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Milk...From Moo To You


MILK - REALLY COOL!

Milk is cool - a most excellent drink for kids and adults. Where does milk come from? How is it made? Why is it so good for you? To discover these awesome facts about the coolest drink on the planet, come along on a journey with MILK....FROM MOO TO YOU!

Milk is a very unique food. Babies can live on milk alone for the first six months of life. All animals that feed milk to their young are called mammals. You are a mammal and whales are mammals. Camel, bats, seals and bears are all mammals. And the animal that makes the milk we drink is also a mammal - the Cow!


COW IN THE WORLD DID THEY GET HERE?

Just like Canadian people whose ancestors came from other countries, the dairy cows that are commonly found in Canada originally came from overseas. As people moved here, they brought dairy cattle with them.

THE FACTS ARE BLACK & WHITE

The most popular and common breed of dairy cow in Canada is the Holstein which originally came from North Holland. You can recognize these cows by the large black patches on their white bodies. This breed produces the most milk of all and makes up 95% of the dairy cows in Canada. There are about 1,200,000 Holsteins in Canada.

The remaining 5% of dairy cows includes four other breeds - Jersey, Guernsey, Ayrshire, and Brown Swiss.

The Jersey is light brown with big, brown eyes and produces rich, yummy milk. Originally, Jerseys came from a small island in the English Channel as did the Guernsey cow. The Guernsey is a golden colour with white spots. The Ayrshire is from Scotland and is white with reddish-brown patches. Switzerland was the original home of the Brown Swiss whose colouring is dark brown or silver grey. Find these faraway places on a map. How do you think these cows first got to Canada?


THE AMOOOZING MILK MACHINE

When you look at a dairy cow, you wouldn't guess that she eats tonnes of food each year. It's true! She does! Most of this food energy is used by the cow to make about 30 L of nutritious milk every day. That would sure fill up your fridge, wouldn't it?

How much milk would a cow produce in a week? A month? Imagine eating the food an average dairy cow eats in a day:

  • 4 kg of hay (about the size of a small microwave oven)
  • 16 kg of silage (about half of a child's backyard swimming pool). Silage is a mixture of grasses and grains that are fermented in a silo (storage tank)
  • 10 kg of mixed grains, salt, vitamins and minerals (2-1/2 ice cream pails full)
  • 100 L of water (2/3 of a standard bathtub full) .

This amount of food is about 75,000 kilocalories a day. When you consider that an average adult like you mom, dad or teacher only eats about 2,00 kilocalories in a day, the cow really can eat an "amoozing" amount of food!!

LET'S TAKE A LOOK AT HOW A COW TURNS ALL THAT FOOD INTO MILK.

In order to make milk, a cow must first have a calf which happens when she is about two years old. Dairy cows produce about 7,300 L of milk per year (enough to fill 85 bathtubs!). Since their young calves need only about 255 L (3 bathtubs full) of this milk for the first few months of life, all that extra milk is available for us to enjoy!

When a cow eats, she partially chews and then quickly swallows her food. This food goes into the first section of her very interesting stomach. The cow's stomach has four compartments. That's right! She needs this complicated stomach to digest foods that we cannot. Imagine a cow with a stomach ache. Do you think it would hurt 4 times as much as yours? Each section of the cow's stomach has a different job to do.

Food first enters the rumen (Roo-men). To remember this say "there is lots of room in the rumen". The second section of the stomach, called the reticulum (ruh-tic-u-lum), is actually only partially separated from the rumen and the food can move freely between the two. The job of the rumen and reticulum is to soften the food and hold it there until the cow is finished eating. The food forms into lumps the size of tennis balls, each called a cud. Then the cow does something very different from us - but perfectly normal for a cow. She brings the cuds up to her mouth one at a time and chews them up again - this time more thoroughly. This is what is happening when a cow looks like she is chewing gum!

The cow swallows the rechewed food again but this time it goes into the third section of the stomach, the omasum (oh-ma-sum) where softening and grinding of the food continues. Finally, the food reaches the fourth compartment, the abomasum (ab-o-ma-sum) where it is digested much like the food in our stomach. The small intestine completes digestion and the nutrients are carried by the blood to the rest of the cow's body.

Why is Milk sometimes blue?

