Good vid. Milk safety is not about “either/or”. It is about “AND”. Raw milk is far superior AND things like Listeria, TB etc are nothing to brush off. I had a friend that got TB from raw milk, became an RN an spent her life researching this topic. So it boils down to the health of the cow (you better believe testing is important) and your trust the cow owner handles everything in a sanitary manner if you don’t own it yourself. You were dispensed a brain for a reason. Information is power.
When did this case of TB happen. That is extremely rare, even rarer among ruminants. I do not think they even test for TB in barnyard animals anymore, which is how rare it has become. It was not rare in the 20th Century. I think it was still around in the 1950s.
It looks like bovine tuberculosis was a factor in the regulation of pasteurization in the late 1800's. Now they can test the herd for the disease and it's a relatively small problem. But when all milk was delivered in uncooled horse carts, there were a lot more problems with pathogens.
TB used to be a very serious problem before effective treatment was available. In the 1800's, TB killed one out of every seven people living in the United States and Europe.
Also Salmonella, Campylobacter jejuni Salmonella species E. coli Listeria monocytogenes Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mycobacterium bovis Brucella species Coxiella Burnetii Yersinia enterocolitica Pretty much all these bacteria cause major health concerns for young children, infants and the elderly as well as the immune compromised. Since 1987 there have been 269 hospitalizations, 3 deaths, 6 still births and 2 miscarriages from milk born pathogens. These are reported cases, the sort of people to drink raw milk aren't the sort of people to seek medical aid. There are literally no health benefits rom drinking raw milk that you don't get from drinking pasteurized milk. Absolutely no scientific evidence in the least. It's one of these things where people are confusing feelings with facts.
Disagree! I have realized that testing is just another form of control! Less health issues with raw milk . We have been so brainwashed in the land of big pharma, FDA, USDA. If you haven't learned anything in the last 3 years about the fact that they don't give a hoot about our health, you're not paying attention.. Educate yourselves. Experience always outways, hearsay.
This is good to know. We do raw milk and my fiance has said this is still a concern. I haven't seen anything about it, but raw milk has helped my son a lot.
Milk was a daily drink in our home on the farm. Our family of ten never had any problems. I help my granddaughter make cheeses, butter, etc. from their beautiful cow😊
Jess you have no idea how much I appreciate this. I have psoriasis and arthritis. I have used raw products on and off over the years. I know now, I feel better drinking raw products by 60% without medicine. Bless you my friend. You can come visit our Longhorns and garden anytime
I was a child in the 50's and 60's, and we did not live on a farm. But a favorite childhood memory of mine, was the regular trips with my mom to the local farmer for milk. While my mom was getting the milk, my sisters and I would go visit the cows. My mom only bought raw milk, and skimmed the cream to used for whipping, and baking. I wish that was a memory I could have made for my kids.
We live near a dairy that's been providing raw milk to the area for almost 95 years, they offer pasteurized also (non homogenized) but the raw is most popular. We've been buying a few gallons a week for the last year and a half, love it. Also, i used to buy raw goats milk in oregon, it was like $15 for a half gallon, I'm getting this raw cows milk for $6 a gallon here in Oklahoma!
I used to be a part of a kind of “share”. I milked the cow once each week and kept all her milk. I paid a monthly fee of $25 to “help care” for the cow by relieving her of her milk 🤪. I live in a state where raw milk can only be sold for “pet consumption“. I miss those days and, especially, I miss her awesome yellow butter! Thanks for spreading the good word about REAL milk.👏🏻
my brother was a dairy farmer - the best thing was having the honor in helping in the morning. - getting the fresh milk that went straight into chillers (a good sized herd). into the chiller. I loved getting a gallon of fresh milk* and bring into the house for breakfast. (*very early in the morning the milk company they sold to would pick up the milk). a true joy.
I'm so glad to hear this. As a child I was taught that unpasteurized milk and home canned foods would kill you and should be avoided just as you should not eat mushrooms. I'm learning those fears may be unfounded. Thank you, Jess!❤
I was raised drinking raw milk, and eating home canned foods (1960s). It's all in how you handle it. Canning, you should follow safe canning recipes and instructions. I can everything I can from my garden. And I also have dairy goats.
Amazing how much info you just delivered! You’re one fast talker 😉 I was finally able to access raw milk, about 2 years ago and am having so much fun making so many things from it! I only have one area of confusion and that is whether to bring up the temperature before making yogurt. I have been keeping the raw milk at 95° for 24 hours with 2 tablespoons of yogurt per quart from a previous batch, and it always comes out amazing!
I heard the same growing up. Mushrooms are such an incredible medicinal resource. It’s sad that we have to practically fight to find reliable resources that tell us the truth. Nature provides a treatment/cure for everything- much to big pharma’s dismay.
I live in upstate New York. My family drinks low temp vat pasteurized non-homogenized milk from a local dairy. I think it's a great compromise because i actually found it, i've seen the well cared-for cows, i can afford it, and it's delivered right to my door every week! it doesn't have a very thick cream line unless it's right in the middle of the summer because of all of that grass. I skim in, mostly because my kids prefer it that way, and throw the cream in my coffee or in a recipe the day i skim it. I guess i'm saying all of this because i thought maybe some of your viewers may be interested in this option, if they can't find or afford raw. Awesome video :)
Thanks Jess! We just switched to Raw A2 milk (my hubby and daughters are lactose sensitive), and we LOVE it!!! They can drink a glass of milk with no bad side effects, and my kids digestive issues have vastly improved in just a couple weeks. 🙌🏻💚
Or they can drink goat milk. The stuff you get in the stores I don't like, but the stuff we get from our 5 does is great. My wife puts it in coffee and does not buy cream. The other advantage of goat milk is it is naturally homogenized not mechanically like cow milk.
