Joke: How do you dramatically increase sales of a new or unpopular food product to the American public?
Answer: Call it a health food!
This joke, while funny, is also very sad as it illustrates with humor what common sense, logic, observation, and facts cannot for the vast majority of Westerners. Time and time again, Americans are completely duped by the clever marketing of a food product, falling all over themselves to buy it just because it has been touted in the media and by their (equally duped) doctors as a food that will improve their health.
Don’t believe it? How about margarine? Americans, in the span of just a few short years after World War II, all but completely shunned butter and this behavior pattern continued for decades because saturated fat was supposedly the demon of heart disease. See my blog which explains the truth about butter. Americans are finally waking up to the fact that butter is a wonderful, truly natural health food. Margarine and fake butter spreads like Smart Balance are ironically the culprits that contribute to heart disease!
What about soy and soy milk? This is another supposed “health food” that has been proven to do nothing but cause an epidemic of hypothyroidism in the Western world (you know the symptoms: overweight, losing your hair, depressed, tired all the time). Soy in Asia, as it has been consumed for thousands of years, is always fermented for long periods of time before it can be safely consumed – and even then – in very small quantities! The modern processing of soy which involves grinding up the leftover soy protein, the waste product in the production of soy oil, and putting it in all manner of food products which line our grocery store shelves makes for a dangerous and health robbing line of consumer goods.
I also blogged recently about the latest healthfood scam:Â agave nectar. Here again, is an example of a new food that was marketed using the “health food” label. This approach to selling to the American people is obviously working as these products are readily available in most health food stores despite the fact that this product has a more deadly concentration of fructose than the high fructose corn syrup in soda!
Now, On to Skim Milk!
Hopefully, you are now convinced that labeling an item as a “health food” is a frequently used approach for selling something to the American public. Skim milk falls into this same category.
Prior to World War II, Americans didn’t ever drink skim or low-fat milk. Drinking such a product to stay “thin and healthy” would have been laughable. Americans would only drink whole milk. In fact, the larger the cream line on their milk, the higher the quality of the milk and the more likely the consumer was to buy it. Milk wasn’t homogenized in those days, so a consumer could easily see the distinct cream line on the milk to determine quality.
Cream has been considered a true health food for centuries. In Ancient Greece, Olympic athletes drank a bowlful of cream to give them strength and endurance before a competition. Why? Because cream steadies blood sugar for an extended period of time. No ups and downs in insulin when your diet has lots of wonderful saturated fat in it. It is only when you eat low-fat that blood sugar issues such as diabetes and hypoglycemia tend to arise.
So, how did skim milk come to be recognized as a health food in America? It all ties back to the demonization of saturated fats that began shortly after World War II. Americans started to abandon butter and cream in droves about this time because studies had apparently shown that saturated fat was linked to the growing number of heart disease cases in America. Never mind that atherosclerosis (clogged arteries) was virtually unknown prior to the mid-1920s when Americans drowned everything in cream and butter. Logic and observation clearly indicated that saturated fat could not possibly be the cause of heart disease – it was obviously something new that had been introduced into the American diet. Of course, this “something” is partially hydrogenated fats which were introduced around 1921 (Enter the first transfat … Crisco. Bingo! First documented heart attack from atherosclerosis in 1927, and it rapidly got worse from there). These factory fats are primarily responsible for the epidemic of heart disease yet saturated fats took the fall anyway.
With Americans abandoning whole milk due to its high saturated fat content, skim milk was touted as the new heart-healthy food. Americans bought the scam hook, line, and sinker. Skim milk was the new king of the dairy aisle. This behavior pattern has continued for decades despite the average American getting fatter and fatter and the cases of heart disease showing no signs of abating.
In the 1990s with the beginnings of the childhood obesity epidemic, doctors even started to encourage parents to switch their children to skim or low-fat milk around age 2. This foolish recommendation has done nothing but make kids fatter (source).
How does drinking skim milk make kids (and adults) fatter? This apparent paradox occurs when you reduce the saturated fat in a person’s diet and he/she turns to carbs (grains and sugars primarily) to fill in the gap. It is the grains and sugars that truly make you fat, not saturated fat. I’ve said before on this blog that the more butter and cream I eat, the easier it is to maintain my weight. MUCH easier. The same goes for all of us. If you drink skim milk, you will be missing out on the satiating, blood sugar and insulin steadying effects of saturated fat, so your body will automatically give you sugar and carb (grains) cravings to make up for it. The body is able to MAKE saturated fat out of sugars, hence the sugar cravings that are impossible to control when you eat a low-fat diet that includes skim milk.
Try it! Increase your consumption of butter, whole milk yogurt, and whole milk cheese for a few days and watch your sugar cravings rapidly diminish!
