Milk: To Be Got Or Not?
If you believe the ads, cows’ milk is a powerhouse product, capable of unsticking a peanut butter mouth, making white-mustachioed celebrities look health-chic and building strong bones. But isn’t soymilk better for your heart? And goats’ milk easier to digest? And aren’t rice milk and nut milk skinnier? The fact is, milk drinkers have never had more options or been more confused. Here, how to sort out the healthiest choices for animals, the planet and you.
Q: Should I drink at least some cows’ milk? Or can soymilk meet the same nutrition needs?
A: A cup of cows’ milk provides 16 percent of your daily value of protein as well as 30 percent of calcium, about 25 percent of vitamin D and riboflavin, plus healthy amounts of potassium and vitamins A and B12—but a glass of fortified soymilk (some flavors of Vitasoy, Edensoy Extra and Silk, for example) has virtually the same benefits. One alert: Several recent studies suggest that the calcium used to fortify soymilk settles to the bottom of the carton and doesn’t end up in your glass. To be safe, add plant sources of calcium to your diet and a supplement too—it’s hard to consistently get enough from food. Good options include broccoli, spinach, artichokes, Brussels sprouts, kale, collard and mustard greens and some legumes (especially soybeans and lentils).
Q: What should kids be drinking?
A: “The nutrients that are of concern for American kids—calcium, magnesium, vitamin D, potassium—are all provided by milk,” says Stephanie Smith, MS, RD, national spokesperson for the National Dairy Council. That’s one reason the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) upped its Dietary Guidelines in 2005 to three daily servings of low-fat dairy foods for everyone over the age of 8. (Children 2–8 should get two servings per day, and kids ages 1–2 should drink whole milk, as fat is essential for growth and development.) However, fortified soymilk can also meet those needs.
As for the notion that milk is vital for kids’ bone health, a controversial research review, published in the March 2005 issue of Pediatrics, found “scant evidence [to support] increasing milk or other dairy product intake for promoting child and adolescent bone mineralization.” Instead, Amy Joy Lanou, PhD, the study’s lead author and senior nutrition scientist for the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, suggests that kids get 400–500 mg calcium per day from plant sources. However, other experts argue that low-fat dairy products are the easiest way to get the right amount of calcium into kids, particularly because so many dairy foods are fortified with vitamin D, which boosts calcium absorption.
The debate will no doubt continue, so for now, just make sure your rug rats are getting calcium from a variety of sources. And unless you’re really desperate to get your kids to drink milk, skip those candy-flavored single-serve bottles of milk. Sold under the name Slammers, they come in Moon Pie, 3 Musketeers, Milky Way and Starburst flavors. One cup of Starburst Strawberry contains 170 calories, 5g of saturated fat and 20g of sugar.
Q: What are my options besides cows’ milk and soymilk?
A: Goats’ milk has more calcium and vitamins A and B6 than cows’ milk and similar amounts of protein. “However, it contains less of a certain type of protein than cows’ milk, which is one reason why it may be digested more easily,” says Stephanie Clark, PhD, associate professor of food science at Washington State University.
With only 1 or 2 grams of protein, even fortified rice milk isn’t a significant source of protein, but it can be a good source of calcium and vitamin D, for about 120 calories per cup.
A cup of Almond Breeze nut milk has 10 percent of the RDA for vitamin A, 25 percent of vitamin D, 20 percent of calcium and 50 percent of vitamin E, and only 60 calories—but also only 1 gram of protein.
Q: What’s the deal with that milk that comes in unrefrigerated cartons? Is it regular milk?
A: Milk marked UHT (for ultra high temperature) simply undergoes a different method of pasteurization and is heated to much higher temperatures. Then it’s put in containers that protect it from bacteria, air and light. Its shelf life is several months, compared to refrigerated milk’s, which is only several weeks. After it’s opened, though, UHT milk should be refrigerated and won’t last longer than regular milk.
Q: Speaking of cartons, which type of milk container is the most environmentally friendly: paper, plastic or glass?
A: The answer pretty much comes down to two things: which type you can recycle in your area and how much fossil fuel is used for transporting it. Lightweight paper cartons and plastic milk jugs require less fuel to transport. But plastic jugs let light in, potentially affecting milk’s flavor. Opaque plastic blocks some light, but can be more difficult to recycle. Glass milk jars, though fairly uncommon, are the least desirable: They’re heavy, breakable and let in light.
Q: What makes organic milk organic?
A: What the cows are fed, not how they’re treated. Their food must be grown in soil that has been free from pesticides and fertilizers for at least three years, and organic cows can’t be given hormones or antibiotics. Unfortunately, they often are kept in factory-farm-style feedlots, just like regular dairy herds. And while the USDA does include “access to pasture” as a requirement for organic certification, it doesn’t prescribe how much time or require grass grazing for cows. However, a group of organic dairies that do let their cows out to graze is challenging the current rules. “Organic is not a health claim, it’s a production process that calls for care of the soil,” says Theresa Marquez, chief marketing executive of Organic Valley Family of Farms, and board member of the Organic Trade Association. “But you have to have a pasturing system. That’s what all organic farms should be doing.” There’s even a health benefit to grass-fed cows: Their milk contains high amounts of CLA, or conjugated linoleic acid, a muscle-building, cancer-fighting fatty acid.