Such helpful information! The one week shelf life seems to be the very general answer for raw milk however, when handles properly it truly does last even longer! We buy several gallons every two weeks and when we’re finishing off the rest of it before our next pick up it still taste as delicious on day 14 and fresh as it did in day 1.
Thanks for this video, I recently read a study about how conventional dairy contains phthalates (endocrine disrupting chemicals leached from heated plastics) from the processing it goes through. As a biologist and an aspiring homesteader, I wanted to learn more about getting milk directly from small, local dairy farmers. You clearly care about your cows, and I love that! I think more of us should rely on our own or our communities animals for our dairy needs. There are a couple things I would like to add to this conversation, and that is that even with good hygiene and keeping cows healthy, it's still difficult to eliminate the risk of all pathogens (disease causing bacteria) in raw milk. The ones that concern a lot of people are Campylobacter, Listeria, E. coli, and salmonella. Campylobacter, for example, was found in 92.6% of all dairies sampled by the National Animal Health Monitoring System, with 33.7% of the cows infected, so it's prevalent and we should all be aware. Aware, but not necessarily afraid or fear-monger. These pathogens cause gastrointestinal illness that is uncomfortable but treatable in a lot of cases with antibiotics, but can be life threatening for people 65+, those who are pregnant, people with weakened immune systems, and infants/young children. I know I would be devastated if my child or family member or friend died because of a preventable infection like this. That said, heating raw milk to 145F for 30 minutes (or 161F for 15 seconds) can kill these harmful bacteria so that they can't cause illness. This can be done at home on the stove in a pan or in a double boiler! Contact your local extension office for more information. You have a lot more control in your own kitchen and can avoid putting the milk in contact with plastics during the heating process, which will prevent a lot of phthalate exposure. But does heating make milk less nutritious? A lot of scientific studies actually say no, this isn't the case. After pasteurization, fewer than 7% of whey proteins denature (are damaged and can no longer function). Minerals are also heat stable and many vitamins are also measured at the same concentration before and after pasteurization (e.g., riboflavin [B2], vitamin A, vitamin E). Certain vitamins do get degraded during pasteurization, but at low frequencies (
Cows do not consume 100# of grain a day in a commercial dairy setting. Max is usually 15-20# depending on what they are eating beyond the grain and production. Beyond a certain amount you are wasting the feed and it actually raises certain values tested for in the milk called MUN (milk urea nitrogen) and is a way that most dairies make sure they are feeding a balanced ration for optimum health in their cows.
I try very hard to limit the amount of processed food in my family's diet but I feel stupid to say I never thought of store milk as a processed product. I KNOW that it is, I've visited dairies and all that, but it just never hit my brain that way. As soon as I was done watching your video I sourced local raw milk for my family. Luckily we live in PA where we can manage to find some. Thank you so much for your video!
Thank you Jess for all the great information. I buy raw milk from a local farmer and she showed me the cooling system of the milk and the dishwasher she uses before I became a customer. I actually recognized her cow as being a Jersey from your videos. A2 A2. Take care and I bless you
Thanks for all the great information. As my family has a “commercial” dairy, I was raised on raw milk and have raised 5 kids on raw milk. I milk our jerseys twice a day and see no reason to not give that same milk to my family. I know it’s clean and we do everything possible to keep our cows healthy. It does seem crazy considering all of the things that we can legally put in our bodies that we know are bad for us, that raw milk is still considered a problem. As far as tuberculosis goes, many states, including illinois where I live, are certified as tuberculosis-free.
Do you mind if I ask where in Illinois you are? I am in southern Illinois and our 3 cows just gave birth 2 weeks ago. I am looking for someone to show me how to milk by hand.
Accredited tuberculosis-free does not mean completely eradicated. A herd could develop TB. If the tuberculosis does not spread to other herds, the state keeps TB-free status. The risk is not zero.
You made this video at the perfect time. We have some new friends that have cows and offer raw milk. I've been having a difficult time getting past the "mental block" of switching. Thank you for your knowledge 💛
Thank you for this; a good mini lesson covering information and questions I didn't know to ask. Got some lactose intolerance going on and this is very intriguing, even though my wife says "I'm not sure I can handle a dairy cow". If an animal that big Doesn't Want To Do, I can see where this would be a handful. I figure that a lot of it is them being handled on a regular basis, trained to be gentle, and knowing how to handle them.
Thank you so much Jess. ❤ can u do a class on raising a family cow. The best grass to seed,Food ,meds, etc. I trust your research and there’s so much out there it’s so overwhelming. Thank you. God bless 😊
I think I might have bought raw milk from that farm you used in Arkansas (between Vilonia and Beebe) because the jugs used to be marked FOR ANIMAL CONSUMPTION. I like raw milk because I don’t have to heat it to a certain temp before processing 24 hour yogurt in my yogurt maker. Thanks for a lovely, comprehensive video! You look like you feel fabulous and THAT makes me happy
Great information; thanks for sharing! I was raised on raw milk & no one in my family ever got I’ll from it. In our province, it’s illegal to buy & sell raw milk. Such a shame! Blessings to everyone 🤗💕🇨🇦
Jess that was so informative. I always like learning about stuff like this. I didn't know until I was 17 that only a cow that has called can give milk. I think people should know more about their food and the processes it goes through. Thanks
So glad you did this, I grew up on a farm drinking raw milk until I was 18 and went to live in the city and I believe that is why I am so healthy at age 72, on no meds and enjoying life. I see more and more people on Facebook asking for raw milk, and it is illegal here in Canada also to sell it so I believe there is a Cow share program also. Crazy world where natural is illegal.
Thanks for opening the conversation and sharing what you know/don't know bout raw milk. Highly informative and heartfelt. In the 10 years or so of switching, I have found that drinking raw milk keeps my tummy settled in comparison to pasteurized milk and I enjoy the difference in flavor. In CA it's not commonly found in all grocery stores. But, I do purchase ours from a health food store nearby or occasionally make the trip to a dairy farm which is about 2 hours away.
