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by crone61 from Hog Valley

Last Post 202 days, 9 hours Ago


The Amazing Health Benefits of Raw Milk

 by Jo Hartley


(NaturalNews) Most people are unaware that clean, raw milk from grass-fed cows was actually used as a medicine in the early part of the 20th century. Raw milk - straight from the cow - has been called the "stem cell" of foods. It was used as medicine to treat, and many times cure, some serious diseases. From the time of Hippocrates until just after World War II, this miracle liquid nourished and healed millions.

Clean raw milk from pastured cows is a completely balanced food. You could live on it exclusively if you had to.

Raw milk ingredients that make it such a powerful food:

Proteins

Raw cow's milk has all 20 of the standard amino acids, which saves our bodies the work of having to convert any into usable form. About 80% of the proteins in milk are caseins (reasonably heat stable but easy to digest). The other 20% fall into the class of whey proteins. These are also easy to digest, but also very heat sensitive.

The immunoglobulins are an extremely complex class of milk proteins also known as antibodies. These provide resistance to many viruses, bacteria and bacterial toxins and may also help reduce the severity of asthma symptoms. Research has shown a significant loss of these important disease fighters when milk is pasteurized.

Carbohydrates

Lactose is the primary carbohydrate in cow's milk. It is made from one molecule each of the simple sugars glucose and galactose. People with lactose intolerance do not make the enzyme lactase and so cannot digest milk sugar. Raw milk has its lactose-digesting Lactobacilli bacteria intact. This may allow people who traditionally have avoided milk to drink raw milk.

Fats

About two thirds of the fat in milk is saturated. Saturated fats play a number of important roles in our bodies. They construct cell membranes and key hormones, they provide energy storage and padding for delicate organs, and they serve as a vehicle for important fat-soluble vitamins.

Conjugated Linoleic Acid (CLA) is abundant in milk from pastured cows. This is a heavily studied, polyunsaturated Omega-6 fatty acid that has promising health benefits. Some of CLA's many possible benefits are (1) it raises metabolic rates; (2) it helps remove abdominal fat; (3) it boosts muscle growth; (4) it reduces resistance to insulin; and (5) it strengthens the immune system and lowers food allergy reactions. Grass-fed raw milk has 3-5 times more CLAs than the milk from feed-lot cows.

Vitamins

Whole raw milk has both water and fat soluble vitamins. No enriching is necessary. It's a complete food. Pasteurized milk must have the destroyed components added back in, especially the fat soluble vitamins A and D.

Minerals

Raw milk contains a broad selection of minerals ranging from calcium and phosphorus to trace elements.

Calcium is abundant in raw milk. Its benefits include a reduction of some cancers, particularly colon; higher bone density in people of all ages; lower risk of osteoporosis in older adults; lowered risk of kidney stones; the formation of strong teeth; as well as a reduction of dental cavities.

An interesting fact about minerals as nutrients is the special balance they require with other minerals to function properly. For example, calcium needs a proper ratio of phosphorus and magnesium to be properly utilized by our bodies. Raw milk is in perfect balance.

Enzymes

The 60 functional enzymes in raw milk have an amazing assortment of jobs to perform. Some of them are native to milk and some come from beneficial bacteria growing in raw milk. When we eat food that contains enzymes devoted to its own digestion, it's less work for our pancreas. Other enzymes, like catalase, lysozyme and lactoperoxidase help to protect milk from unwanted bacterial infection, making it safer for us to drink.

Cholesterol

Milk contains about 3mg of cholesterol per gram. Our bodies make most of the cholesterol we need. This amount fluctuates by what we get from our food. Cholesterol is a repair substance. It is a waxy plant steroid that our body uses as a form of water-proofing and as a building block for key hormones.

Beneficial Bacteria

Raw milk is a living food with amazing self-protective properties. As most food goes bad as it ages, raw milk gets better. From helpful bacterial fermentation, the digestibility of enzymes, vitamins, and minerals all increases.

Today, the demand for raw milk from pasture-fed cattle is growing as word spreads of the tremendous health benefits of drinking raw milk. Those who want information can go to the following websites:

(
www.realmilk.com)

(
www.westonaprice.org)

Sales of raw milk are currently legal in 28 out of 50 US states. Specific information for each state can be found here: (
http://www.realmilk.com/happening.html).


