Guest guest Posted November 8, 2003 Report Share Posted November 8, 2003 Is ghee the part with or without the casein? I though I had learned somewhere that it was the part without. I ordered the ghee from WFN and it is so good. I have been making my own butter from grass-fed raw milk but they do feed grain right before milking and during the winter when the grass is covered with snow. I cannot get milk that is totally grass-fed (never any grain) I don't think it is anywhere available to my understanding but WFN claims to get this from cows in the USA! Is anyone here getting raw milk that is totally grass-fed in the USA?? There is a difference in the ghee that is made from regular land-o-lakes butter and raw grass- fed. I would love to find this totally raw milk/butter. The best butter/ghee is at the top of my list for nutritional additions to my diet. Anyway if you have not read or seen the WFN site here is a link to the section on ghee. http://www.wildernessfamilynaturals.com/mall/raw_ghee.asp Thought someone may be interested. Thanks for this discussion. , I have saved your directions for making stove ghee and plan to try it. Thanks, ~Del > Last night's ghee now has a fire under it again. Overnight it did not > harden, does it? should it? I'm cooking it down again. The stuff on > the bottom did brown some but I've still got some foam on top. > > Any advice is appreciated. > > Thanks, > > Belinda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 8, 2003 Report Share Posted November 8, 2003 --- In , " Delano Eaton " <mushimushi@s...> wrote: I would love to find this totally raw milk/butter. The best > butter/ghee is at the top of my list for nutritional additions to my > diet. -------Del, Radiant Life carries x-factor gold butter oil. It's from cows not only 100% grassfed, but also eating grass in the growth phase, which produces the x-factor Weston Price talked about. They only produce it in the spring and the fall, since that is when the new grass is growing. They don't use heat to separate the oil (they centrifuge it as I believe WFN does also) so it's still raw. It's expensive, and for supplementation, not cooking. If you're interested, you should act quickly, as winter is coming and they may run out soon (if they haven't all ready). I stocked up enough to last me through March since I plan to try get pregnant in a month or two. Hope this is helpful, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 8, 2003 Report Share Posted November 8, 2003 > Last night's ghee now has a fire under it again. Overnight it did > not harden, does it? should it? If it is cold enough for long enough, it should harden. If your butter was still liquid this morning, and there was some browning, it sounds like your fire died out much slower than expected, and continued to keep it warm, and even cook a it a little, longer than expected. > I'm cooking it down again. The stuff on the bottom did brown some > but I've still got some foam on top. You want all of the non-fat milk solids, or particulate matter, to brown at the same rate, or as closely to that ideal as possible. So cook very slowly and stir often. Whatever happens, once any appreciable amount of the sediment reaches the darker end of the ideal color range, cooking _must_ stop, or you risk burning some of the solids and imparting a burnt flavor to the ghee. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 8, 2003 Report Share Posted November 8, 2003 > I would love to find this totally raw milk/butter. The best > > butter/ghee is at the top of my list for nutritional additions to my > > diet. > > -------Del, Radiant Life carries x-factor gold butter oil. It's from cows not only > 100% grassfed, but also eating grass in the growth phase, which produces > the x-factor Weston Price talked about. They only produce it in the spring > and the fall, since that is when the new grass is growing. They don't use heat > to separate the oil (they centrifuge it as I believe WFN does also) so it's still > raw. It's expensive, and for supplementation, not cooking. If you're > interested, you should act quickly, as winter is coming and they may run out > soon (if they haven't all ready). I stocked up enough to last me through > March since I plan to try get pregnant in a month or two. > > Hope this is helpful, > > WFN says theirs is also 100% grass-fed and I can buy that by the bottle which is easier on the pocketbook right now. Radient Life is a better buy. WFN says 1 teaspoon is a serving and one bottle is 30 servings. Radient Life says 1/2 teaspoon is a serving. If I use 1/2 teaspoon of the WFN then that makes WFN a better buy! So the 64,000 dollar question is how much do I need. Nobody knows. Right now I am taking a T of CLO. Does that mean I would need to take the same of the butter oil?? BTW, Radient Life