I was offered raw milk for the very first time as a teenager at my uncle’s dairy farm in Chautauqua County, New York. I had spent the afternoon riding his beautiful palomino all over the rolling hills of the spacious farm and was feeling very hot and sweaty (and thirsty!) by the time I returned in the early evening.
A large, stainless steel pitcher sat in the middle of the dinner table filled to the rim with cold, frothy milk. It looked so inviting. I still vividly remember the condensation from the pitcher dripping onto my Aunt’s red checkerboard tablecloth.
My uncle asked me if I wanted a glass.
I knew what it was. My mother had warned me about it.
It was raw milk. Straight from the cow.
I quickly shook my head and emphatically said “no”.
I imagined that the milk would somehow taste horrible, scald my throat and make me keel over on contact.
My uncle smiled understandingly and told me that the milk tasted great and that I would enjoy it. I was tempted to try some despite the workings of my overactive imagination. But the warnings from my mother that raw milk was dangerous overpowered my curiosity.
To this day, I regret never trying Uncle Harry’s raw milk. The farm has long since been sold and my Uncle has passed away, but that nagging sensation that there was something about that milk I needed to know and experience firsthand never quite left me.
Fast forward several decades. My family has been drinking raw milk now for over 15 years. It is the only milk my children have ever known. In fact, they won’t touch pasteurized versions preferring to drink water if the Real Thing isn’t available.
So what changed my mind about raw milk? Why do I drink it today and wouldn’t touch it as a teenager?
The Truth about Raw Milk
When my first child (who is about to turn 18) was being weaned from breastmilk at the age of two, I started researching options for the best and most nutritious beverage that he could consume. This search after months of reading and soul searching (and a brief stint with soy milk) led me to a grassfed dairy farmer from Pennsylvania. There was no better option for my growing child than clean, nutritious raw milk from healthy cows grazing on unsprayed pastures. It is one of the safest foods your children could possibly consume according to CDC data.
The FDA website identifies pasteurized milk as the most allergenic food in America. Raw milk is different, however. Raw milk nurtures and grows children’s immunity with superior nutrition, naturally occurring probiotics and enzymes that protect them from asthma, allergies and many other ailments. Research has repeatedly confirmed this to be the case.
I’ve never regretted making the choice for raw milk for my family. In almost 18 years, my children have never needed antibiotics. Neither do they suffer from allergies or other autoimmune issues. I even drank milk when I was pregnant and lactating with my two youngest children. CDC data again confirms that this is a safe choice despite media reports to the contrary. Raw milk helped preserve my own health from the nutrient drain and resultant fatigue that having multiple children can often cause for some women.
The $64,000 Question: How Does Raw Milk Taste?
You can talk about the benefits of raw milk until the cows come home, but the bottom line is taste.
How in fact does raw milk taste?
If it doesn’t taste good compared with processed milk, all the safety and nutrition data in the world don’t matter. People won’t keep drinking it long term.
The good news is that raw milk taste, is, well, fantastic!
It really is hard to describe exactly how amazing until you try it for yourself. I’ve had some friends describe the taste like melted vanilla ice cream. This is a good description, but I don’t think it quite captures the freshness aspect of raw milk.
The way I try to explain it to people in a way that they can understand is by using orange juice as a familiar example.
We all have tasted processed orange juice from the store, right? Well, compare that to orange juice that is fresh-squeezed right in your own home. I’m not talking about the orange juice in the carton in the supermarket that claims to be fresh-squeezed. That stuff is actually pasteurized.
Big difference.
I’m talking about orange juice that you squeeze yourself in your own kitchen or get at a juice bar where the oranges are squeezed right in front of you.
Truly fresh, raw orange juice tastes amazing, does it not? There really is no comparison to processed orange juice from the store whether it comes in a carton falsely labeled “fresh squeezed” or reconstituted from a can with water.
Take that experience of tasting raw orange juice versus processed orange juice and apply it to milk. Hopefully, you can see that it is no exaggeration to say that raw milk taste is far better and fresher than processed milk even if it is organic.
What to Do If You Can’t Get Raw Milk Where You Live
Have you tried raw milk yourself yet? I hope you get to try some soon if you haven’t already. It is worth the leap.
Check this raw milk finder to find a farm near you!
If you live in Canada, you can legally drive across the border to the US, buy raw milk and return home as long as it is for personal consumption only.
Terry
First of all I love your articles. Recently diagnosed with Lyme and through research have found it is passed through breast milk of moms who have Lyme. Is there any thing in place to check for cows that may be infected. I have a organic farm down the road which we love their raw milk and yogurts.Have been drinking raw milk for years.Thanks for your hard work and research that helps us all.
John
I love milk, had my first chance to taste raw milk. The story is too long to tell you so I will cut to the chase, my father in law (83 years old) and a true farmer brought it to my house a half hour out of the belly. It was warm and I was a bit nervous. I put it in the refrigerator and the following morning took my first sip. My brain remembered everything good in this world, I became a kid again. Nectar from the Gods. Rich, creamy and my cereal became lunch and almost dinner. However I’m sure the FDA has reasons but I’m not going down that political slope.
GTH
I understand you need compensation for your time and work but three ads in the body of your article and four within a 1:24 video is a little overkill isn’t it? It’s very disruptive.
Sarah
Thanks for letting me know. There must be something not working … I played the video several times and got no ads at all.
GTH
Watched the video again. It gave and ad for Garden Of Life at the beginning, at fifteen seconds in, at the 1 minute mark and at the end. This time it was all the same ad. Last time it alternated between two different ones. Each time it pauses your video, makes me wait 4 seconds then gives me the option to skip ad. I am using Safari as a browser. Don’t know if that makes a difference.
Sarah
I just watched it and there was one ad along the bottom of the screen at the beginning that did not disrupt the playing of the video at all. All seems to be working properly from my end.
Christine
We call it “real milk” in our house. This article was very informative about camel milk. I didn’t even know there was such a thing.
Kay E
It tastes delicious! Our grandchildren say no thanks to pasteurized. They want real milk!
RobinP
Seven years ago we decided to get a Jersey milk cow because I was convinced that ridding ourselves of the pasteurized poison in the store was the next step we needed to take in our food journey. We had no experience with cows, let alone drinking the liquid gold from them. Before our cow, Lynette, was delivered to our property I asked a friend if I could taste some of the milk from her cow. Oh my goodness! What a treat! So sweet and delicious! It’s worth going out twice a day to get some of that “fresh-squeezed” goodness!
Susan
At my house we call it real milk.
Kay
We’ve been drinking raw milk for three years, in New York, from a farm selling the only certified raw milk in six counties. It is everything Sarah says it is. My granddaughter certainly enjoys it when she visits!
Heather T
My kids call the raw milk we drink “Fresh Squeezed”. He He
LD
Thankfully, here in Utah we have quite a few raw milk options. My kids have only ever had raw milk (which we actually call ‘fresh milk’ at our house:) )
Strangely though, it’s illegal here to sell raw cream, butter, sour cream, etc.
Sarah
We call it raw in our home instead of fresh milk because of the mislabeling of processed milk at the store as “fresh”. So much misleading advertising when it comes to the dairy industry 🙁