11 Comments |  Add a Comment

Member Comments Total Comments: 11
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PegasusWing read my blog view my photos
Apr 28, 2008 | 2:38 PM

In the past, I might have argued with you.
In CA at Trader Joe's and Whole Foods, even some of the regular stores, there was a choice of cheeses from raw milk.
What a difference!
It was so digestable and didn't block up the plumbing system.

DeborahLakeHelen read my blog view my photos
Apr 28, 2008 | 3:19 PM

I know it makes the best cheeses (all kinds) you'll ever eat in your life! My Grandpa had a dairy farm, and I grew up on that stuff! Now, I'm fortunate enough to have a neighbor who shares her homemade cheese, straight from her cow!
It's ABSOLUTELY the BEST!!!!

gatorchomper view my photos
Apr 28, 2008 | 7:22 PM

we ship a great deal of our milk to china and australia, why dont we make them pay out the @$$ and save our nation some change? once again we cater to the world and get screwed in the end.

crone61 read my blog
Apr 29, 2008 | 2:38 AM

PegasusWing and Deborah, I agree completely. I consumed a lot of raw milk products as a child - milk, cheese, butter and ice cream. The difference is like night and day.

gatorchomper, nice guys finish last, but kindness is its own reward. We're (the USofA) are a bit of a conundrum. We are pretty well off when it comes to feeding everyone, though many go hungry, which burns my biscuits - but that's a whole other blog. We want everyone to have the benefits of "enough" food, as we do, but people are ungrateful and we do get screwed for trying to better the lives of others. It sucks and changes definitely need to be made, but we keep on keepin' on.
None of that came out exactly the way I wanted, but I hope you get my gist. LOL

Thank you all for your blogs.

rexsmom read my blog view my photos
Apr 29, 2008 | 1:46 PM

I've never gotten to try it, but I've wanted to for some time. I think this is just another stupid law that needs repealed. I'd heard that real sour cream is delicious and nothing like the stuff in the tub at Wally World.

didaskalos read my blog
Apr 29, 2008 | 1:49 PM

Interesting post Crone!

Meb452m read my blog
Apr 29, 2008 | 9:04 PM

If it isn't pastuerized you'd have to put it away pretty quickly. Most people wouldn't know how to pull up a stool and turn one of the faucets on ! I thought getting 2% lowfat for the youngin' and myself was still doing good.

crone61 read my blog
Apr 29, 2008 | 10:47 PM

rexsmom, fresh milk is one of the number one reasons I miss Tennessee so much - except for the churning. I get real tired of churning, but I love the rewards. LOL

Hi didaskalos, thanks for the read.

Meb4, I can never keep my pastuerized and my homogenized straight, but we used to take our fresh milk to the comm-what-the-heck-do-you-call-it (half brain dead - need coffee) where they would put it in a machine that would get rid of any possible germs, but wouldn't separate it. We would get a receipt for the gallons we brought and could take that many back home with us -ready for the dreaded churn. LOL Of course we always kept some fresh-fresh at home. ;) Nothing tastes better. Did you know whole milk from the store only has 3% fat? I never saw the big deal in 1%, but I buy 2% anyway. That's as low as I can stand go. Skim milk is nothing but Blue John, which is so totally devoid of nutrients hogs won't even eat it.

Thanks for your blogs. I appreciate the input.

crone61 read my blog
Apr 29, 2008 | 10:49 PM

Sitting here thinking about milk, I remember getting store bought milk with cream on the cap. My dad and I would "fight" over who got to open the new jug. LOL

Meb452m read my blog
Apr 29, 2008 | 11:45 PM

I pulled a bucket or two full over the years. I'd rather walk in pay at the store and walk away. The cows seemed to prefer warm hands, that little trick probably saved me from some grief in my later years, with another far more attractive 2 legged mammal !

crone61 read my blog
Apr 30, 2008 | 1:43 AM

LOL I never minded the milking, and even with warm hands I had a few close calls with hooves. Glad to know your bovine experience helped with your "divine" mammal. LOL

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crone61

I'm a married mother of two with an incomplete college education. I'm an ordained minister and a practitioner of a Nature based belief system. I have an affinity for motorcycles, animals, music, Native American teachings, guns, tattoos, water and healing & preserving Mother Earth. I have an aversion to crime, public profanity, misguided public officials and general stupidity.

Member Since: 3/18/2008