beef is from cows, bulls, etc that have not been fed grain, but also some Holstein steers that have. The “high end” is from beef breed steers or heifers about a year to a year and a half old that have been grass-fed except for the last 80-120 days of their lives. I’ll grant that for that last period, they are fed grain. But you have to remember that cattle eat “grain” even when they’re grass fed in a way. Grain is just seeds. Cattle on pasture will eat seeds of all kinds of things; grass, clover, lespedeza, whatever’s there. They’ll eat acorns too.

But I’ll grant that pushing grain at the end does make the meat fattier than it would be if they were “grass-fed” from beginning to end. Aussies, I’m told, prefer grass-fed. I’ve butchered totally grass fed, and it’s a bit less juicy, but it’s otherwise really good. My family prefers it. I’m a bit leery of heavy marbling myself.

Back to acorns. Every fall I turn cattle into the woods to eat the white oak acorns. (They’re not bad…not bitter like red or black oak acorns) That really fattens them up, which is good for the mother cows for winter. I’m told it’s a different kind of fat, though from fat from grain. 🤷
Deer like acorns from white oaks too. I have the name somewhere of an oak tree that produces acorns that are not bitter. There is nothing that I will not eat!

When I was a big meat eater, my favorite steak was a BBQ Angus porterhouse steak. The flavor is in the fat, and Angus cattle have great marbeling. I would give the tenderloin portion of the porterhouse steak to my wife and I would eat the T-bone section of the porterhouse steak. I use to eat my weight in BBQ when I was in Texas. Now I do not even miss the taste of meat.

When I drank milk, my favorite milk was from Jersey cows. Jersey cows do not produce as much milk as the other breeds, but their milk is richer in butterfat. When I was a child, I use to drink warm Jersey milk 5 minutes after milking, before the fat rose to the top of the bowl.
 
" I had no idea you could milk a cat!"

“Oh, you can milk just about anything with nipples”

Bottom line: If you don’t like cows milk or are concerned about “toxins”, antibiotics, GH and the like, don’t drink it. If you like it, go for it. People die from all sorts of stuff, and the stuff claimed to be in milk has yet to be proven to be a health hazard.
 
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Bottom line: If you don’t like cows milk or are concerned about “toxins”, antibiotics, GH and the like, don’t drink it. If you like it, go for it. People die from all sorts of stuff, and the stuff claimed to be in milk has yet to be proven to be a health hazard.
The more research that I read, the less I like milk, ice cream, meat, etc. My tastebuds have changed and now I crave **raw **vegetables straight from the garden. I do not even like cooked vegetables anymore. I now eat between 50% - 85% raw food.
 
The more research that I read, the less I like milk, ice cream, meat, etc. My tastebuds have changed and now I crave **raw **vegetables straight from the garden. I do not even like cooked vegetables anymore. I now eat between 50% - 85% raw food.
Which there have been studies shown to increase the risk of stomach cancer!😉
 
The more research that I read, the less I like milk, ice cream, meat, etc. My tastebuds have changed and now I crave **raw **vegetables straight from the garden. I do not even like cooked vegetables anymore. I now eat between 50% - 85% raw food.
Hope you wash them. 😃
 
Which there have been studies shown to increase the risk of stomach cancer!😉
What cause stomach cancer, milk or raw vegetables? There are some studies that show that milk can turn cancer cells on, just like a light bulb.

Lorraine Day, a physician who developed cancer herself, was aware that physicians are more afraid of cancer than patients are, because doctors know that chemotherpy, raidiation and surgery are not the answer to cancer. I listened to her DVDs, "Cancer Doesn’t Scare Me Anymore, You Can’t Improve on God, and Diseases Don’t Just Happen."

youtube.com/watch?v=AXUx_juHXXU
 
What cause stomach cancer, milk or raw vegetables? There are some studies that show that milk can turn cancer cells on, just like a light bulb.

Lorraine Day, a physician who developed cancer herself, was aware that physicians are more afraid of cancer than patients are, because doctors know that chemotherpy, raidiation and surgery are not the answer to cancer. I listened to her DVDs, "Cancer Doesn’t Scare Me Anymore, You Can’t Improve on God, and Diseases Don’t Just Happen."

youtube.com/watch?v=AXUx_juHXXU
Cultures where the diet hs lots of raw food, have a higher occurence of stomach cancer, ie Japanese.
 
Deer like acorns from white oaks too. I have the name somewhere of an oak tree that produces acorns that are not bitter. There is nothing that I will not eat!

When I was a big meat eater, my favorite steak was a BBQ Angus porterhouse steak. The flavor is in the fat, and Angus cattle have great marbeling. I would give the tenderloin portion of the porterhouse steak to my wife and I would eat the T-bone section of the porterhouse steak. I use to eat my weight in BBQ when I was in Texas. Now I do not even miss the taste of meat.

When I drank milk, my favorite milk was from Jersey cows. Jersey cows do not produce as much milk as the other breeds, but their milk is richer in butterfat. When I was a child, I use to drink warm Jersey milk 5 minutes after milking, before the fat rose to the top of the bowl.
You’re probably thinking of Chinquapin oaks. Their acorns are not at all bitter. To my taste, though, neither are white oak acorns. Of course, there are different species of white oak, and Chinquapins might be one of them. I guess post oaks are “white oaks” too, but I wouldn’t eat acorns from a post oak. The particular white oaks I was talking about (not sure what the proper name is) are the “shagbark” white oaks. Light gray bark that has a sort of loose, shaggy appearance to it. They grow to immense size, but slowly. They are the kind the timber people want to cut.

Regarding your previous preference for Jersey milk. Around here there is some dairying, but not a whole lot. Mostly it’s beef cattle. But some New Zealander groups have come over here to do their particular type of ranching. I know of one Aussie outfit that does it too. They’re here because they will only buy land in a narrow corridor that is both in the “green (all year) fescue” and “bermuda” belts; not too hot and steamy in the summer, lots of clean ground water, and in which there is very little snowfall in the winter. That’s because their cattle graze year-round. They never feed grain, and only feed hay when there is hard snow or ice on the ground, which isn’t often. Anyway, they actually milk their beef cattle. Don’t get much per cow, but it’s very rich in butterfat. They sell it to the specialty companies like Ben & Jerry’s and other creamy dessert people who want super high butterfat milk for their products. Pretty profitable, too, as I understand it. They came a long way here to do it, anyway.
 
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