I remember looking at the pickle jars of raw milk on the counter at my grandparents house and seeing the cream separate. I also used to help my grandmother churn the butter in the wooden churn. She was a very strong lady. My sister used to love to drink the left over buttermilk from the churn but it was too sour for me.
Thank you for this information! I’m giving myself grace because there’s much about the U.S. I am still learning. But I remember being in Hawaii, and there was this random sticker on a stop sign talking about raw milk. Had no idea it was illegal. Had no idea why. I do know that pasteurized milk is a no go for me and my whole family. Our bodies hate it. We have turned to oat milk. And it’s alright. I have always wondered what raw milk tasted like. I was shocked to hear about the A2 milk and hearing you say most who I’ve a problem with pasteurized usually don’t have a problem with raw milk. So, thanks again!
Great timing! Iowa just passed legislation this summer, making it legal to sell real milk. I was so excited. I live on two acres and just don't have room for a cow operation. Buying milk is my best option for now. It has been a challenge to find a source, but I just did last week! I have to drive 30 miles and it costs $8 a gallon. When I found it, I texted my husband in all caps. I wanted to do a happy dance all over. I'm so excited for the opportunity to have real milk for the first time since I was five when my mom had to stop milking our cow because of carpal tunnel syndrome.
My family and I have been drinking Raw Milk for years from produce stores in SC. Never have gotten sick from drinking it. Super healthy. Pasteurized Milk has little nutrition compared to Raw Milk. Would love to have my own dairy cow one day. Great video, Jess!!
This was great timing! I regularly drive past a family owned small herd dairy with a self-serve fill-your-own raw milk dispenser and have been meaning to try it out since they opened a year ago, they even have a vending machine to purchase bottles if you need them. The milk is pricey but if we like it, I think it would be worth it to support small local farming. Here in New Zealand it is legal to sell raw milk but the rules and process for accreditation is super expensive, so it is very rare.
My Love and I were JUST talking about cow breeds and such. Planning for the near-ish future when we will be able to have our own milk cows and make our own dairy products. You always seem to bring a lesson on something just when I need it. Thank you! 😊
Thank you Jess,. We had the TWIN Pines man bought milk in our milk shoot. 1950, &60's. I appreciate the education. I love you and your family. GLORY BE TO GOD HALLELUJAH HALLELUJAH FROM SE MICHIGAN GREAT LAKE'S STATE 🐠🐟✝️🀄🙏🛐✝️🀄🛐🛐🛐☕☕☕☕☕🌻🌻🌻🦓🍉🍓💖💕🇺🇸🐠🐟
As always, thanks for being real! Something I think is important to notes is that it is absolutely worth the price! I pay almost 3 times the price for raw milk in my area versus the generic non-organic grocery store price... but knowing farmers personally, this is really what their cost is. Often small farmers are doing this mostly for their families and just sharing the extra. They aren't trying to exploit their customers. And the work they commit to do every day to care for the animals and create a great product is worth the extra dollars.
I have drank raw milk for 52 years never got sick, my kids my grandkids never got sick. But when I go have dinner by my friends and have milk, cheese, ice cream, butter I get bad stomach pains and very gassy. But at home on raw milk, and the stuff I make with it. I have absolutely no problems. Just for the hell of it I told my dr. This story and he says we'll your lactose intolerant then I told him when I am home I drink raw milk, and make cheese, butter, ice cream and I don't have any of them problems. He had nothing no answer. I said so that just makes you wonder what the hell they put in our food
This was incredibly informative to me as I've been considering purchasing raw milk from a dairy nearby. Thank you so much for putting this video out. I'll be saving it to refer back to again. 😀
I agree with everything you said. I have been allergic or sensitive to dairy for years. Milk would give me a headache. However, raw milk doesn't bother me at all. I'm so happy about this fact. I know it's better for me and I have missed my cereal milk for a long while
A2 pasteurized gives me issues. Regular store-bought pasteurized gives me issues. Not sure about raw or A2 raw. Haven't tried it yet because where we just moved from didn't really have that option near us. We have some close to us here but we want to get settled first.
When the store bought milk turns it doesn't smell sour it stinks.... nasty! When raw milk turns it smells amazing it takes me back to my childhood! I prefer that to the sweet milk! So yummy 😋😋😋!
I’ve never been much of a milk drinker. My husband worked at a commercial dairy in his younger years and cautions against buying milk from the grocery store. He also grew up in small farm country and was able to enjoy fresh, raw milk and swears that if I ever tasted it, I’d be a milk convert for sure. I might get brave enough one day 😂, who knows!! But this video had a ton of great information so thank you for sharing!!
Trust me, I hated milk. I thought drinking milk straight, in a glass was the grossest thing. Now I am constantly drinking milk from the bottle and it is the only food I constantly crave. Every single process that grocery store milk goes through, homogenization, pasturization, fortification and skimming are all toxifying to the milk, and they all make it taste worse. Think about it. We're mammals. We feed it to new born babies. The fact that we can be led to believe that milk is bad for us, and not the synthetic calcium they add, or the pasturization that destroys all the nutrients. We have a lot to unlearn.
I tried raw milk for the first time in June at Rory's homestead fest and I loved it. I cannot wait until we are able to get our homestead and a milk cow.
Thanks so much for this information, Jess. I am not privileged to have a dairy cow but found your talk so interesting. I had forgotten the term clabbered cream. Now I know precisely what it means :)
Thank you SO MUCH Jess for posting this Video and clarifying the "For Animals Only" thing because over summer i searched local Raw Milk and it showed that so i never got any lol😊👍🐄🐄🥛All this information waa greatly appreciated❤
Our children were all breast fed and moved straight to raw milk as we were dairying at the time- we had Ayrshires who are said to have different sized fat globules (easier digestion). Only one of our kids had a little trouble adjusting. Didn’t take long. We had to shop around for a pediatrician who wasn’t anti raw milk. We found one who was PRO raw for children, he felt that the kids would recover faster from flus because of the constant exposure to some bacteria, especially good bacteria and enzymes. This seems to be true. We had people who wanted our milk for family use, we traded since we could not sell it for home use. Crazy!
