What is Cream Line MILK? Cream line
milk is, simply milk that is allowed to be milk. Like the milk
found on most store shelves, cream line milk is pasteurized.
We do not, however, homogenize our milk. Homogenization is, in
short, the process by which the cream (or fat content) in the
milk is permanently mixed into the body of the milk, eliminating
the separation-or cream line-that is characteristic of
fresh-from-the-farm milk. The process of homogenization uses
very high pressure to break down the fat molecules into
particles so small that they can be dissolved into the rest of
the milk. They lose buoyancy and thus, the cream never rises to
the top of homogenized milk. We believe that homogenization
diminishes the flavor and decreases many of the health benefits
of milk. Studies have shown that when fat molecules are
forcibly broken up by mechanical means, an enzyme called
Xanthine Oxidase is released and allowed to penetrate the
intestinal wall. Once it gets through the intestinal wall,
Xanthine Oxidase gets into the bloodstream and is capable of
creating scar damage to the heart and arteries, which may in
turn cause the body to release cholesterol into the blood as a
means of protecting the scarred areas with fatty tissue. This
can lead to Arteriosclerosis. When un-homogenized milk is
consumed, Xanthine Oxidase is normally excreted from the body
without much absorption. Our Milk is also free of controversial
growth hormones including rBST, and is free of animal byproducts.
Cows were meant to eat plants not animals, thus the food they
eat here contains no animal byproducts.
HEALTHY COWS ARE HAPPY COWS. The way a
cow lives and is treated plays a large part in her ability to
produce healthy milk. Our cows at Westvale-Vu Dairy spend their
days outside when weather permits to lay and graze on our
pastures. We take special care to provide warm, dry cover from
rain, snow and inclement weather, including providing a cooling
mist for them to walk through during the hottest days of summer.
Milk is all natural.
DO YOU KNOW WHERE YOU MILK COMES FROM?