still has the butter oil available. I have been using the butter oil extravaganly, spreading it on my cooked fish, steak and veggies! I need to stop doing that and just take an amount of it 1x a day and use the land-of-lakes butter or my own butter when ever I need it. I see that you guys are making the ghee to be able to cook and not burn. Why don't you just use coconut oil? It doesn't burn nor is it destroyed when heated. Somewhere I read that butter should never be heated. Anyone else read that? ~Del Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 8, 2003 Report Share Posted November 8, 2003 > > Is ghee the part with or without the casein? I though I had learned > somewhere that it was the part without. The ghee is definitely the part without. Casein is the main protein in milk, but ghee is almost 100% pure milk _fat_. The cooking of what little casein, as well as lactose, and I know not what all else left in butter after churning, imparts a certain distinctive flavor to ghee, but is strained out of it after cooking. This is part of the reason I object to so called " raw ghee " being called as such. Though of course I don't deny any possible health benefits to be had from the product. > There is a difference in the ghee that is made from regular land- > o-lakes butter and raw grass-fed. I don't doubt it. I imagine that, among other things, it is a much deeper yellow than ghee from regular store-bought butter. However many of us can't afford to make a staple of raw butter made from the milk of all-grass-fed cattle, as much as I'm sure we all wish we could. As an interesting aside, goat- or sheep's-milk ghee is actually clear when liquid, and white like Crisco when solid. There's no beta-carotene left in the milk of goats and sheep to color it. That's also the reason that feta is no brilliantly white, with no hint of yellowness like cheeses made from cow's milk. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 8, 2003 Report Share Posted November 8, 2003 ----- Original Message ----- From: " wtsdv " <liberty@...> > I don't doubt it. I imagine that, among other things, it is > a much deeper yellow than ghee from regular store-bought butter. > However many of us can't afford to make a staple of raw butter > made from the milk of all-grass-fed cattle, as much as I'm sure > we all wish we could. I don't see why not. At over 3,000 calories per pound, raw butter is actually a pretty good deal in terms of cost per calorie. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 8, 2003 Report Share Posted November 8, 2003 > > > > Is ghee the part with or without the casein? I though I had learned > > somewhere that it was the part without. > > The ghee is definitely the part without. Casein is the main > protein in milk, but ghee is almost 100% pure milk _fat_. > The cooking of what little casein, as well as lactose, and I > know not what all else left in butter after churning, imparts > a certain distinctive flavor to ghee, but is strained out of > it after cooking. ---I don't understand what you are saying above. Could you rephrase it? It sounds like you are saying that in order to get ghee we have to cook it, therefore taking out flavor. Is that right? The ghee I bought at WFN says on the bottle " no heat process " . It also says that raw ghee is made with no heat unlike traditional ghee that is heated. WFN uses centrifuge to separate the milk solids and take out the water. This raw ghee is also made from cream. It is a very deep yellow.---- This is part of the reason I object to so > called " raw ghee " being called as such. Though of course I > don't deny any possible health benefits to be had from the > product. > > > There is a difference in the ghee that is made from regular land- > > o-lakes butter and raw grass-fed. > > I don't doubt it. I imagine that, among other things, it is > a much deeper yellow than ghee from regular store-bought butter. > However many of us can't afford to make a staple of raw butter > made from the milk of all-grass-fed cattle, as much as I'm sure > we all wish we could. ----I understand too well! That's why I will limit my consumption to 1/2 teaspoon a day along with my clo and use coconut oil and land-of- lakes to cook with. Have you ever heard to not heat butter and if you do, it should never brown? Browning it makes it turn to transfat, I think.---- > > As an interesting aside, goat- or sheep's-milk ghee is actually > clear when liquid, and white like Crisco when solid. There's > no beta-carotene left in the milk of goats and sheep to color > it. That's also the reason that feta is no brilliantly white, > with no hint of yellowness like cheeses made from cow's milk. