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gavindean90 | 1 year ago

Yes, but because of the way that the milk industry is shaped in the US it’s exceedingly hard to get and many people are afraid of it.

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why_only_15|1 year ago

What is this typically called? Are you referring to raw milk? I think this is a different thing.

MillironX|1 year ago

Raw milk is milk that has not undergone pasteurization or homogenization. Depending on the state (in the US), raw milk may be illegal to sell, but there are ways to work around that for the determined.

Creamline milk is milk that was pasteurized, but not homogenized, so the cream floats to the top. It doesn't store well long-term in grocery stores, but can often be found at farm-to-table stores and other specialty boutiques.

Note that the U.S. (including my parents growing up before we got milk cows) has an obsession with "reduced fat" milk. Switching from 2% milk to whole milk makes a world of difference for taste, even without going cream line.

My favorite milk was raw from our Jerseys (they have average ~5% fat compared to national average of 4% [1]), but I've had raw Jersey milk, mixed-breed creamline milk and store-bought whole milk depending on what's available, and they all taste better than 2%.

[1]: https://queries.uscdcb.com/publish/dhi/current/hax.html

Retric|1 year ago

Raw milk isn’t inherently more flavorful than pasteurized. It’s by necessity consumed sooner which enhances the flavor profile vs milk that’s spent weeks going through the typical logistics chain before you buy it. But, the safety concerns are significant and you could also get pasteurized milk that isn’t particularly old.

gr3ml1n|1 year ago

You're conflating some sort of heritage cow breed with raw milk. It's being intentionally misleading.

gavindean90|1 year ago

I was because I can’t imagine somehow finding a heritage cow breed pasteurization group here in the US.