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Re: Kefir changes okay?

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> I've finished reading the info at Dom's kefir website, and am just

> about ready to get going

> with kefir. I was talking to a lady near me who sells good raw goat

> milk, and she was

> saying that if I use my kefir grains in goat milk, and THEN try to use

> 'em later on in cow

> milk that it will KILL my kefir grains. Is this true?

Not in my experience.

Lynn S.

------

Lynn Siprelle * web developer, writer, mama, fiber junky

http://www.siprelle.com * http://www.thenewhomemaker.com

http://www.democracyfororegon.com * http://www.knitting911.net

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reborn1000 <reborn1000@...> wrote:

was talking to a lady near me who sells good raw goat

> milk, and she was

> saying that if I use my kefir grains in goat milk, and THEN try to

> use 'em later on in cow

> milk that it will KILL my kefir grains. Is this true?

I've done this many many times and the grains are fine and don't seem to

change (though the kefir is different).

It might reassure you to know that kefir grains are pretty hardy.

Though I've read here of people killing their grains accidently, I've

only managed to do this once (by leaving them in the fridge for months)

and I reckon that probably, if I could have been bothered, they would

have revived.

Helen

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['] I was talking to a lady near me who sells good raw goat

milk, and she was

saying that if I use my kefir grains in goat milk, and THEN try to use

'em later on in cow

milk that it will KILL my kefir grains. Is this true? I know that

Dom said not to use milk

grains in making " non milk " kefir, but I didn't think that there would

be a problem going

from a goat milk to a cow milk. Anyone know if what my goat milk lady

said is true?

[MAP] Hi ', what your goat milk lady said is absolute nonsense.

The combined experiences of hundreds of people provide hundreds and

hundreds of years of counterexamples to that bizarre claim lacking any

scientific motivation whatsoever. The differences between milks from

different animals are completely irrelevant to kefir.

Mike

SE Pennsylvania

The best way to predict the future is to invent it. --Alan Kay

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I'm going to have to respecfully disagree with Mr. . My kefir grains, for

whatever reason, die off every time I try to put them in raw goat milk. Goat

milk which I have gotten from very pure sources, and two different farms with

two diffeerent breed of goats. If I put the grains back into raw cow milk, they

come back with a vengeance.

Rebekah

Re: Kefir changes okay?

['] I was talking to a lady near me who sells good raw goat

milk, and she was

saying that if I use my kefir grains in goat milk, and THEN try to use

'em later on in cow

milk that it will KILL my kefir grains. Is this true? I know that

Dom said not to use milk

grains in making " non milk " kefir, but I didn't think that there would

be a problem going

from a goat milk to a cow milk. Anyone know if what my goat milk lady

said is true?

[MAP] Hi ', what your goat milk lady said is absolute nonsense.

The combined experiences of hundreds of people provide hundreds and

hundreds of years of counterexamples to that bizarre claim lacking any

scientific motivation whatsoever. The differences between milks from

different animals are completely irrelevant to kefir.

Mike

SE Pennsylvania

The best way to predict the future is to invent it. --Alan Kay

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Rebekah,

You say your milk grains die when you put them in your locally(?)

obtained goat milk? Have you checked to see what those farms

are putting ON their goats and/or their fields, as well as checking

to see if the goats get antibiotics or any other chemicals injected

or fed to them?

Darrell

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Yes to all of that. No antibiotics, no steroids, no growth hormones, etc. They

graze on grassy fields, rotated every 3 or so days, little to no supplemental

feed. Fields are pretty wild, with some rare oversowing of grasses done

periodically. Very rural areas, no close by cross-contamination from

non-organic/non-biodynamic farms.

Rebekah

Re: Re: Kefir changes okay?

Rebekah,

You say your milk grains die when you put them in your locally(?)

obtained goat milk? Have you checked to see what those farms

are putting ON their goats and/or their fields, as well as checking

to see if the goats get antibiotics or any other chemicals injected

or fed to them?