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 8, 2003 Report Share Posted November 8, 2003 > > I see that you guys are making the ghee to be able to cook and > not burn. Why don't you just use coconut oil? It doesn't burn > nor is it destroyed when heated. Coconut oil is very good tasting, and I personally consider it a close second to butter or ghee, but it is not the traditionaly fat to use when cooking, for example, Indian, Persian or Ossetian food. Alot of what Sally Fallon's books is supposedly about, is following age-old traditions that have a proven track record of sustaining our ancestors. My ancestors were not in the tropics and probably never saw a coconut, they were nomadic cattle herders whose diet was very rich in milk fat, and who used ghee to fry their food. > Somewhere I read that butter should never be heated. Anyone else > read that? You may have read that, there are alot of raw-foodist out there that would forbid heating anything, but if any fat at all is to be heated, then it should be an animal fat. They are the least prone to damage by heating. Supposedly coconut and palm oil are the next best fats for this use, but animals fats are the best. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 8, 2003 Report Share Posted November 8, 2003 --- In , " Berg " <bberg@c...> wrote: > ----- Original Message ----- > From: " wtsdv " <liberty@p...> > > > However many of us can't afford to make a staple of raw butter > > made from the milk of all-grass-fed cattle, as much as I'm sure > > we all wish we could. > > I don't see why not. At over 3,000 calories per pound, raw butter is > actually a pretty good deal in terms of cost per calorie. Regular store-bought butter has a comparable number of calories per pound, but is much cheaper. I don't go to the store to buy calories, I go to buy butter. I don't eat the butter with a mind to get calories, I eat it because I like the taste of butter. The calories are just along for the ride. :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 8, 2003 Report Share Posted November 8, 2003 > > ---I don't understand what you are saying above. Could you rephrase > it? It sounds like you are saying that in order to get ghee we have > to cook it, therefore taking out flavor. Is that right? No, we have to cook it to _add_ flavor - the flavor of the caramelized milk sugars, of the denatured milk proteins, and of whatever other small amounts of non-fat milk solids are left in butter after churning. Without this flavor it should not be considered traditional ghee, merely clarified butter. > The ghee I bought at WFN says on the bottle " no heat process " . It > also says that raw ghee is made with no heat unlike traditional > ghee that is heated. Yes, but Belinda was making traditional ghee, which is heated. I also have been objecting, in this thread and in another, to the raw product being called " ghee " . The heating process is integral to the production of real ghee. This so called " raw ghee " is actually just centrifugally clarified butter. See my other post on the difference between clarified butter and ghee, and also keep in mind that I'm not claiming any special health- giving properties from traditional (heated) ghee. > WFN uses centrifuge to separate the milk solids and take out the > water. This raw ghee is also made from cream. It is a very deep > yellow.---- I'm sure that it's a very good product, and very beneficial for health, but it's not really ghee. It's centrifugally clarified butter, and if I had the means, I would start legal procedings to stop those companies that are selling it as such. > Have you ever heard to not heat butter and if you do, it should > never brown? Browning it makes it turn to transfat, I think.---- See my other post where I try to answer this question. Regard- less of whatever heating might do to butter, it will do worse to any other fat except lard, tallow or suet, which are also animal fats. So the question is whether _any_ fat at all should be heated, not whether butter specifically shouldn't be. If _any_ fat can be heated, butter can. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 8, 2003 Report Share Posted November 8, 2003 --- In , " Berg " <bberg@c...> wrote: > > Coconut oil has been used traditionally in some parts of India > (Southern India, I think), hasn't it? Yes, you're right. I should have said " certain types of North Indian cooking " , but wasn't thinking. Sorry about that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 9, 2003 Report Share Posted November 9, 2003 > > > > > I see that you guys are making the ghee to be able to cook and > > not burn. Why don't you just use coconut oil? It doesn't burn > > nor is it destroyed when heated. 