Thank you ,Jess for talking about this , as this just needs to be brought up more. Here in Texas , we can buy at farmers markets as long as you order before and pay before , we buy our Raw milk, cream from them , They give out booklets to everyone about the benefits of Raw Real Milk . God bless you and this whole community. I absolutely love Raw Real Milk . God bless you & your Mrs josette Tharp Montgomery County, Texas 🙏 ❤
So - this was a cool and intriguing topic. Especially when tied to the auto-immune discussion of a few days ago. I am interested in and currently exploring "gut health" and how to achieve it. I have eczema and other issues; 3 of my children have auto-immunes diseases. I am not saying raw milk is the total answer but I believe it's a slice of that pie; another piece of the puzzle. Thank you!
When we milked, which was for several years before we went to Scotland , we found the goats milk very much needed to be chilled immediately! We didn't advertise, but word of mouth spread that we had raw goats milk. At the time it was highly illegal here in GA. We made 'for animal consumption only' labels and sold all of our extra milk, cheese, and yogurt. My favorite was the ice cream.
I found a place, thanks to the website that you mentioned, selling the A2/A2milk for $10 a gallon and A2/A1 for $7. I always thought that raw milk would cost a lot more. Thank you for breaking down the details!
I remember my mother telling me how she was on a band competition trip in high school in the 1940’s. She took a room on a farm where they served her raw milk for breakfast. Initially she was creeped out by it, but ended up loving it.
I grew up in Oregon and my mom was very crunchy. Think home births, homeschooling, gardens... She got us raw milk whenever she could but it was hard to get ahold of in the 90s!
I'm definitely not against raw milk, and prefer that over store bought hands down. However, it's really important to know the sanitation practices where you're getting it from if it's not your own. My brother almost died from contaminated raw milk that led to botulism. It's a wonderful food, but only if the risks are taken seriously.
True but look how many people get sick every year from highly regulated store-bought foods. She even said that people have gotten sick from store-bought (and therefore pasteurized) milk. Not only that but she emphasized knowing the practices of the farm you're getting it from. 🤷♀️
In Europe the pasteurisation was largely about bovine TB transferring to human TB through milk. Herds are TB tested now but raw milk is still quite hard to come by in the UK.
Thank you so much for this video. I've learned alot. When I was a kid, the only thing we as children ate or drink is what my dad raised, grew or hunted for. But as I grew older I forgot most of what my dad did and how my dad did it. I am and wanting to go back to that way.
Very informative video Jess. I remember when Oregon decided to 'crack down' on home dairies. We had been buying really good goat milk for some time and then all of a sudden it was taboo unless they were "certified" and had to have a quick chiller. I get a kick out of what goes on in the background of some of your videos. about 2/3 through the sheep chasing one of the cats and then near the end one of the horses comes running up to the barn.
We had a milk cow for a long time and had very small children when we first got one. I asked my Dr. one day when at an appointment if we needed to buy a pasteurizer for the milk, He said, "No, you don't. You have three little ones and if you use it within 3 to 4 up to about a week, you are just fine." Then he asked if I made butter from the cream. I said yes, and he wanted to know if I would bring him some from time to time, so I did! He LOVED it. We never pasteurized our cows milk or our goats milk. Raised all our kids on it and we enjoy the cream and cheese we make from it. :)
Good vid. Milk safety is not about “either/or”. It is about “AND”. Raw milk is far superior AND things like Listeria, TB etc are nothing to brush off. I had a friend that got TB from raw milk, became an RN an spent her life researching this topic. So it boils down to the health of the cow (you better believe testing is important) and your trust the cow owner handles everything in a sanitary manner if you don’t own it yourself. You were dispensed a brain for a reason. Information is power.
great perspective!
When did this case of TB happen. That is extremely rare, even rarer among ruminants. I do not think they even test for TB in barnyard animals anymore, which is how rare it has become. It was not rare in the 20th Century. I think it was still around in the 1950s.
@@katrinaanon1038don’t believe comments. Sounds like a made up story
It looks like bovine tuberculosis was a factor in the regulation of pasteurization in the late 1800's. Now they can test the herd for the disease and it's a relatively small problem. But when all milk was delivered in uncooled horse carts, there were a lot more problems with pathogens.
TB used to be a very serious problem before effective treatment was available. In the 1800's, TB killed one out of every seven people living in the United States and Europe.
Also Salmonella,
Campylobacter jejuni
Salmonella species
E. coli
Listeria monocytogenes
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Mycobacterium bovis
Brucella species
Coxiella Burnetii
Yersinia enterocolitica Pretty much all these bacteria cause major health concerns for young children, infants and the elderly as well as the immune compromised. Since 1987 there have been 269 hospitalizations, 3 deaths, 6 still births and 2 miscarriages from milk born pathogens. These are reported cases, the sort of people to drink raw milk aren't the sort of people to seek medical aid. There are literally no health benefits rom drinking raw milk that you don't get from drinking pasteurized milk. Absolutely no scientific evidence in the least. It's one of these things where people are confusing feelings with facts.
Yes
Disagree! I have realized that testing is just another form of control! Less health issues with raw milk . We have been so brainwashed in the land of big pharma, FDA, USDA. If you haven't learned anything in the last 3 years about the fact that they don't give a hoot about our health, you're not paying attention.. Educate yourselves. Experience always outways, hearsay.
This is good to know. We do raw milk and my fiance has said this is still a concern. I haven't seen anything about it, but raw milk has helped my son a lot.
Milk was a daily drink in our home on the farm. Our family of ten never had any problems.
