Guest guest Posted May 3, 2004 Report Share Posted May 3, 2004 Does anyone know if one can undo the effects of homogenization at home, say, by freezing and then thawing milk or cream? Liz on 5/1/04 4:22 PM, Terry L. at tls@... wrote: The homogenized process encapsulates Xo into tiny fatty substances called liposomes. This protects Xo from stomach acids and allows it to pass through the intestinal walls into the circulatory system. " http://www.fetalogos.com/articles.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2004 Report Share Posted May 3, 2004 Hi Liz, No - from what I read earlier today, the heat of pasteurization actually transforms the fat and shrinks the sheathing that supports and surrounds the fat globule. Homogenization causes even further corruption and oxidation. -Blair p.s. I think that lower heat pasteurization does not do as much damage to the fat globule, but then you've got all that XO to deal with.... > Does anyone know if one can undo the effects of homogenization at home, say, > by freezing and then thawing milk or cream? > Liz > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2004 Report Share Posted May 3, 2004 Liz-- I can't imagine how you could get the fat globules back together again.... kind of like Humpty Dumpty.. I think modern Ag practices have just messed it up as a SuperFood, so boil the stuff for whatever culinary purpose that doesn't matter so much. I can see the reason for doing that if you're not thinking of it as a source of Real Enzymes anymore. You're trying to detoxify it. It's not that the Homo/Past stuff is Dangerous for most people (although some would say otherwise), but that they've taken what is our best Ideal Food and turned it into JunkFood. Then again if they're feeding cows GE Soybeans, of all things, then there's just no saving any of it. No amount of "cultured" bottles of swill can make up for what they've done to the poor cow or to the milk. --Terry On 5/3/2004 5:56:04 PM, rawdairy wrote:> Does anyone know if one can undo the effects of homogenization at home,> say,> by freezing and then thawing milk or cream?> Liz> > > on 5/1/04 4:22 PM, Terry L. at tls@... wrote:> > The homogenized process encapsulates Xo into tiny fatty substances> called> > liposomes. This protects Xo from stomach acids and allows it to pass> through> > the intestinal walls into the circulatory system. "> >> > http://www.fetalogos.com/articles.htm> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2004 Report Share Posted May 3, 2004 Liz-- Just remembered something..... They don't Homogenize most Cream, although now they usually Ultra-Pasteurize it. On 5/3/2004 5:56:04 PM, rawdairy wrote:> Does anyone know if one can undo the effects of homogenization at home,> say,> by freezing and then thawing milk or cream?> Liz> > > on 5/1/04 4:22 PM, Terry L. at tls@... wrote:> > The homogenized process encapsulates Xo into tiny fatty substances> called> > liposomes. This protects Xo from stomach acids and allows it to pass> through> > the intestinal walls into the circulatory system. "> >> > http://www.fetalogos.com/articles.htm> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 3, 2004 Report Share Posted May 3, 2004 Terry, It depends of the manufacturer. Almost all commercial cream I see in the stores is homogenized. Even some of the organic brands such as Horizon. Check the labels. Marieta > Liz-- > Just remembered something..... > They don't Homogenize most Cream, although now they usually Ultra- Pasteurize it. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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