1. Don't like the taste of coconut and imagine the oil would be the same. 2. Don't know how to make it. 3. Too expensive to buy. Normally we use lard, which we have plenty of, this is just my way of making some room in the freezer. Belinda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 9, 2003 Report Share Posted November 9, 2003 in butter after churning. Without this flavor it should > I'm sure that it's a very good product, and very beneficial > for health, but it's not really ghee. It's centrifugally > clarified butter, and if I had the means, I would start legal > procedings to stop those companies that are selling it as such. ------forgive me, , if I'm reacting to a statement made in jest as if it were serious, but don't people have the freedom to use language incorrectly? Granted, it can be annoying to the purists, but what would be the legal justification for suing a company for misusing the term " ghee " ? Would you want to live in a country where the law interfered with our lives to this extent? And why would you want to put these manufacturers of good foods through the expense of litigation over the fine distinction between clarified butter and ghee? Again, if you were exaggerating to make a point, please disregard this rant. It's just that your statement really pushed my libertarian buttons. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 9, 2003 Report Share Posted November 9, 2003 > > ------forgive me, , if I'm reacting to a statement made in > jest as if it were serious, I was jesting a little, and a serious a little. :-) > but don't people have the freedom to use language incorrectly? Yes, I think so, but we do have marketing and labelling laws, like those that require milk to contain so much of this or that before it can be sold as " milk " , and the like. > Granted, it can be annoying to the purists, but what would be > the legal justification for suing a company for misusing the > term " ghee " ? I don't know, but are you on any of the kefir lists? If so, you'll know about the same sort of annoyance, though caused by calling various kinds of fermented milks " kefir " , but which are not made using Caucasian kefir grains. > Would you want to live in a country where the law interfered with > our lives to this extent? I already do, and since I do, I want them to go ahead and apply the same sort of laws to the legal definition of ghee, as they do, for example, to foods like bread, mayonnaise or beer, the latter of which aren't nearly so important to me personally as ghee. > And why would you want to put these manufacturers of good foods > through the expense of litigation over the fine distinction > between clarified butter and ghee? Sure. There's no reason for them to call it ghee, unless they feel there's a marketing advantage in doing so, in which case they're taking advantage of the consumer's notions about, or desire for, a different product than the one they're actually selling. > Again, if you were exaggerating to make a point, please disregard > this rant. It's just that your statement really pushed my > libertarian buttons. I don't mind the rant. I'm a libertarian too, and understand what you're saying, but I think that so long as we don't yet have a true libertarian system in place, we might as well try to use the existing laws to our best personal advantage. That's what those who are selling centrifugally clarified butter as " ghee " are doing. By the way, I'm not trying to stop people on this list who themselves are buying, or discussing buying, a product sold as " raw ghee " from calling it that. That's the name under which it's being marketed, and if they were to try to call it anything else, confusion about which product, from which company, would ensue. It's the company's choice of name made in the first place, that I object to. If anyone has bought a product from company X, and that company calls it " raw ghee " , regardless of what it might actually be, then by all means don't be afraid to say " I bought X's raw ghee " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 9, 2003 Report Share Posted November 9, 2003 --- In , " wtsdv " <liberty@p...> wrote: > I was jesting a little, and a serious a little. :-) > I don't mind the rant. I'm a libertarian too, and understand > what you're saying, but I think that so long as we don't yet > have a true libertarian system in place, we might as well try > to use the existing laws to our best personal advantage. That's > what those who are selling centrifugally clarified butter as > " ghee " are doing. ======Thanks for the well thought out reply, ! I can completely relate to frustration with misuse of the language. I myself had conniptions when the History channel kept mispronouncing Atilla the Hun, as uh-TILL-uh, rather than ATTLE-uh. It's the HISTORY channel for heaven's sake! That said, we'll have to agree to disagree on the morality of suing the " raw ghee " companies. I really appreciate that these companies are making healthy foods available to us by mail order, and if their