Another big secret is that Big Dairy adds skim milk powder to skim milk. Here’s an excerpt from “Dirty Secrets of the Food Processing Industry” from the Weston A. Price Website:
A note on the production of skim milk powder: liquid milk is forced through a tiny hole at high pressure, and then blown out into the air. This causes a lot of nitrates to form and the cholesterol in the milk is oxidized. Those of you who are familiar with my work know that cholesterol is your best friend; you don’t have to worry about natural cholesterol in your food; however, you do not want to eat oxidized cholesterol. Oxidized cholesterol contributes to the buildup of plaque in the arteries, to atherosclerosis. So when you drink reduced-fat milk thinking that it will help you avoid heart disease, you are actually consuming oxidized cholesterol, which initiates the process of heart disease.
One parting fact: pig farmers love feeding skim milk to their pigs. Why? It makes them REALLY fat! Still want to drink your skim milk? I hope not.
Still confused about fat? Please see my healthy shopping list for where to buy healthy fats and oils.
More Information
Why Milk Matters and Why it isn’t Just for Baby Cows
101 Uses for Raw Milk that has Soured
A1 and A2 Milk: Do Cow Genetics Even Matter?
A1 and A2 Factor in Raw Milk
Karen Pryal
I used to drink low fat milk when I was younger but I always much preferred whole milk. The only problem was I couldn’t get a non homogenized one till recently now my local supermarket is selling it from the Adare Farm in Limerick. It’s the best milk I’ve tried and there is a thick cream line at the top. The cows graze on lush fields of green grass to produce this high quality milk.
Vicki Cox
How am I to believe you when you claim the first heart attack didn’t come until 1927?? It’s a bogus claim. We know artherosclerosis was present in pharaohs 3500 years ago.
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
Artherosclerosis doesn’t necessarily mean a heart attack occurs or that being the cause of death.
Johny
Heart attacks have various causes. Its like your writing propaganda by saying the first heart attack was in 1927. You really discredit yourself by saying that.
James Hudock via Facebook
Now they tell us, now that we’ve been drinking it for years! tisk tisk!
Diane Paxton via Facebook
Make mine whole milk…preferably raw please
Jennifer Figueroa Frechmann via Facebook
I drank skim for a while. Then hubby always add fun of me for drinking milk water. That it was the leftovers from when they rinsed out the tanks. Lol. Bought whole for my kiddo and never went back!
Cassie Haga Meadows via Facebook
Skim milk is water pretending to be milk; a liar and a deceiver lol. Drank 2% my whole life until I had kids and now we’ve switched to whole milk. We drink a lot of milk, like 3 or more gallons a week. We really need a cow out back. If I could get raw milk I would, but of the processed mills whole is the least processed. I wish I could find un homogenized milk.
Ruth Morgan via Facebook
I don’t really drink milk, but keep it in the fridge for cooking and that occasional bowl of cereal. My usual breakfast consists of dry Cheerios; easy to eat from a baggie on the go.
Kari Olson
You would do so much better eating organic oatmeal soaked overnight with a little whey. Processed grains are so bad!
Maureen Anne LyonsAdair via Facebook
Raw Milk even better
Danielle Davis via Facebook
What about using the milk that you skimmed the cream off of for butter or whipped cream? What to do with it? Or the buttermilk that comes from making butter? It seems wrong to throw it out & you can sub those left over milk products for milk rather easily.
Marie
this is what i want to know as well.. i keep reading how bad it is to drink skim milk, but most of them are talking about (to my mind) the dangers of avoiding fat… i dont want to avoid the fat, i want to make BUTTER… and whipped cream, and CHEESE, with my cream, and then my kids will kill me if they dont get milk as well LOL. So as long as we are still getting our lovely raw butterfat in SOME form, is it ok to drink the now skimmed raw milk? Or should i feed it to the chickens???
Dawne
that “skimmed” milk that you took the cream from is not the same as the “skim” milk that is sold in stores. Yours is still good milk, just not loaded with yummy cream. The stuff at stores has had all of the milkfat (cream) removed and then added back in percentages. It has been standardized. even “Whole” milk in the store is only about 3%, while straight from the cow is 5-7% or more (depends on breed and nutrition etc). Don’t fall for the propaganda….
Brandy
What I have read is that as long as you are consuming the fat that would have been in the milk it’s okay. I am reading farmer boy with my kids and they drank the butter milk and loved it. They also ate tons of pastured meats and butter.
Kim Griffin via Facebook
Here at my home, we had a man who drank skim milk for years until he met me and we switched to raw. I can see he was close to heart disease but I believe we are reversing this after finding the Weston A Price Foundation. And adopting these principles minus the grains.