Cynthia wrote: That said, why drink something that isn't particularly good for you, especially when it tastes so much worse than the stuff that is better for you.
Food Nut wrote:Cynthia wrote: That said, why drink something that isn't particularly good for you, especially when it tastes so much worse than the stuff that is better for you.
Because skim milk is heart healthy and less calories!
Cynthia wrote:and coconut milk is lower in calories and higher in calcium.
spinynorman99 wrote:Cynthia wrote:and coconut milk is lower in calories and higher in calcium.
Where'd you get that? Coconut milk in its natural form is much lower in calcium content. Added-calcium processed coconut milk isn't appreciably different than added-calcium skim milk.
KajmacJohnson wrote:I am a 2% milk drinker and have been for over a decade. Since I was a child I have always loved milk and used to drink whole (a LOT of it) so much so that when I was growing up that we would have to get a gallon every couple of days. In my 20s, I started to gain a little weight so I switched over to 2% to keep it under control. 2% is the perfect balance between skim and whole, it doesn't taste nearly as disgusting as skim and it is not as fatty as whole and you still get some semblance of milk. Nowadays if I try whole it has a different taste to me.
Cynthia wrote:
Of course, depending on the whole you're trying, a lot of milk has a different taste from when we were younger. I find that only organic milk really tastes like milk any more -- and even skim milk isn't too horrid if it's organic. There's just something about that mass-produced stuff that kind of misses the boat.
Cynthia wrote:KajmacJohnson wrote:I am a 2% milk drinker and have been for over a decade. Since I was a child I have always loved milk and used to drink whole (a LOT of it) so much so that when I was growing up that we would have to get a gallon every couple of days. In my 20s, I started to gain a little weight so I switched over to 2% to keep it under control. 2% is the perfect balance between skim and whole, it doesn't taste nearly as disgusting as skim and it is not as fatty as whole and you still get some semblance of milk. Nowadays if I try whole it has a different taste to me.
Of course, depending on the whole you're trying, a lot of milk has a different taste from when we were younger. I find that only organic milk really tastes like milk any more -- and even skim milk isn't too horrid if it's organic. There's just something about that mass-produced stuff that kind of misses the boat.
Yeah, their website lists "Skim has .1%"NFriday wrote:Hi- I think that milk producers can put a small amount of cream in their milk and still call it fat free. It can be 1/4 of 1% and still be labeled fat free. I know it is crazy.
NFriday wrote:Hi- I think that milk producers can put a small amount of cream in their milk and still call it fat free. It can be 1/4 of 1% and still be labeled fat free. I know it is crazy.
stevez wrote:Cynthia wrote:KajmacJohnson wrote:I am a 2% milk drinker and have been for over a decade. Since I was a child I have always loved milk and used to drink whole (a LOT of it) so much so that when I was growing up that we would have to get a gallon every couple of days. In my 20s, I started to gain a little weight so I switched over to 2% to keep it under control. 2% is the perfect balance between skim and whole, it doesn't taste nearly as disgusting as skim and it is not as fatty as whole and you still get some semblance of milk. Nowadays if I try whole it has a different taste to me.
Of course, depending on the whole you're trying, a lot of milk has a different taste from when we were younger. I find that only organic milk really tastes like milk any more -- and even skim milk isn't too horrid if it's organic. There's just something about that mass-produced stuff that kind of misses the boat.
Based on my own personal survey, I think the off taste of a lot of milk these days has more to do with its packaging than the actual milk itself. Milk sold in glass tastes like milk. Milk sold in plastic packaging tastes like plastic. This is caused by plastic leaching into the milk. There is actually some scientific evidence that this is a real phenomenon, but I noticed it for years before the scientists came up with this theory.
NFriday wrote:Hi- Nature's Promise milk comes in cartons, and is not organic, but is grass fed, and BGH free, and is from small farms in Indiana. It tastes much better than conventional milk in plastic bottles.
Hi- I have done a taste test with Oberweis and conventional milk, and I can definitely tell the difference. There probably is not a lot of difference in taste between Dean's and Aldi's milk though.