terminology offends, then use your (quite considerable:-)) persuasive skills to get them to change the name. I just don't believe in using the force of law and government to bend others to my will (of course, this is a general principle, which because of human depravity, cannot be applied 100%... but that's an issue for another day, and another list:-)) > > Would you want to live in a country where the law interfered with > > our lives to this extent? > > I already do, and since I do, I want them to go ahead and apply > the same sort of laws to the legal definition of ghee, as they > do, for example, to foods like bread, mayonnaise or beer, the > latter of which aren't nearly so important to me personally as > ghee. > > > And why would you want to put these manufacturers of good foods > > through the expense of litigation over the fine distinction > > between clarified butter and ghee? > > Sure. There's no reason for them to call it ghee, unless > they feel there's a marketing advantage in doing so, in > which case they're taking advantage of the consumer's > notions about, or desire for, a different product than the > one they're actually selling. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 11, 2003 Report Share Posted November 11, 2003 > > I myself had conniptions when the History channel kept > mispronouncing Atilla the Hun, as uh-TILL-uh, rather than > ATTLE-uh. It's the HISTORY channel for heaven's sake! Oh, you're interested in Atilla and the history of the Huns? So am I! > I just don't believe in using the force of law and government > to bend others to my will How I love to read words like these, and agree of course! If we are indeed disagreeing, it's the sweetest disagreement I've ever had! ;-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 11, 2003 Report Share Posted November 11, 2003 > Oh, you're interested in Atilla and the history of > the Huns? So am I! -----I must confess I'm more interested in proper pronunciation and word usage, but I do find " barbarian tribes " fascinating! Especially how Atilla terrorized and chiseled away at the mighty Roman Empire. I didn't realize the Huns were an Asiatic people, rather than a Germanic people like the Goths and Visigoths. There's just so much I've forgotten from high school history! > > > I just don't believe in using the force of law and government > > to bend others to my will > > How I love to read words like these, and agree of > course! If we are indeed disagreeing, it's the > sweetest disagreement I've ever had! ;-) -------Well I'm a sweet girl! Were we disagreeing? I can't remember...:-) > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 11, 2003 Report Share Posted November 11, 2003 > -----I must confess I'm more interested in proper pronunciation and word > usage, , that makes two of us. I forgot, were you a part of our grand digression on " thus " and " thusly " and prescriptivism versus descriptivism? It was a little long-winded and not really apropriate for this board, but it was a fun thread. Grammar is yummy. Tom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 11, 2003 Report Share Posted November 11, 2003 > , that makes two of us. I forgot, were you a part of our > grand digression on " thus " and " thusly " and prescriptivism versus > descriptivism? It was a little long-winded and not really apropriate > for this board, but it was a fun thread. Grammar is yummy. ----Tom, I must confess I avoided that thread because I felt intimidated by high level of linguistic expertise! I like reading books on grammar and pronunciation, but I'm a dabbler... plus my interest in food and nutrition is somewhat all consuming at this moment! I don't remember what side you were on, but I definitely am opposed to thusly (unless used poetically)... I think this makes me a prescriptivist!:-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 12, 2003 Report Share Posted November 12, 2003 Yep, that was the side I was advocating. And there's nothing wrong with dabbling! Tom > > > , that makes two of us. I forgot, were you a part of our > > grand digression on " thus " and " thusly " and prescriptivism versus > > descriptivism? It was a little long-winded and not really apropriate > > for this board, but it was a fun thread. Grammar is yummy. > > ----Tom, I must confess I avoided that thread because I felt intimidated by > high level of linguistic expertise! I like reading books on grammar and > pronunciation, but I'm a dabbler... plus my interest in food and nutrition is > somewhat all consuming at this moment! I don't remember what side you > were on, but I definitely am opposed to thusly (unless used poetically)... I > think this makes me a prescriptivist!:-) > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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