The Sunday Post (Inverness)

The dairy grind: why we’ll be debating milk’s merits till the cows come home

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the young of the animal producing it, you’d ideally want milk from an animal with a digestive system similar to ours. That definitely wouldn’t be a cow, with its multiple stomachs! A lot of people believe donkeys or goats would be better.

So why is cow’s milk most common?

In the economics of dairy farming, it’s about how many gallons of milk you can produce with the fewest animals.

How did drinking milk once pose a danger?

Drinking milk was not a common practice until the industrial revolution, nor was giving animal milk to babies. As women started to go to work, artificial feeding became more widely practised.

It was always known that milk was dangerous if not fresh. When it became more widely used in cities, infant mortality increased at an alarming rate because of very bad hygiene and practices.

But so intense was the belief that babies had to have milk that parents risked it. Pasteurisa­tion changed all that. How did pasteurisa­tion come about?

French biologist Louis Pasteur came across it in the 1860s but he wasn’t looking for a way to make milk safe. He was actually studying beer and wine but, in the process of looking at fermentati­on, he made the pivotal discovery that diseases were caused by invisible germs that could be killed with heat.

It was argued about for a few decades before becoming widely accepted. There is still a controvers­y over raw milk v pasteurise­d milk.

Many feel raw milk is better but the problem with raw milk from a public health perspectiv­e is that it’s very difficult to monitor it and assure its quality.

Should we be drinking milk? Humans are the only species to drink milk after infancy. I was fascinated to learn that 60% of the population is lactose intolerant.

It’s often spoken of as a disease but actually it’s the normal condition.

Lactose, the sugar in milk, is indigestib­le but there are some enzymes in the intestines that renders it digestible. This enzyme disappears about the age of two in humans. But for some, it didn’t disappear so they could continue drinking milk.

What’s the most interestin­g fact you discovered? Something that surprised me about breastfeed­ing is that, throughout history, many believed wet nurses passed on their personalit­y to those who drank their milk.

Milk! A 10,000-Year Food Fracas by Mark Kurlansky, published by Bloomsbury, out now.

 ??  ?? A few gulps of their fave drink gives these two a milk moustache
A few gulps of their fave drink gives these two a milk moustache

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