Darrell

<HTML><!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC " -//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN "

" http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd " ><BODY><FONT

FACE= " monospace " SIZE= " 3 " >

<B>IMPORTANT ADDRESSES</B>

<UL>

<LI><B><A

HREF= " / " >NATIVE

NUTRITION</A></B> online</LI>

<LI><B><A HREF= " http://onibasu.com/ " >SEARCH</A></B> the entire message

archive with Onibasu</LI>

</UL></FONT>

<PRE><FONT FACE= " monospace " SIZE= " 3 " ><B><A

HREF= " mailto: -owner " >LIST OWNER:</A></B>

Idol

<B>MODERATORS:</B> Heidi Schuppenhauer

Wanita Sears

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At 10:44 AM 2/2/05 -0500, you wrote:

>

>Yes to all of that. No antibiotics, no steroids, no growth hormones, etc.

They graze on grassy fields, rotated every 3 or so days, little to no

supplemental feed. Fields are pretty wild, with some rare oversowing of

grasses done periodically. Very rural areas, no close by

cross-contamination from non-organic/non-biodynamic farms.

>

>Rebekah

So what you're saying, then, is that your kefir grains are very picky

eaters? Have they been talking to that picky 6-year old?

:-D

MFJ

Once, poets were magicians. Poets were strong, stronger than warriors or

kings - stronger than old hapless gods. And they will be strong once

again. ~Greg Bear

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No ... just to my own picky 2, 5 and 6 year olds !

Rebekah

So what you're saying, then, is that your kefir grains are very picky

eaters? Have they been talking to that picky 6-year old?

:-D

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['] I was talking to a lady near me who sells good raw goat

milk, and she was saying that if I use my kefir grains in goat milk,

and THEN try to use

'em later on in cow milk that it will KILL my kefir grains. Is this

true? I know that

Dom said not to use milk grains in making " non milk " kefir, but I

didn't think that there would be a problem going from a goat milk to a

cow milk. Anyone know if what my goat milk lady said is true?

[MAP] Hi ', what your goat milk lady said is absolute nonsense.

The combined experiences of hundreds of people provide hundreds and

hundreds of years of counterexamples to that bizarre claim lacking any

scientific motivation whatsoever. The differences between milks from

different animals are completely irrelevant to kefir.

[Rebekah] I'm going to have to respecfully disagree with Mr. .

My kefir grains, for whatever reason, die off every time I try to put

them in raw goat milk. Goat milk which I have gotten from very pure

sources, and two different farms with two diffeerent breed of goats.

If I put the grains back into raw cow milk, they come back with a

vengeance.

[MAP] It's an indisputable and trivial scientific fact that kefir

grains work equally well in any milk, unless there's some species'

milk that doesn't contain lactose! Just on these email groups alone

you can find dozens, if not hundreds, of people who have successfully

used goat and cow milk interchangeably, prominently including Dom. I

have a feeling the disagreement comes from different concepts of kefir

grain condition based on inference from sensory data about the kefir

itself, but could you clarify what you mean by " die off " ? How were

you able to determine this? Are you referring to the size of the

grains? If so, how long did you test the goat milks? Are you referring

to the consistency of the kefir? I'm sure we can get to the bottom of

this experience.

Mike

SE Pennsylvania

The best way to predict the future is to invent it. --Alan Kay

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[Rebekah] I'm going to have to respecfully disagree with Mr. .

My kefir grains, for whatever reason, die off every time I try to put

them in raw goat milk. Goat milk which I have gotten from very pure

sources, and two different farms with two diffeerent breed of goats.

If I put the grains back into raw cow milk, they come back with a

vengeance.

[MAP] It's an indisputable and trivial scientific fact that kefir

grains work equally well in any milk, unless there's some species'

milk that doesn't contain lactose! Just on these email groups alone

you can find dozens, if not hundreds, of people who have successfully

used goat and cow milk interchangeably, prominently including Dom. I

have a feeling the disagreement comes from different concepts of kefir

grain condition based on inference from sensory data about the kefir

itself, but could you clarify what you mean by " die off " ? How were

you able to determine this? Are you referring to the size of the

grains? If so, how long did you test the goat milks? Are you referring

to the consistency of the kefir? I'm sure we can get to the bottom of

this experience.