Q: Why are animal rights and environmental groups so antidairy?
A: There are three key reasons:
Animal treatment: Cows are kept lactating as long as possible by constant pregnancies, which produce either more dairy cows or—besides the few male calves kept for stud—veal or beef.
Milk quality: To increase milk production, conventional dairy cows are given synthetic growth hormones and then antibiotics to treat any resulting infections. Some of those hormones and antibiotics end up in your glass.
Environmental effects: Each dairy cow creates 120 pounds of waste and drinks 50 gallons of water a day, while 80 percent of US agricultural land either grows grain to feed animals or animals to feed humans, according to People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.
So if you drink cows’ milk, go low-fat and organic. If you choose not to drink cows’ milk, try a fortified soymilk or other milk instead, and boost that with calcium-rich foods and a calcium supplement, too, just for good measure.
Comments
Archive of Editorial
2008 Reader Recipe Contest
For our 2008 Reader Recipe Contest, we challenged VT readers to create vegetarian versions of classic nonveg favorites—and do it using at least one sponsored ingredient.
I heard that cow's milk isn't even good for you. Is this true? I mean it sure does seem abnormal that humans are the only species that drinks another species' milk.
ugh! How can you guys OK drinking milk? disgusting! You SHOULD be supporting a healthy animal-free diet. You guys need to be vegan 100%. Half your recipes are vegan anyway - just go the rest of the way.
milk is for baby cows.
Why are animal rights and environmental groups so antidairy?
Speaking solely to the AR aspect, rightists see that nonhuman animals deserve not to be treated as property. In other words, not to be used at all. They have the capacity for pain, suffering, and joy, and should be free to live their lives as they wish rather than artificially inseminated, bred, kept in captivity and slaughtered at a young age for our consumption, particularly when it is all entirely unnecessary.
Is it really natural to drink another mammals milk? I don't think so...
I can't believe how judgemental some of you are. For a lot of people looking at this site, vegetarianism is a big first step, let alone becoming a vegan and giving up food such as milk that they have had all their life. The last thing they need is people like you looking down on them for drinking "disgusting" milk.
Nobody 'needs' to be vegan. It's a life choice. How do you feel when people look down at you for choosing not to eat animal products? It goes both ways. Get off the high horses already and let people explore these choices and do what is right for them.
I believe when people are empowered to learn about where their food is coming from and become more in touch with their food and nature at the most basic level, they will then begin to understand the need for compassion and harmony with our animals and the planet we share.
I'm a former raw foodist & vegan (total 5 y.), I agree with Angela, I'm a happy, balanced lacto-ovo, I've been like some of you in the past, but I'm so happy to have lost that sense of superiority r.f. & veganism gave me and worried everybody around me.
This is Vegetarian Times, not Vegan Times. I do appreciate all the vegan recipes in this magazine.
How do I feel when people look down on me for not eating animal products? I feel like they're uneducated and/or in denial. And remember, kids, vegan is not synonomous with high horse. That's just one of those qualities people like to ascribe to us in order to justify their own non-veg choices.
I agree, becoming vegetarian is a huge first step, and if it is the only step that some people can make, then good for them. Being extreme as in vegan is not necessary, being educated is. Buying organic and supporting farms that promote healthy animals, to provide healthy milk, cheese and eggs is a way that everyone can win.
I agree that vegetarianism is a huge step for a lot of people and it's a very good one. But I'm at a loss as to why anyone would look down on someone for not using animal products, but whatever. I also agree with mrc about the uneducated/in denial thing, because whenever anyone asks me to explain my veganism, they say stuff like, "Don't tell me that!" or "I don't want to know." And, for the record, I never offer that info unless someone asks me.
When we speak of making choices, let us consider how our choices impact those who have no choice at all -- the animals used by the industry. When a dairy cow mournfully bellows throughout the night after her newborn calf has been removed so that people can take her milk, her choice - and her sorrow - is ignored. Her male offspring will likely end up in a veal crate. The crated veal industry arose to derive economic benefit from the otherwise "useless" male offspring of dairy cows, who are impregnated annually to keep them lactating. These ethical issues are not solved by buying "organic." Every step taken to replace animal foods with plant foods is something to be glad for, and more power to everyone who tries!
I find very positive people with different opinions sharing their perspectives. I think that choosing veganism is a completely respectful decision, and from my point of view is something more ethical than anything else. I don't think it's something radical or extreme. The way societies profit animals is just insane and unfair because somewhere in the "development highway" we forgot that all living beings keep an harmonic equilibrium with their environments and with this planet.... everybody but us living in more or less developed countries.