I help my granddaughter make cheeses, butter, etc. from their beautiful cow😊
Jess you have no idea how much I appreciate this. I have psoriasis and arthritis. I have used raw products on and off over the years. I know now, I feel better drinking raw products by 60% without medicine. Bless you my friend. You can come visit our Longhorns and garden anytime
I was a child in the 50's and 60's, and we did not live on a farm. But a favorite childhood memory of mine, was the regular trips with my mom to the local farmer for milk. While my mom was getting the milk, my sisters and I would go visit the cows. My mom only bought raw milk, and skimmed the cream to used for whipping, and baking. I wish that was a memory I could have made for my kids.
Watching while one of our dairy goat mama's labors away. We LOVE our raw milk and raw milk cheeses, kefir.... ❤❤❤
We live near a dairy that's been providing raw milk to the area for almost 95 years, they offer pasteurized also (non homogenized) but the raw is most popular. We've been buying a few gallons a week for the last year and a half, love it.
Also, i used to buy raw goats milk in oregon, it was like $15 for a half gallon, I'm getting this raw cows milk for $6 a gallon here in Oklahoma!
Do you purchase from swans dairy? I’ve been impressed by their commitment to meeting the needs and preferences of milk consumption here in Oklahoma.
Where at in Oklahoma. I would love to buy some if it's pretty close to me. I am in the Henryetta area.
@@athomewithracheal yes! That's who we buy from
@@ChrissyL7497 if you google swan dairy you should be able to locate if it’s close to ya!
So cheap in Oklahoma! $11 in NH 😮
I used to be a part of a kind of “share”. I milked the cow once each week and kept all her milk. I paid a monthly fee of $25 to “help care” for the cow by relieving her of her milk 🤪. I live in a state where raw milk can only be sold for “pet consumption“. I miss those days and, especially, I miss her awesome yellow butter! Thanks for spreading the good word about REAL milk.👏🏻
my brother was a dairy farmer - the best thing was having the honor in helping in the morning. - getting the fresh milk that went straight into chillers (a good sized herd). into the chiller. I loved getting a gallon of fresh milk* and bring into the house for breakfast. (*very early in the morning the milk company they sold to would pick up the milk). a true joy.
I'm so glad to hear this. As a child I was taught that unpasteurized milk and home canned foods would kill you and should be avoided just as you should not eat mushrooms. I'm learning those fears may be unfounded. Thank you, Jess!❤
I was raised the same way. I’m so thankful to be set free from that way of thinking!
Wow! I'm sad that children were taught that! 😔
I was raised drinking raw milk, and eating home canned foods (1960s). It's all in how you handle it. Canning, you should follow safe canning recipes and instructions. I can everything I can from my garden. And I also have dairy goats.
Amazing how much info you just delivered! You’re one fast talker 😉 I was finally able to access raw milk, about 2 years ago and am having so much fun making so many things from it! I only have one area of confusion and that is whether to bring up the temperature before making yogurt. I have been keeping the raw milk at 95° for 24 hours with 2 tablespoons of yogurt per quart from a previous batch, and it always comes out amazing!
I heard the same growing up. Mushrooms are such an incredible medicinal resource. It’s sad that we have to practically fight to find reliable resources that tell us the truth. Nature provides a treatment/cure for everything- much to big pharma’s dismay.
I live in upstate New York. My family drinks low temp vat pasteurized non-homogenized milk from a local dairy. I think it's a great compromise because i actually found it, i've seen the well cared-for cows, i can afford it, and it's delivered right to my door every week! it doesn't have a very thick cream line unless it's right in the middle of the summer because of all of that grass. I skim in, mostly because my kids prefer it that way, and throw the cream in my coffee or in a recipe the day i skim it. I guess i'm saying all of this because i thought maybe some of your viewers may be interested in this option, if they can't find or afford raw. Awesome video :)
Thanks Jess! We just switched to Raw A2 milk (my hubby and daughters are lactose sensitive), and we LOVE it!!! They can drink a glass of milk with no bad side effects, and my kids digestive issues have vastly improved in just a couple weeks. 🙌🏻💚
Or they can drink goat milk. The stuff you get in the stores I don't like, but the stuff we get from our 5 does is great. My wife puts it in coffee and does not buy cream. The other advantage of goat milk is it is naturally homogenized not mechanically like cow milk.
Such helpful information! The one week shelf life seems to be the very general answer for raw milk however, when handles properly it truly does last even longer! We buy several gallons every two weeks and when we’re finishing off the rest of it before our next pick up it still taste as delicious on day 14 and fresh as it did in day 1.
People still use milk after day 10 routinely, but generally I to make things like sourdough bread, ricottas, and clabbarded milk products.
Thanks for this video, I recently read a study about how conventional dairy contains phthalates (endocrine disrupting chemicals leached from heated plastics) from the processing it goes through. As a biologist and an aspiring homesteader, I wanted to learn more about getting milk directly from small, local dairy farmers. You clearly care about your cows, and I love that! I think more of us should rely on our own or our communities animals for our dairy needs.
There are a couple things I would like to add to this conversation, and that is that even with good hygiene and keeping cows healthy, it's still difficult to eliminate the risk of all pathogens (disease causing bacteria) in raw milk. The ones that concern a lot of people are Campylobacter, Listeria, E. coli, and salmonella. Campylobacter, for example, was found in 92.6% of all dairies sampled by the National Animal Health Monitoring System, with 33.7% of the cows infected, so it's prevalent and we should all be aware. Aware, but not necessarily afraid or fear-monger. These pathogens cause gastrointestinal illness that is uncomfortable but treatable in a lot of cases with antibiotics, but can be life threatening for people 65+, those who are pregnant, people with weakened immune systems, and infants/young children. I know I would be devastated if my child or family member or friend died because of a preventable infection like this.
