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Re: Not Use To Milk

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I have a 9 and 10 year old. For years they have been extremely allergic to

dairy. Their allergies were so bad they couldn't eat birthday cake at a

party or treats at school. I read labels looking for everything that

remotely resembled a milk product. They couldn't have cookies or crackers if

they said " whey " in the ingredient list. One thing off their diet and we

could be guaranteed of having very sick kids all night long. In addition,

my sons nose constantly dripped. He had a hard time running and keeping up

with other kids he had so much drainage running down his throat. Dairy

wasn't the only thing they were allergic to. They reacted to msg in all

forms including hydrolyzed soy protein, and autolyzed yeast, as well as

citrus, peanuts, cashews, wheat, corn, soy, the list goes on...Then of course

there were all the environmental allergies as well...I had two very sick

kids.

About a year ago I stumbled across the book " Nourishing Traditions " by Sally

Fallon. She advocates the use of raw milk or cultured milk products only as

well as a number of other things (soaking grains overnight in fermented dairy

products, fermenting vegies, presoaking and drying nuts, sprouting grains,

etc). Suddenly it clicked... We realized they weren't allergic to dairy,

they were allergic to pasteurized homogenized dairy. If the dairy was raw or

fermented as in kefir they could have it. At first to just drink the dairy

was too much for them. I started by soaking my grains for pancakes and

waffles in kefir. They had no problems with this. Then we added raw milk

cheeses. No problems once again. It's a year later and I have been

following the principles of the book " Nourishing Traditions " very closely and

to our surprise our kids allergies have suddenly disappeared. They can now

spend the night at a friends house and eat what they serve for dinner and not

get sick. They can have treats at school and not get sick. We still are

very careful what we fix at home but they are getting healthier and healthier

all the time. They have been tested several times during this year process

and each time they get more foods added to their diets and each time the

reaction to those they are allergic to gets less and less.

You may want to start as we did...just one step at a time. As you add more

good bugs to their system you too may find that new foods become available to

them.

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I just sent an e-mail thinking it came from a milk website, not the native

nutrition one so you are already using the book. I'm actively looking for

raw milk so I've joined several other message boards in search of it. Sorry

for the confusion.

Since you're using the book, start slowly as we did...try out the pancake

recipe for starters, soaking your grains in the kefir. And use the raw milk

cheese. Then start making saurkraut. That's a great one for getting lots of

good bugs in your kids systems. Start with one or two tablespoons at a time.

Pretty soon they will be coming home and requesting a bowl after school!

Milk may not be where you start, there may be other foods that work best for

you in the beginning.

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brenda, what other boards are you on that may lead you to raw

milk.....(especially organic) i am searching too.

*choose the road less travelled*

amanda

cop wife & mimmy2angels jack 01/20/98 obhosp

daphne 12/02/00 uc

homeRebirth

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Thanks a bunch for your advice. It makes sense and I'll try it out.

Also please let me in on the raw milk too. I can get it here but it is

expensive at the store. If I lived near the Claravale farm in Northern

California I could get it for about $1.59 a quart.

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One board I joined is Kefir_making . It's a very active board

with lots of daily messages. I have been hoping that with all the people out

there making kefir, some of them have got to be using raw milk. So far, no

luck in my area. I have found two places that are community farms that sell

the milk. They sell it at about $5 / gallon. But they have very long

waiting lists, to the point of not taking any more names. I'm been checking

out e-mail and phone listings of organic farmers in our state , local

processing plants in search of their suppliers, calling food co-ops,

contacting butchers, and putting notes up on health food stores and feed

supply stores bulletin boards. I will start checking the farmer's markets

this spring to see if anyone there has a dairy cow or two and extra milk. So

far I haven't had any luck in Oregon. Eventually, with enough phone calls,

just through the law of numbers, eventually those no's will lead to a yes.

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If you can get it, at whatever price, thank them profusely every time you

pick up your milk! I would love to just find a source!!! My husband isn't

real excited about moving to a farm!

I talked with another friend that had similar experiences to your boys

regarding the milk. She took the raw milk and started fermenting/clabbering

it. Once she started that, she didn't have any problems with it. You could

try kefir, fil mjolk, and viili all of which are available from GEM cultures

under the sources section of the book. She said she had the best luck with

the room temperature cultures rather than the yogurt, and buttermilk

(available at www.cheesemaking.com) as you have to heat the milk first. I

suppose by heating it you're killing some of the enzymes that your body would

need.

Good luck!

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  • 2 weeks later...

Also, I've heard that a teaspoon of raw honey mixed in with the milk helps with tolerance.

Dana

In a message dated 2/19/2001 4:35:27 AM Pacific Standard Time, ms4runr@... writes:

I notice the raw milk does cause a little gas discomfort. I am planning on learning how to ferment it with keifer. I love buttermilk and maybe it will be similar. I'm only drinking it for the nutrition right now, but I do think it being fermented to a degree would be much better on the system.

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I notice the raw milk does cause a little gas discomfort. I am

planning on learning how to ferment it with keifer. I love buttermilk

and maybe it will be similar. I'm only drinking it for the nutrition

right now, but I do think it being fermented to a degree would be

much better on the system.

> If you can get it, at whatever price, thank them profusely every

time you

> pick up your milk! I would love to just find a source!!! My

husband isn't

> real excited about moving to a farm!

>

> I talked with another friend that had similar experiences to your

boys

> regarding the milk. She took the raw milk and started

fermenting/clabbering

> it. Once she started that, she didn't have any problems with it.

You could

> try kefir, fil mjolk, and viili all of which are available from GEM

cultures

> under the sources section of the book. She said she had the best

luck with

> the room temperature cultures rather than the yogurt, and

buttermilk

> (available at www.cheesemaking.com) as you have to heat the milk

first. I

> suppose by heating it you're killing some of the enzymes that your

body would

> need.

>

> Good luck!

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