Mike

SE Pennsylvania

[Rebekah]

What I'm calling die-off would be that the grains gradually get smaller in

size, with each batch of kefir. In time, they seem to " disappear " all together.

(This would take about 7-10 batches, which I usually leave out for 24 hours per

batch.) By this time, the milk doesn't seem to change to the thickness and tart

flavor I associate with kefir. The milk would just separate into curds and

whey, like when I culture milk for cream cheese/whey, etc. I admit I'm new at

the kefir thing, but I assumed that when the grains were invisible to the naked

eye, and the kefir flavor wasn't there, that the grains were dead. However,

when these same grains are placed in raw cow milk, they produce thick, tart

kefir, and mass-produce themselves over and again, and are easy to see and

filter out, to make more kefir.

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Rebekah wrote:

>I'm going to have to respecfully disagree with Mr. . My kefir grains,

for whatever reason, die off every time I try to put them in raw goat milk.

Goat milk which I have gotten from very pure sources, and two different farms

with two diffeerent breed of goats. If I put the grains back into raw cow milk,

they come back with a vengeance.

Here's a thought for you. The lady who I bought goat milk from was discussing

containers with me one day. She said she could either use large plastic Coke

containers or bleach bottles!!!!! I respectfully declined the bleach bottles.

Not that I'm suggesting you bought your goat milk in bleach bottles, but could

it be that the goat people are using bleach somewhere in their operation that is

affecting the milk? I've kefired in raw cow milk, raw goat milk and all sorts

of store-bought milk, and my grains are still thriving :-)

and the K9's

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I suppose that is possible; I didn't ask them specifically what/if they use to

clean their containers. I know both goat farms use new, unused plastic

containers, either half or full gallon size. Maybe I'll ask the next time I

order.

Rebekah

Re: Kefir changes okay?

Rebekah wrote:

>I'm going to have to respecfully disagree with Mr. . My kefir grains,

for whatever reason, die off every time I try to put them in raw goat milk.

Goat milk which I have gotten from very pure sources, and two different farms

with two diffeerent breed of goats. If I put the grains back into raw cow milk,

they come back with a vengeance.

Here's a thought for you. The lady who I bought goat milk from was

discussing containers with me one day. She said she could either use large

plastic Coke containers or bleach bottles!!!!! I respectfully declined the

bleach bottles. Not that I'm suggesting you bought your goat milk in bleach

bottles, but could it be that the goat people are using bleach somewhere in

their operation that is affecting the milk? I've kefired in raw cow milk, raw

goat milk and all sorts of store-bought milk, and my grains are still thriving

:-)

and the K9's

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Rebekah Dowd wrote:

> I suppose that is possible; I didn't ask them specifically what/if they

> use to clean their containers. I know both goat farms use new, unused

> plastic containers, either half or full gallon size. Maybe I'll ask the

> next time I order.

>

> Rebekah

I should add that I fermented some goat milk from a neighbor, who was

milking the goat for a foal and was NOT using any soap, bleach etc.

Nevertheless, the kefir came out far *different* than it does for cow

milk. I got some raw cow milk, and THAT comes out different than it does

for pasteurized grocery store milk. Mind you, I can't drink milk myself,

but I use the kefir for family members and chickens, and the grains for

kefir beer.

The goat milk would NOT get thick, though the kefir smelled ok. The raw

cow milk kefir gets thick, but it smells very strong. I believe that

either is fine for people, but ... bacteria are strange little creatures

and they react differently to different media.

My kefir grains survive fine an ANY milk, except non-organic commercial

milk, in which media they simply stop growing. Organic ulta-pasteurized

they love (no competition, methinks!).

-- Heidi Jean

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The raw goat milk I have kefired ends up the consistency of gravy.

It had to be kefired for a very long time, in my case, if I wanted the

whey to separate. It must have something to do with the solids in

goat milk being much smaller particles or " naturally homogenized "

as many are fond of saying.

Darrell

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