Guest guest Posted April 1, 2005 Report Share Posted April 1, 2005 , I am sorry you are having these health problems with your baby. I wish I had some answers, but I don't. My thoughts and prayers are with you and your family today. Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 1, 2005 Report Share Posted April 1, 2005 I am thinking when i get my kefir grains again I will give her kefir as it should take at least some of the lactose out of normal milk (then I can at least use normal pasturized milk) but I am not sure how she respond to the taste, she does not like sour at all. What would be the best sweetener to use concidering she drinks about a liter a day and she is a year old?! ####### I'd go with maple syrup - I've used tiny bits with my 8 month old when I make kefir cheese out of kefir (just strain the whey out until it's the consistency of cottage/ricotta cheese). Fortunately, he likes sour stuff okay. I'm so sorry you're having such problems !!! My baby is 8 months old and still nursing. I was so adamant about it I didn't introduce the first bottle till he was 5 months old and I was going back to work in 3 days !! It did stress him out a bit but he took the bottle with no problems. He still nurses mornings/evenings and on weekend, including every night at least twice. Funny: I haven't slept through the night in over 6 months and I feel great !! My thoughts are with you. I hope everything will get back to " normal " soon. Magda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 1, 2005 Report Share Posted April 1, 2005 --- Siemens <amandasiemens@...> wrote: > So UHT pasturized is the same as ultra pasturized? Yes, it is. See Mother 's article in the current issue of WT. UHT is just the fancy name that Parmalat created for ultr-pasteurised milk. I think it means " Ultra High Temperature " . BTW, there is a movement afoot in the US among the large-scale dairy industry to mandate *all* milk to be UHT. If that succeeds (or rather, *when* that succeeds), you won't find regular pasteurised milk in grocery stores at all. The primary motive behind that is to throw all the small scale farmers and dairies out of business, plus total disregard for the hygience and care of the dairy cows (since all milk will the UHT treated anyway). I hope that never happens here in Canada (at least not in my lifetime) > we will either be > buying a farm or at least 10 or so acres of land, then we will have > grass fed raw milk, beef, and pastured poultry and can raise most of > our produce organically ourselves. Will you be selling any of that? If so, count me as one of the first customers -Pratick __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 1, 2005 Report Share Posted April 1, 2005 Thanks for the advice! Since she just took yogurt without sweetening for the first time I will try it with straite kefir and see if she wont drink it without any sweetening too!! I'd go with maple syrup - I've used tiny bits with my 8 month > old when I make kefir cheese out of kefir (just strain the whey out > until it's the consistency of cottage/ricotta cheese). Fortunately, he > likes sour stuff okay. > I'm so sorry you're having such problems !!! My baby is 8 months old > and still nursing. I was so adamant about it I didn't introduce the > first bottle till he was 5 months old and I was going back to work in 3 > days !! It did stress him out a bit but he took the bottle with no > problems. He still nurses mornings/evenings and on weekend, including > every night at least twice. Funny: I haven't slept through the night in > over 6 months and I feel great !! > My thoughts are with you. I hope everything will get back to " normal " > soon. > Magda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 1, 2005 Report Share Posted April 1, 2005 What! No way!!!! Don't you know it's illegal!?! ::looks to the left then to the right:: Psst. You. yeah you. c'mere. Wanna buy some ::looks around again:: REAL milk? ::ominous music:: tee hee. I might dauble in the black market a bit ;-) > > Will you be selling any of that? > If so, count me as one of the first customers > > -Pratick Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 1, 2005 Report Share Posted April 1, 2005 Practick wrote: > --- Siemens <amandasiemens@...> wrote: > > So UHT pasturized is the same as ultra pasturized? > > Yes, it is. > See Mother 's article in the current issue of WT. > UHT is just the fancy name that Parmalat created for ultr-pasteurised milk. > I think it means " Ultra High Temperature " . According to my research, UHT and ultra-pasteurization have similarities, but are " not " the same. UHT milk is processed longer, and is essentially " sterilized " . That is what you see on the grocery store shelf (unrefrigerated)in aseptic packaging . Ultra-pasteurization does extend the shelf life, but still need refrigeration. In Canada, commercial whipping cream is routinely ultra-pasteurized. This is from the National Dairy Council <http://www.nationaldairycouncil.org/NationalDairyCouncil/Nutrition/Products/mil\ kPage5.htm> " Ultrapasteurization. This is the process of heating fluid dairy products at or above 280 & deg;F for at least 2 seconds to destroy all pathogenic organisms. Ultrapasteurized products are packaged in an aseptic atmosphere in presterilized containers and refrigerated. These milk products have an extended shelf life (14 to 28 days at refrigerated temperatures), with little effect on their nutritive value. Ultrahigh Temperature. Ultrahigh temperature (UHT) milk products are heated to 275 to 302 & deg;F for 4 to 15 seconds. These products are packaged aseptically in specially designed multilayer containers. The heat treatment and packaging allow these milk products to be stored at room temperature for extended periods of time. Ultrahigh temperature processing may cause some loss of folate, vitamin C (which is already low in milk), vitamin B12 , and thiamin. " ~~ Jocelyne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 2, 2005 Report Share Posted April 2, 2005 I also contains a lot more than cream!!! I can't wait to get my source of nice (pasturized but organic and not full of additives) whipping cream from the health store:-) or would that be ultra pasturized too? In Canada, commercial whipping > cream is routinely ultra-pasteurized. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 2, 2005 Report Share Posted April 2, 2005 wrote: > I also contains a lot more than cream!!! I can't wait to get my source > of nice (pasturized but organic and not full of additives) whipping > cream from the health store:-) or would that be ultra pasturized too? > The only brand I can get locally is Organic Meadow. It is pasteurized, but not ultra-pasteurized. I have also found that it keeps longer than the best-before date indicates. ~` Jocelyne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2005 Report Share Posted April 3, 2005 > -----Original Message----- > From: Siemens [mailto:amandasiemens@...] > > Oh it's so pathetic!!!!! How can the food industry > sleep at night when it makes REAL food so hard to come by and > so EXPENSIVE that you have to be rich to afford it?! What > about people like me who is downright POOR but get soooooo > sick on " normal " food?! It's wrong wrong WRONG!!! Don't blame the food industries--blame your fellow shoppers. When shoppers choose on the basis of price, without respect to quality, companies must compete on the basis of price, without respect to quality. Under such conditions, they must, if they want to stay in business, sacrifice quality to cut costs. Most people are not willing to pay more for pasteurized milk than for ultrapasteurized milk (in fact, some prefer the latter because of its long shelf life), so that's what companies make. Don't like it? You should go to the root of the problem and educate other consumers, rather than railing vainly against the food industries. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2005 Report Share Posted April 3, 2005 Quoting jag14 <jag14@...>: > wrote: > > I also contains a lot more than cream!!! I can't wait to get my source > > of nice (pasturized but organic and not full of additives) whipping > > cream from the health store:-) or would that be ultra pasturized too? > > The only brand I can get locally is Organic Meadow. It is pasteurized, > but > not ultra-pasteurized. I have also found that it keeps longer than the > best-before date indicates. In the United States, at least, the date on dairy products is usually the sell-by date. Stores will generally stop selling after this date, but it should still be good for several days afterwards. -- Berg bberg@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2005 Report Share Posted April 3, 2005 - >Don't blame the food industries--blame your fellow shoppers. When shoppers >choose on the basis of price, without respect to quality, companies must >compete on the basis of price, without respect to quality. Under such >conditions, they must, if they want to stay in business, sacrifice quality >to cut costs. Most people are not willing to pay more for pasteurized milk >than for ultrapasteurized milk (in fact, some prefer the latter because of >its long shelf life), so that's what companies make. Don't like it? You >should go to the root of the problem and educate other consumers, rather >than railing vainly against the food industries. And of course the food industries had no part in the current state of affairs, including the level of eduction of current consumers. That's right. None. Zip. Silly of us to think otherwise. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2005 Report Share Posted April 3, 2005 > -----Original Message----- > From: Idol [mailto:Idol@...] > - > >Don't blame the food industries--blame your fellow shoppers. When > >shoppers choose on the basis of price, without respect to quality, > >companies must compete on the basis of price, without respect to > >quality. Under such conditions, they must, if they want to stay in > >business, sacrifice quality to cut costs. Most people are > not willing > >to pay more for pasteurized milk than for ultrapasteurized milk (in > >fact, some prefer the latter because of its long shelf > life), so that's > >what companies make. Don't like it? You should go to the root of the > >problem and educate other consumers, rather than railing > vainly against the food industries. > > And of course the food industries had no part in the current > state of affairs, including the level of eduction of current > consumers. That's right. None. Zip. Silly of us to think > otherwise. No doubt " they " (I put " they " in quotes because many of " them " are dead or no longer affiliated with the food industries) did, as did so-called " consumer advocates " like the CSPI and politicians afflicted with the " do something " disease. Government has for decades controlled most of the nutritional education in this country, and powerful governments tend to be influenced by pressure groups which have a financial or ideological stake in their decisions. But the fact remains that consumer choice rules in a free society. No one would make UHT milk if people weren't willing to buy it, and companies can't profitably produce raw or unhomogenized milk and sell it at low prices because there isn't enough demand for the vast quantities that would be required to drive down costs via economies of scale. The food industries don't care what you or I think of them--they care what people buy. If you want cheap, high-quality food on the shelves of every grocery store, the only way to get it is to convince millions of others to buy it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 5, 2005 Report Share Posted April 5, 2005 - >But the fact remains that consumer choice rules in a free society. No one >would make UHT milk if people weren't willing to buy it, and companies can't >profitably produce raw or unhomogenized milk and sell it at low prices >because there isn't enough demand for the vast quantities that would be >required to drive down costs via economies of scale. The food industries >don't care what you or I think of them--they care what people buy. If you >want cheap, high-quality food on the shelves of every grocery store, the >only way to get it is to convince millions of others to buy it. Fascinating how in your worldview, when there are multiple parties responsible for a given state of affairs, only the consumer gets the blame. One thing I'd like to point out is that raw milk cannot by definition achieve the economies of scale that pasteurized and ultrapasteurized dairy can. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 5, 2005 Report Share Posted April 5, 2005 --- Idol <Idol@...> wrote: > Fascinating how in your worldview, when there are multiple parties > responsible for a given state of affairs, only the consumer gets the blame. > > One thing I'd like to point out is that raw milk cannot by definition > achieve the economies of scale that pasteurized and ultrapasteurized dairy can. Correct, and for this reason, I believe that raw milk can exist only in the small scale, personalised farming scenario or as pockets in a large, capitalist idustrialist scenario (like it does currently) I don't think there is a way for raw milk (or grass-fed meat for that matter) to exist as a viable product in a capitalist industralised society. There are only two types of societies where it can exist on a large scale - in a feudal society (mideaval times and developing countries) or in an advanced communist society with communal agriculture and communal production (which we are yet to see till date - does not include the totalitarian societies of Stalinist USSR or Maoist China). But we are drifting OT very fast here..... -Pratick __________________________________ Messenger Show us what our next emoticon should look like. Join the fun. http://www.advision.webevents./emoticontest Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.