Nomads in Somalia, for example, have camels as one of their most important companions. They have a very extreme and hard lifestyle that we westerns reading Vegetarian Times, surfing in the internet and worrying about getting a good iron intake just can't imagine. Camels are respected animals not just milk producers. Somalian nomads drink camel's milk but they just take a certain amount of milk and they left the rest for the baby camel. They make the same with the goats. Because EVERYBODY needs to survive..... I found that example very illustrative about how far we are from this direct relation with animals.
So glad that other people such as Sunflower and Angela have refuted the judgmental remark made about those who are still drinking milk. Clearly the comment is made to try and make people change their mind. Yet... Some people "SHOULD" (sic) be smart enough to know that a demanding or guilt-making tone only alienates people, especially those who are making a huge change in their diets.
A holier-than-thou tone (as opposed to the thoughtful distinctions made in the article) just chased off some people who are trying to become vegetarian, and who won't continue reading ahead. The magazine is called "Vegetarian", not "Vegan" Times. You need to ask yourself, would I rather encourage 100 people to become vegetarians, knowing that some of them would eventually become vegan, or would I prefer yelling at people for not meeting my standards, with the end result being 10 "perfect" vegans, and 90 people who scuttled away from vegetarianism, because they found the people too "judgmental" and all the "rules" too daunting?
No, vegan is not synonymous with high horse. But those vegans who exhibit that kind of behavior are the ones who turn off their friends and family from healthier food and habits.
I love this magazine and am doing well in the recipes and they are a breeze to prepare. Those of you out there who have and will change to vegetarian or vegan have my blessings. All of you with differences and attitudes are truly amazing.Thankyou for the ideas and tidbits of info. Im a newbie and not sure about the milk issue....the substitutes are interersting in flavour to be sure.
"And God blessed them and soid to them, be fruitful, multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue it using all its vast resources in the service of God and man. And have dominion over the fish of the sea, the birds of the air, and over every living creature that moves upon the earth.
"And God said, See, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is on the face of all the land and every tree with seed in its fruit; you shall have them for food." Genesis 1 verse28-29
Let no man condemn you for how you choose to nourish your body.
I didn't see anyone mention that milk has hormones which may cause acne (most recent issue). My wife also says that there are people who avoid cancer by avoiding milk and milk products. I don't miss it, especially since there are many soy milks out there.
I didn't see anyone mention that milk has hormones which may cause acne (most recent issue). My wife also says that there are people who avoid cancer by avoiding milk and milk products. I don't miss it, especially since there are many soy products that you can use as substitutes. My
I have been a vegetarian for only a month. This is extremely difficult for me because I hate vegetables. I rely on dairy and eggs until I can make a successful improvement in my intake of plant matter. I'm trying to do the right thing for the right reasons. Give me a break here!
I've been a vegetarian to different degrees over the years (since I was 11, I'm now 45!). I think everyone needs to make the choices that work for them and not have others judge that choice. I do eat dairy products though I try and eat organic from small sustainable farms that treat their animals with dignity and respect. Soy milk would actually not work for me as I have been warned by my doctor due to a hx of breast cancer in my family not to eat too much soy (as it has phyto estrogen properties).
The bottom line is do what's right for you and don't let others (meat eaters or vegans) judge you.
Try making your own milk; almond milk or rice milk. It will save you money and it's something that you are doing instead of watching television. Be more active in life PLEASE people. Be more like the www.thegardendiet.com family!! You can learn A LOT from them!
God gave humans dominion not domination. I think everyone who is vegetarian should make changes they can live with. It is not all or nothing. You can drink soymilk but still consume cheese. Do what is best for you at the time and be open to changes in the future. I don't know anyone who was turned on to vegetariansim by a vegan. Yet I know a lot who were turned on by a vegetarian. I would love it if the world was vegan, but right now I believe we need to increase the population of vegetarians in the US for the majority to stop and think.
Did you know that the average gallon carton (from a factory farm) of 2% milk is 1/16th pus? That's because the poor cows are so stressed out! Most of them get claustraphobia, I'd think.
I would not trust nutrition advice from a doctor. Over 90% have never taken a nutrtion class. They are taught to treat, not prevent disease.
Milk is disgusting and unnatural to drink. Human babies drink milk because they need it to live. Once they are weaned, this is unnecessary. MIlk also tastes nasty and I hate to drink it. I force myself to put it on my cereal.
I completely agree with Lorraine, I've lichen right now and soy&stress have caused it, I'm intollerant even to lecithin right now, and I know a woman who has a lot of thyroid problems caused by previous soy use.
So use it in moderation and in the more natural forms.
I won't, anymore.
I've been reading John Robbins' books and The China Study, which give evidence for the idea that dairy, like other animal protein, can be a contributing cause for cancer, heart disease, osteo, etc. I have two kids and am finding it difficult to know how to feed them. Why is this information not mainstream?
Lauragh, that info is not mainstream because the big dairy conglomerates and other big business DON'T WANT it to be and they have serious lobbying power.
That said, I think anyone trying to make even a small change for the better should be applauded, not degraded.