That said, heating raw milk to 145F for 30 minutes (or 161F for 15 seconds) can kill these harmful bacteria so that they can't cause illness. This can be done at home on the stove in a pan or in a double boiler! Contact your local extension office for more information. You have a lot more control in your own kitchen and can avoid putting the milk in contact with plastics during the heating process, which will prevent a lot of phthalate exposure.
But does heating make milk less nutritious? A lot of scientific studies actually say no, this isn't the case. After pasteurization, fewer than 7% of whey proteins denature (are damaged and can no longer function). Minerals are also heat stable and many vitamins are also measured at the same concentration before and after pasteurization (e.g., riboflavin [B2], vitamin A, vitamin E). Certain vitamins do get degraded during pasteurization, but at low frequencies (
I appreciate your comment and love the way you stated everything.
AI troll
I can see you love your cows, and they know it!
No one loves a commercial cow. It’s just a machine like a car.
Happy cows should be healthier.
Oregonian here! I will gladly break any law to obtain it for my family! The benefits we’ve all had have been amazing!
Yea 611k subscribers 🎉🥰 great channel & vlogs! Thank you/Bless you 🙏🏽😊
Cows do not consume 100# of grain a day in a commercial dairy setting. Max is usually 15-20# depending on what they are eating beyond the grain and production. Beyond a certain amount you are wasting the feed and it actually raises certain values tested for in the milk called MUN (milk urea nitrogen) and is a way that most dairies make sure they are feeding a balanced ration for optimum health in their cows.
I try very hard to limit the amount of processed food in my family's diet but I feel stupid to say I never thought of store milk as a processed product. I KNOW that it is, I've visited dairies and all that, but it just never hit my brain that way. As soon as I was done watching your video I sourced local raw milk for my family. Luckily we live in PA where we can manage to find some. Thank you so much for your video!
Thank you Jess for all the great information. I buy raw milk from a local farmer and she showed me the cooling system of the milk and the dishwasher she uses before I became a customer. I actually recognized her cow as being a Jersey from your videos. A2 A2. Take care and I bless you
Thanks for all the great information. As my family has a “commercial” dairy, I was raised on raw milk and have raised 5 kids on raw milk. I milk our jerseys twice a day and see no reason to not give that same milk to my family. I know it’s clean and we do everything possible to keep our cows healthy. It does seem crazy considering all of the things that we can legally put in our bodies that we know are bad for us, that raw milk is still considered a problem. As far as tuberculosis goes, many states, including illinois where I live, are certified as tuberculosis-free.
Do you mind if I ask where in Illinois you are? I am in southern Illinois and our 3 cows just gave birth 2 weeks ago. I am looking for someone to show me how to milk by hand.
Accredited tuberculosis-free does not mean completely eradicated. A herd could develop TB. If the tuberculosis does not spread to other herds, the state keeps TB-free status. The risk is not zero.
Legally put in your body? Sorry but I don't need anyone's permission to do anything to my body.
I am 57. I grew up on raw milk. Never an issue.
🌻💚🌻
The comfort you have around your girls now is so sweet to see.❤
You made this video at the perfect time. We have some new friends that have cows and offer raw milk. I've been having a difficult time getting past the "mental block" of switching. Thank you for your knowledge 💛
Thank you for this; a good mini lesson covering information and questions I didn't know to ask. Got some lactose intolerance going on and this is very intriguing, even though my wife says "I'm not sure I can handle a dairy cow". If an animal that big Doesn't Want To Do, I can see where this would be a handful. I figure that a lot of it is them being handled on a regular basis, trained to be gentle, and knowing how to handle them.
Thank you so much Jess. ❤ can u do a class on raising a family cow. The best grass to seed,Food ,meds, etc. I trust your research and there’s so much out there it’s so overwhelming. Thank you. God bless 😊
I think I might have bought raw milk from that farm you used in Arkansas (between Vilonia and Beebe) because the jugs used to be marked FOR ANIMAL CONSUMPTION. I like raw milk because I don’t have to heat it to a certain temp before processing 24 hour yogurt in my yogurt maker. Thanks for a lovely, comprehensive video! You look like you feel fabulous and THAT makes me happy
Great information; thanks for sharing! I was raised on raw milk & no one in my family ever got I’ll from it. In our province, it’s illegal to buy & sell raw milk. Such a shame! Blessings to everyone 🤗💕🇨🇦
Here here,, well said. 😁😀👍💗💕
Jess that was so informative. I always like learning about stuff like this. I didn't know until I was 17 that only a cow that has called can give milk. I think people should know more about their food and the processes it goes through. Thanks
Calved- darn auto correct
12:35 the cat being chased by the sheep in the background i could not help but laugh at the cuteness
So glad you did this, I grew up on a farm drinking raw milk until I was 18 and went to live in the city and I believe that is why I am so healthy at age 72, on no meds and enjoying life. I see more and more people on Facebook asking for raw milk, and it is illegal here in Canada also to sell it so I believe there is a Cow share program also. Crazy world where natural is illegal.
Thanks for opening the conversation and sharing what you know/don't know bout raw milk. Highly informative and heartfelt. In the 10 years or so of switching, I have found that drinking raw milk keeps my tummy settled in comparison to pasteurized milk and I enjoy the difference in flavor. In CA it's not commonly found in all grocery stores. But, I do purchase ours from a health food store nearby or occasionally make the trip to a dairy farm which is about 2 hours away.
I remember looking at the pickle jars of raw milk on the counter at my grandparents house and seeing the cream separate. I also used to help my grandmother churn the butter in the wooden churn. She was a very strong lady. My sister used to love to drink the left over buttermilk from the churn but it was too sour for me.
Great! You look much healthier too!
