6 Things You Didn't Know About Skim Milk

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Think Fat-Free Milk is Healthy? 6 Secrets You Don’t Know About Skim
Written on September 6, 2012 by ButterBeliever in Myth Busting

Fat-free skim milk is the quintessential staple of any health-conscious home in America. You’re supposed to drink skim because whole milk has too much fat, too many calories, and cholesterol that can give you heart disease. Right?

In case you’ve been led to believe these lies, I’ve got a few things I’d like you to know about the darling of the dairy industry, skim milk.

1. It was designed to profit off of you, not make you healthy.


People haven’t always bought into the idea that fat is unhealthy. It all started with a flawed theory by a really bad scientist who said that saturated fat and cholesterol cause heart disease. Which is pretty weird, considering no one had heart attacks around the turn of the century when everyone was still eating pounds of butter and cream every week.

Somehow, by the time World War II rolled around, we were all convinced that fat was the enemy, anyway. Butter was replaced with cheap margarine made from toxic industrial oils, and creamy, full-fat milk was dumped in favor of skim.

Dairy manufacturers were thrilled with this new trend, however, because what was once an industrial waste product had quickly become a highly-desirable “health food.” When cream was skimmed from milk, the remaining fat-free milk used to be considered a nearly useless byproduct of obtaining the cream. But, market that wasteful skim milk as being a healthful choice for consumers, and suddenly, you’ve got a serious money-maker on your hands! Now, the agribusiness giants running the dairy industry are able to profit off of both products, and don’t intend on stopping anytime soon.

2. It’s got a mystery ingredient they’re not telling you about.

Before processing, skim milk has a very unappetizing blueish color, a chalky taste, and watery texture that doesn’t resemble natural milk at all. So, to whiten, thicken, and make it taste a little more normal, powdered milk solids are often mixed into the milk.

What’s so bad about powdered milk? Well, in the manufacturing process, liquid milk is forced through tiny holes at very high pressure, which causes the cholesterol in the milk to oxidize, and toxic nitrates to form. Oxidized cholesterol contributes to the buildup of plaque in the arteries, while unoxidized cholesterol from unprocessed foods is actually an antioxidant to help fight inflammation in the body. The proteins found in powdered milk are so denatured that they are unrecognizable by the body and contribute to inflammation.

Shockingly, dairy manufacturers are not required by the FDA to label the powdered milk as a separate ingredient, because it’s still technically just “milk,” the single ingredient found on the list. So, there’s no way to be sure that it is or isn’t in your fat-free or low-fat dairy products.

3. It contains antibiotics, nasty bodily fluids, and GMOs


Water downstream of a factory farm in Idaho, where animals are generally knee-deep in their own waste.

The skim milk you’ll find in most grocery stores is a mass-produced product from animals in concentrated animal feeding operations, or factory farms, where the cows are kept in confinement and fed a diet that is completely inappropriate for their species. Because cows are designed to eat grass, when they are fed a diet consisting primarily of corn, as they are in factory farms, they get sick.

And because they get sick, they’re given a steady stream of antibiotics in their feed to keep them alive so they can continue to produce. But because they’re still fighting off infections, things like blood and pus from open sores frequently make their way into the finished product — the milk we see on store shelves. The FDA allows up to 750 million pus cells per liter of milk, to be sold legally.

Also legal, are the injections of recombinant bovine growth hormones, or rBGH, a known carcinogen banned in virtually every industrialized nation in the world, except the United States. The “recombinant” part of the growth hormone means that it was genetically modified from the cow’s natural growth hormones to stimulate increased milk production.

4. It’s provides almost no nutritional value.

Real milk really does do a body good. It has many valuable nutrients in it. In addition to vital minerals like calcium, milk provides vitamins D, A, E, and K.

Well, skim milk actually has no vitamin K because it’s concentrated in the butterfat of the milk. And as for the others? They are fat-soluble vitamins. So even if you were to get a little bit of them in from drinking your fat-free milk, you won’t actually be able to absorb and assimilate them into your body. Unless, maybe, you paired your glass of skim with a nice heaping spread of butter over toast or something!

But, if you’re not getting milk from a farm that raises cows on green pastures instead of in concentrated animal-feeding factories, your milk won’t have very much of those essential fat-soluble vitamins. Cows get their vitamin E, A, and K from the nutrients they eat in grass, and vitamin D from cruising around in the sunlight all day. Also, because confinement dairy cows are bred for unnaturally-high levels of milk production, the vitamin content of the milk is severely diluted, as the cow only transfers a set amount of vitamins to her milk supply.

