Cogito wrote:has anyone tried the no-growth-hormone milk available from Oberweis, and other outlets? What do you think of it? Notice any difference in taste?
JoelF wrote:I could probably deal with skim for breakfast cereal, Oreo dunking, or even a cold slug of it after a hot day outside... but MrsF insists on 2%'s superior flavor.
Now, I thought some dairy was making a Skim-Plus or some such trademark, with additional milk solids (proteins and sugars but not fats, I'm assuming) added to it. It's obviously going to carry a premium price, but I'd like to know what it tastes like versus Skim and 2%.
Cogito wrote:Considering the very small difference in milkfat content, I really can't understand why people even bother.
Cathy2 wrote:About 5 years ago or so, the President of Oberweis Dairy was the guest lecturer at Culinary Historians. Pre-WW2 milk production was done in batches. The advent of continuous flow production was a technological advance brought on by the demands of the war effort. Initially it was for airplane fuel but the concept and ideas trickled down to all areas of production, including milk.
Pre-WW2 separating cream from milk was done in a centrifuge using cold milk. Post WW2, they found by heating milk to 120 degrees the cream separated from the milk more efficiently and completely. Oberweis Dairy, at least several years ago, continues to use the cold method of separation allowing their skim milk to seem richer and not the blueish color of standard skim milk.
Now I am thinking out loud, is skim milk really a more genuine buttermilk product than cultured buttermilk? It's what's left after the cream/fat has been removed and it certainly is a thinnish liquid.
Cathy2 wrote:HI,
I don't like skim milk. I much prefer whole milk, though I can live with 2%. Lately the dietary screws have been tightened in my household to skim milk. I don't drink it. I don't cook with it. I now drink a lot less milk than I used to, which I don't think is an improvement.
I've found that the organic milks I've tried have much better flavor than the non-organic alternatives. They look better, too. Grocery-store brand skimmed milk is kind of bluish, but organic skimmed milk is actually white and looks like milk, rather than looking like milk and water. Even if there were no health or environmental issues, I'd pick organic milk for the taste.
the organic does taste better...
Cogito wrote:BTW, isn't "skimmed milk" the correct terminology?
Federal law requires a minimum pasteurization temperature of 163°F. We pasteurize at 173°F, but most dairies pasteurize at 185°F and above. They do this to get the required "code date" length on their products. This higher temperature results in a "cooked" flavor of milk.
Betsy wrote:Actually, according to Oberweis, there's a little wiggle room:Federal law requires a minimum pasteurization temperature of 163°F. We pasteurize at 173°F, but most dairies pasteurize at 185°F and above. They do this to get the required "code date" length on their products. This higher temperature results in a "cooked" flavor of milk.