Thank you for this information! I’m giving myself grace because there’s much about the U.S. I am still learning. But I remember being in Hawaii, and there was this random sticker on a stop sign talking about raw milk. Had no idea it was illegal. Had no idea why. I do know that pasteurized milk is a no go for me and my whole family. Our bodies hate it. We have turned to oat milk. And it’s alright. I have always wondered what raw milk tasted like. I was shocked to hear about the A2 milk and hearing you say most who I’ve a problem with pasteurized usually don’t have a problem with raw milk. So, thanks again!
Thanks 🙏
Great timing! Iowa just passed legislation this summer, making it legal to sell real milk. I was so excited. I live on two acres and just don't have room for a cow operation. Buying milk is my best option for now. It has been a challenge to find a source, but I just did last week! I have to drive 30 miles and it costs $8 a gallon. When I found it, I texted my husband in all caps. I wanted to do a happy dance all over. I'm so excited for the opportunity to have real milk for the first time since I was five when my mom had to stop milking our cow because of carpal tunnel syndrome.
I live in NE and didn't hear anything about this! Thanks for sharing!
Thank you !
I grew up on a dairy farm and raw milk was a staple. Mom used to pasteurize it when we were tiny. We never got sick on it. It's delicious. 😊
My family and I have been drinking Raw Milk for years from produce stores in SC. Never have gotten sick from drinking it. Super healthy. Pasteurized Milk has little nutrition compared to Raw Milk. Would love to have my own dairy cow one day. Great video, Jess!!
Try goats, less resource intensive.
@@katrinaanon1038 Thanks! They are definitely on the list. 😊
This was great timing! I regularly drive past a family owned small herd dairy with a self-serve fill-your-own raw milk dispenser and have been meaning to try it out since they opened a year ago, they even have a vending machine to purchase bottles if you need them. The milk is pricey but if we like it, I think it would be worth it to support small local farming. Here in New Zealand it is legal to sell raw milk but the rules and process for accreditation is super expensive, so it is very rare.
Excellent information! Thanks. Those cows sure do trust and love you. So sweet.
thanks for the info.
Very interesting. Thanks for sharing this information.
My Love and I were JUST talking about cow breeds and such. Planning for the near-ish future when we will be able to have our own milk cows and make our own dairy products. You always seem to bring a lesson on something just when I need it. Thank you! 😊
Thank you Jess,. We had the TWIN Pines man bought milk in our milk shoot. 1950, &60's.
I appreciate the education.
I love you and your family.
GLORY BE TO GOD HALLELUJAH HALLELUJAH
FROM SE MICHIGAN GREAT LAKE'S STATE 🐠🐟✝️🀄🙏🛐✝️🀄🛐🛐🛐☕☕☕☕☕🌻🌻🌻🦓🍉🍓💖💕🇺🇸🐠🐟
As always, thanks for being real!
Something I think is important to notes is that it is absolutely worth the price! I pay almost 3 times the price for raw milk in my area versus the generic non-organic grocery store price... but knowing farmers personally, this is really what their cost is. Often small farmers are doing this mostly for their families and just sharing the extra. They aren't trying to exploit their customers. And the work they commit to do every day to care for the animals and create a great product is worth the extra dollars.
I have drank raw milk for 52 years never got sick, my kids my grandkids never got sick. But when I go have dinner by my friends and have milk, cheese, ice cream, butter I get bad stomach pains and very gassy. But at home on raw milk, and the stuff I make with it. I have absolutely no problems. Just for the hell of it I told my dr. This story and he says we'll your lactose intolerant then I told him when I am home I drink raw milk, and make cheese, butter, ice cream and I don't have any of them problems. He had nothing no answer. I said so that just makes you wonder what the hell they put in our food
This was incredibly informative to me as I've been considering purchasing raw milk from a dairy nearby. Thank you so much for putting this video out. I'll be saving it to refer back to again. 😀
I agree with everything you said. I have been allergic or sensitive to dairy for years. Milk would give me a headache. However, raw milk doesn't bother me at all. I'm so happy about this fact. I know it's better for me and I have missed my cereal milk for a long while
My mother in law is the same way. She has no problem with raw milk. Pasteurized is a different story.
The pasteurization is not a problem for me. It is if the milk is not A2. If it has the A1 gene, I get a stomach ache.
A2 pasteurized gives me issues. Regular store-bought pasteurized gives me issues. Not sure about raw or A2 raw. Haven't tried it yet because where we just moved from didn't really have that option near us. We have some close to us here but we want to get settled first.
@@dlsdyer9071 You should not have a problem with goat milk either! But get it from a farm.
@@katrinaanon1038 Growing up we had friends that had goats. It never tasted right. I am a super taster. So no goat milk for me.
Super informative! Thank you‼️👍👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👆‼️👍👍👍❤️
When the store bought milk turns it doesn't smell sour it stinks.... nasty! When raw milk turns it smells amazing it takes me back to my childhood! I prefer that to the sweet milk! So yummy 😋😋😋!
I’ve never been much of a milk drinker. My husband worked at a commercial dairy in his younger years and cautions against buying milk from the grocery store. He also grew up in small farm country and was able to enjoy fresh, raw milk and swears that if I ever tasted it, I’d be a milk convert for sure. I might get brave enough one day 😂, who knows!! But this video had a ton of great information so thank you for sharing!!
Trust me, I hated milk. I thought drinking milk straight, in a glass was the grossest thing. Now I am constantly drinking milk from the bottle and it is the only food I constantly crave. Every single process that grocery store milk goes through, homogenization, pasturization, fortification and skimming are all toxifying to the milk, and they all make it taste worse. Think about it. We're mammals. We feed it to new born babies. The fact that we can be led to believe that milk is bad for us, and not the synthetic calcium they add, or the pasturization that destroys all the nutrients. We have a lot to unlearn.
@@donquixote8462"We have a lot to unlearn." Absofreakinlutely! Not just with food, either :-/
Well done!
I tried raw milk for the first time in June at Rory's homestead fest and I loved it. I cannot wait until we are able to get our homestead and a milk cow.