As for the rest of the nutrition in skim milk from factory farms? Well, it does provide a bit of denatured (and therefore, potentially quite harmful) protein, thanks to high-heat pasteurization. But no beneficial enzymes and probiotic microflora — those are all killed off in the pasteurization process — which aid in digestion.

And then of course, some chemically-synthesized vitamin D is usually added since confinement cows are severely lacking in it. Except the kind that humans and animals are able to assimilate from exposure to the sun, vitamin D3, isn’t at all the same as the manufactured D they dump into skim milk — synthetic vitamin D2. A study referenced by the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition concluded that synthetic vitamin D2 “should no longer be regarded as a nutrient appropriate for supplementation or fortification of foods,” because of how basically worthless it is to your body.

5. It won’t make or keep you skinny.


Farmers knew well before skim milk was marketed as a waistline-slimming health food what it really is good for — fattening you up! Skim milk has traditionally been fed to pigs to help them bulk up for slaughter. They of course would save the good part, the cream, for human consumption.

Today, our school children who have been guinea pigs of the misguided nutritional advice to drink fat-free milk instead of whole milk, certainly aren’t any thinner for it. Researchers at the Harvard medical school found that, contrary to their hypothesis, “skim and 1% milk were associated with weight gain, but dairy fat was not,” in a study in which thousands of children’s milk drinking habits were surveyed.

Adults aren’t faring much better with swapping whole milk for skim. Studies have showed time and time again that a reduced-fat diet, similarly to a reduced-calorie diet, does not result in long-term weight loss and health, but instead leads only to “transient” weight loss — that would be weight that comes piling right back on after it’s temporarily shed. This is because healthy fats actually curb your appetite and trigger the production of hormones which tell the brain when you’re full. If you’re not eating fat, you stay constantly hungry, and wind up binging on unhealthy food. Fat-free milk essentially signals to your body that something is missing, which leads to overeating and weight gain.

6. It won’t help you avoid heart disease


Fat-free milk is supposed to be “heart healthy” because it lacks the saturated fat and cholesterol that whole milk contains.

It really boggles my mind how prevalent the completely de-bunked theory still is that heart disease is caused by the intake of saturated fat. One guy makes up a totally bogus “scientific” study that points to countries with a high-fat diet having high rates of heart disease, while leaving out all the countries of people eating tons of fat and having almost zero heart disease. And somehow, seventy years later, we’re still singing his praises and demonizing saturated fat and cholesterol?
 
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Dana

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Think about it. Were our ancestors eating fat-free sour cream, cholesterol-free “buttery spreads” or skim milk? Of course not. Dairy had always been consumed in its whole, full-fat form before the industrialization of foods began. And no one had heart disease. The field of medical cardiology didn’t even exist until the advent of industrial seed oils packed with toxic polyunsaturated fat.

When you look at basic history, or even modern trends of disease in the last century, as intake of foods high in saturated fat and cholesterol have decreased, heart disease has been steadily skyrocketing. So, why is this myth that saturated fat and cholesterol are causing it, still being perpetuated? It doesn’t make any logical sense.

Could it be because 25% of the adult population is taking expensive statin medications that make players in the medical and pharmaceutical industries a whole lot of money? Or that the processed food industry doesn’t want you to know just how much more they profit off of foods produced with cheap, shelf-stable industrial oils, as opposed to real, saturated fat?

Heart disease is in no way caused by dietary cholesterol and saturated fat. It just isn’t. Even heart surgeons are starting to speak out on the fact that “the science that saturated fat alone causes heart disease is non-existent.” Do we really need more proof?
What kind of milk is healthy?

There’s no reason to ever buy fat-free milk or fat-free dairy products, or even low-fat ones, if for no other reason than there’s no need to avoid the dietary fat found in milk — saturated fat, which is essential to health. Most skim milk is a highly processed food that is usually born of a factory, not a farm, and is not a healthy choice at all.

The best choice is fresh, clean milk from happy cows grazing on the grass of a real farm. Just the way it came from the cow — whole, unprocessed, and with all its nutrients intact. Including the fat.

You can find real, whole milk from a farm near you in most states, on the RealMilk.com directory.
What about you? Were you ever convinced that skim milk is healthy?

http://butterbeliever.com/fat-free-dairy-skim-milk-secrets/
 

Natasha

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Think about it. Were our ancestors eating fat-free sour cream, cholesterol-free “buttery spreads” or skim milk? Of course not. Dairy had always been consumed in its whole, full-fat form before the industrialization of foods began. And no one had heart disease. The field of medical cardiology didn’t even exist until the advent of industrial seed oils packed with toxic polyunsaturated fat.

