Super healthy milk.
By Jo Robinson
Most cartons of milk in the supermarket show a picture
of cows contentedly grazing on grass. Unfortunately, 85
to 95 percent of the cows in the United States are now
being raised in confinement, not on pasture. The only
grass they eat comes in the form of hay, and the ground
that they stand on is a blend of dirt and manure.
The reason for confining our cows in feedlots and feeding
them grain rather than grass is that they produce more
milk?especially when injected with bi-weekly hormones.
Today's grainfed cows produce three times as much milk
as the old family cow of days gone by.
With the current emphasis on quantity, the quality of
our milk has suffered. One of the biggest losses has been
in its CLA content. CLA or "conjugated linoleic acid"
is a type of fat that may prove to be one of our most
potent cancer fighters. Milk from a pastured cow can have
five times as much CLA as a grainfed animal. To date,
most of the proof of the health benefits of CLA has come
from test tube or animal studies. But a few recent human
studies have produced encouraging results. For example,
French researchers compared CLA levels in the breast tissues
of 360 women. The women with the most CLA in their tissue
(and thus the most CLA in their diets) had a 74 percent
lower risk of breast cancer than the women with the least
CLA.(Bougnoux et al, Inform, 10:S43, 1999.) If an American
woman were to switch from grainfed to grassfed dairy products,
she would have levels of CLA similar to those with the
lowest risk of cancer. Got CLA milk?
Milk from pastured cows also contains an ideal ratio
of essential fatty acids or EFAs. There are two families
of EFAs?omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids. Studies suggest
that if your diet contains roughly equal amounts of these
two fats, you will have a lower risk of cancer, cardiovascular
disease, autoimmune disorders, allergies, obesity, diabetes,
dementia, and various other mental disorders.
Take a few moments to study the chart below showing EFA
levels in milk from cows fed varying amounts of grass
and grain.[2] The green bars represent omega-3 fatty acids
in the milk, and the yellow bars represent omega-6 fatty
acids. As you can see, when a cow is raised on pasture
(represented by the two bars on the far left), her milk
has an ideal ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids.
Take away one third of the grass and replace it with grain
or other supplements (represented by the two bars in the
middle) and the omega-3 fatty acid content of the milk
goes down while the omega-6 fatty acid content goes up,
upsetting an essential balance. Replace two-thirds of
the pasture with a grain-based diet (illustrated by the
two bars on the far right) and the milk will have a very
top-heavy ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids, a ratio
that has been linked with an increased risk of a wide
vatiety of conditions, including obesity, diabetes, depression,
and cancer. Much of the milk you buy in the supermarket
has an even more lopsided ratio than the final set of
measuerments because they get no pasture whatsoever.
Milk from pastured cows offers additional health benefits.
(I'm beginning to sound like a TV infomercial: "But
wait! There's more!") Besides giving you five times
more CLA and an ideal balance of EFAs, grassfed milk is
higher in beta-carotene, vitamin A, and vitamin E. This
vitamin bonus comes, in part, from the fact that fresh
pasture has more of these nutrients than grain or hay.
(When grass is dried and turned into hay, it loses a significant
amount of its vitamin content.) These extra helpings of
vitamins are then transferred to the cow's milk.
There's another factor involved as well. A grazing cow
produces less milk than a cow fed a grain-based diet.
This turns out to be a bane for the farmer but a blessing
for the consumer. The less milk a cow produces, the more
vitamins in her milk.[3] This is because a cow has a set
amount of vitamins to transfer to her milk, and if she's
bred, fed, and injected to be a Super Producer, her milk
has fewer vitamins per glass. It's a watered down version
of the real thing.
Oh, I almost forgot the best part of all. Dairy products
from grassfed cows taste delicious, and they have a bright
yellow color that is visible proof of their bonus supply
of carotenes. Serve cheese or butter from a grass-based
dairy, and everyone will notice the difference. Also,
your cookies and cakes will have that rich buttery color
that hasn't been seen since Grandma's day. (You do bake,
don't you?)