Thanks so much for this information, Jess. I am not privileged to have a dairy cow but found your talk so interesting. I had forgotten the term clabbered cream. Now I know precisely what it means :)
So informative!
Thank you SO MUCH Jess for posting this Video and clarifying the "For Animals Only" thing because over summer i searched local Raw Milk and it showed that so i never got any lol😊👍🐄🐄🥛All this information waa greatly appreciated❤
Our children were all breast fed and moved straight to raw milk as we were dairying at the time- we had Ayrshires who are said to have different sized fat globules (easier digestion). Only one of our kids had a little trouble adjusting. Didn’t take long. We had to shop around for a pediatrician who wasn’t anti raw milk. We found one who was PRO raw for children, he felt that the kids would recover faster from flus because of the constant exposure to some bacteria, especially good bacteria and enzymes. This seems to be true. We had people who wanted our milk for family use, we traded since we could not sell it for home use. Crazy!
Thank you ,Jess for talking about this , as this just needs to be brought up more.
Here in Texas , we can buy at farmers markets as long as you order before and pay before , we buy our Raw milk, cream from them ,
They give out booklets to everyone about the benefits of Raw Real Milk .
God bless you and this whole community.
I absolutely love Raw Real Milk .
God bless you & your
Mrs josette Tharp Montgomery County, Texas 🙏 ❤
Bless you Jess ! ❤
Wow love that we have been blessed by your present nearly everyday❤❤❤thanks Jess
very informative video! also your sweet cows are so cute 😍
Amen, buying store bought is way more wired.
So - this was a cool and intriguing topic. Especially when tied to the auto-immune discussion of a few days ago. I am interested in and currently exploring "gut health" and how to achieve it. I have eczema and other issues; 3 of my children have auto-immunes diseases. I am not saying raw milk is the total answer but I believe it's a slice of that pie; another piece of the puzzle. Thank you!
I have had psoriasis ever since I fell ill with chicken pox as an adult, years ago. Have you found a correlation in raw foods and aiding your excema?
When we milked, which was for several years before we went to Scotland , we found the goats milk very much needed to be chilled immediately! We didn't advertise, but word of mouth spread that we had raw goats milk. At the time it was highly illegal here in GA. We made 'for animal consumption only' labels and sold all of our extra milk, cheese, and yogurt. My favorite was the ice cream.
Very interesting tks
It's so cute how comfortable you are with them now...in the beginning you were so nervous around the cows ❤😂
Such a lovey human. Thank you for all the valuable information.
Amen sister!!!!
I found a place, thanks to the website that you mentioned, selling the A2/A2milk for $10 a gallon and A2/A1 for $7. I always thought that raw milk would cost a lot more. Thank you for breaking down the details!
I've seen it as high as $15/gallon but no matter how much I have to pay, it is 100% worth it.
Awesome video. Great, helpful information. Thank you!
thanks Jess.
Amen!
This is the best video I have seen in explaining this from someone who has actually done it
I remember my mother telling me how she was on a band competition trip in high school in the 1940’s. She took a room on a farm where they served her raw milk for breakfast. Initially she was creeped out by it, but ended up loving it.
I grew up in Oregon and my mom was very crunchy. Think home births, homeschooling, gardens... She got us raw milk whenever she could but it was hard to get ahold of in the 90s!
Great content and well explained Jess!!! Thank you!!
Wow. Great info. Thanks Jess. Ive learnt alot today ❤
I'm definitely not against raw milk, and prefer that over store bought hands down. However, it's really important to know the sanitation practices where you're getting it from if it's not your own. My brother almost died from contaminated raw milk that led to botulism. It's a wonderful food, but only if the risks are taken seriously.
True but look how many people get sick every year from highly regulated store-bought foods. She even said that people have gotten sick from store-bought (and therefore pasteurized) milk. Not only that but she emphasized knowing the practices of the farm you're getting it from. 🤷♀️
@@katie7748 not arguing anything you said.
Thankyou Jess for explaining this!
The spout jar IS my cream separator!! 😂
In Europe the pasteurisation was largely about bovine TB transferring to human TB through milk. Herds are TB tested now but raw milk is still quite hard to come by in the UK.
thank you for sharing this.
The Cow 🐮 Loving on you is so sweet!😍💓
Yup- Live in OR and this is what we do too!
thank you for being such a good teacher!
Excellent video!
Thanks for this video. Lots of good info!
So informative. Thank you so much, Jess.
Great video, Jess. Thanks!❤
❤ you are awesome Jess!!! Very clear and concise info
That was a ton of information. I'm going to have to watch this again. Thanks so much for sharing
So interesting! Thanks for sharing your wealth of knowledge.
Great info. Thank you for all that you teach us. Every time; I learn a new thing or three....😊
Thank you so much for this video. I've learned alot. When I was a kid, the only thing we as children ate or drink is what my dad raised, grew or hunted for. But as I grew older I forgot most of what my dad did and how my dad did it. I am and wanting to go back to that way.
Thank you Jess, well explained.👏🇨🇦
Very informative video Jess. I remember when Oregon decided to 'crack down' on home dairies. We had been buying really good goat milk for some time and then all of a sudden it was taboo unless they were "certified" and had to have a quick chiller.
I get a kick out of what goes on in the background of some of your videos. about 2/3 through the sheep chasing one of the cats and then near the end one of the horses comes running up to the barn.
We had a milk cow for a long time and had very small children when we first got one. I asked my Dr. one day when at an appointment if we needed to buy a pasteurizer for the milk, He said, "No, you don't. You have three little ones and if you use it within 3 to 4 up to about a week, you are just fine." Then he asked if I made butter from the cream. I said yes, and he wanted to know if I would bring him some from time to time, so I did! He LOVED it. We never pasteurized our cows milk or our goats milk. Raised all our kids on it and we enjoy the cream and cheese we make from it. :)