I love when people make this argument b/c they invariably forget that they were also much more active than the average person is today. They didn't sit on their asses watching 8 hours of TV a day...they were out in the fields plowing, picking vegetables, and so on. Kids were outside running and playing, not sitting in front of an Xbox or Playstation.
 

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tl:dr - food is bad for you,corporations would rather kill their customers for extra profit.

move to a hippy commune and grow your own.
 

Dana

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I love when people make this argument b/c they invariably forget that they were also much more active than the average person is today. They didn't sit on their asses watching 8 hours of TV a day...they were out in the fields plowing, picking vegetables, and so on. Kids were outside running and playing, not sitting in front of an Xbox or Playstation.

I'm not saying laziness doesn't come into play at all. Of course it does. Society has gotten fucking lazy. If you consume fat and lay around sitting on your ass you'll be nothing but a fat ass. My point was eating closer to where your food comes from instead of ingesting the chemical laced shit that has the shelf life of plutonium is still better for you; if you lead an active lifestyle.

Kakapo, dude do you ever have anything worth a damn to say in these threads? If people who eat clean and organic and try to shun as much mass produced shit as possible are fucking hippies so be it. Go gorge yourself on Micky D's and stay the Hell out of my thread unless you have a constructive response.

fuel; I actually agree with 100%. I do not consume milk. I do however have a weakness for cheese and yogurt. But since they are processed differently they digest differently in your body than milk does. I don't even drink cow milk anymore.
 

Natasha

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I'm not saying laziness doesn't come into play at all. Of course it does. Society has gotten fucking lazy. If you consume fat and lay around sitting on your ass you'll be nothing but a fat ass. My point was eating closer to where your food comes from instead of ingesting the chemical laced shit that has the shelf life of plutonium is still better for you; if you lead an active lifestyle.

Of course it is. I hope this means you've cleaned your fridge of hot pockets now, LOL :p
 

Kakapo Dundee

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Kakapo, dude do you ever have anything worth a damn to say in these threads? If people who eat clean and organic and try to shun as much mass produced shit as possible are fucking hippies so be it. Go gorge yourself on Micky D's and stay the Hell out of my thread unless you have a constructive response.
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I believe I'm supposed to be offended by this, but seriously? too busy laughing.

I'll declare an interest here, I work in the dairy industry.

Let's look at some of the claims that you make.

Yes we're in the business of making money.That's how the world works.

How do we do it? We make what people want to buy. Again, that's how the world works.

Would it be a good idea for us to poison our customers? Probably not. If they're dead, they can't buy more. Again, that's how the world works.

Is it a good business to be in? Bloody oath it is. Thanks to continuous research and development, plain old milk can be turned into all manner of things.

What's one of the biggest products of the dairy industry? Tax dollars. If we're that evil, better stop taking the benefits that we pump back into the economy from all of our hard work.

Looking at the site that you cut/pasted this drivel from, there's a disclaimer.

http://butterbeliever.com/aboutme/disclaimer/

The author has no qualifications.

We're experts at what we do. There are numerous government agencies that monitor and control the way in which we do it.

In short, we provide an excellent lifestyle for thousands of families by working the land and adding value to create products that people want, at prices they are prepared to pay. In doing so, we pump billions of dollars into the rural economy, and billions more into the tax reserves.

If you are in any way concerned about what we make, or how it's made, don't buy it. There's more demand than supply, you will not be missed.

One small favour I would ask in return - before you cut/paste the sanctimonious drivel of an activist, read it right through,ask critical questions, look for any hard evidence sources. Read the full website and see if there is any evidence that she has the qualifications to back up her conspiracy theories.
 

Kakapo Dundee

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You will forever find differing opinions on every subject.. As an example this site list 10 pros and cons on milk..

After the teenage years one requires much less milk but I guess everyone is different.

Milk is an excellent source of calcium, essential in the prevention of osteoporosis. It would be a shame if the snivelling hippies managed to convince an aging population that they'd be better off with brittle bones.
 

Francis

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Milk is an excellent source of calcium, essential in the prevention of osteoporosis. It would be a shame if the snivelling hippies managed to convince an aging population that they'd be better off with brittle bones.

True but Milk in Adults can often cause intestinal lactose digestion problems. Does it mean all adults should not drink milk or milk bi-products, nope, but again everything in moderation.. ;)
 
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