Nutrients from the cow's feed, along with water, fill the cow's udder to make milk. It is the nutrients that give milk its colour. The light reflects off the particles of milk fat making it appear creamy white. When the milk fat is not there, as in skim milk, the milk has a bluish colour. This is because one of the nutrients, riboflavin (ry-bo-flay-vin), is blue in colour.


UDDERLY AWESOME!

When the cow's udder is full of milk, it is milking time. The udder is a pouch with four compartments inside, each with a teat for the milk to be sucked out of. Farmers used to milk their cows by hand but now it is much easier, faster and more sanitary to milk the cows by machine. Some farmers milk their cows two times a day and others do it three times, but no matter what, they have to milk cows every day of the year. Therefore, it is important to have the barn set up in a way that will be easy to milk the cows and save the most time. There are two basic types of barns used to house dairy cows.


COW HOUSES

During the winter and poor weather, the cows may use the barns for shelter and to eat and sleep in. When the weather is nice, the cows may roam the pastures and feed on fresh grass. In fact, the cows are treated very well by the farmer who gives special care and attention to ensure the herd is healthy.

1. TIE STALL BARN

Smaller dairy herds are usually housed in a Tie Stall Barn. The name refers to how the cows are held in place in their stalls. A strap and a chain that hold the cow are attached to a bar in front of the cow's head. This does not bother the cow because she can eat and move around enough to be comfortable. The strap and chain can be released, when it is time to move the cow from the stall. At milking time the cows remain in their stalls and the farmer brings the milking equipment to them.

2. FREE STALL BARN

Larger dairy herds are housed in a Free Stall Barn where it is easier to handle a greater number of cows and the work for the farmer is not as heavy. In one part of the barn is the eating and sleeping area. Down the middle of this area, tractors drive through to deposit the cows's food in the feed alleys. At milking time, the cows are moved one group at a time through gates to the milking parlor. This is a specially designed room where the cows walk up a ramp to stand in stalls on a raised platform. Between the two rows of cow stalls is a pit where the farmer stands to attach the milking equipment. This is easier because the farmer does not have to bend down to the cow's level to milk her.

3. LOOSE HOUSING

Another type of shelter that is used by some farmers, especially where the weather is mild, is loose housing. Here, the cows are allowed to move freely about in a sheltered area.


STEP RIGHT UP TO THE MILKING MACHINE

The milking machine has four cups (called a cluster), one cup for each teat. Before the cups are fitted on, the farmer cleans the cow's udder and teats with a disinfectant. The cups gently suck the milk out of the teats in much the same way as if it were done by hand. Milking each cow takes about 5 minutes and the cow feels much better when her udder is not so full.

Milk that is straight from the cow is called raw milk. This milk is carried through pipes to a refrigerated storage tank in another room in the barn. All the equipment is washed right after each use and sanitized right before the next milking.

Every-second day, the raw milk is piped from the storage tank in the barn to a big, insulated milk truck for its journey to the dairy.


AT THE DAIRY...

When the milk truck arrives at the dairy, the raw milk is piped into another cold storage tank. A sample of the milk is taken and tested for its milk fat content, flavour, odour, and bacterial count. Milk naturally contains bacteria and because milk is so nutritious, bacteria can grow really well in it. Some of the bacteria might make people sick so raw milk must first be pasteurized (pas-chur-ized) before using.

Pasteurization

This process is named after a famous French scientist, Louis Pasteur, who discovered that heating milk quickly and then cooling it quickly kills harmful bacteria without changing the milk's nutrient value. Today, milk is pasteurized using the HTST (High Temperature, Short Time) process, meaning the milk is heated to at least 72*C for 16 seconds and then cooled to 4*C. Most milk in our stores has gone through HTST pasteurization.

A very special way to pasteurize milk is called UHT (Ultra High Temperature). In this process, the milk is heated to at least 138*C for not less than 2 seconds! Then it is quickly cooled down to 2*C. This milk is almost sterilized: there are no bacteria of any kind present. The milk is packaged in square boxed under aseptic (ay-sep-tik) conditions - as clean as a hospital. Therefore, the milk can be stored unopened, at room temperature for up to 6 months. Once opened, it too needs to be kept in the refrigerator.

Homogenization

Almost all milk is homogenized (ho-moj-en-ized) to keep the milk fat from separating and floating to the top. Milk fat is what makes milk creamy, rich and flavourful. A homogenizer is a machine which forces the milk at high pressure through tiny holes. This process breaks up the milk fat globules into particles one eighth their original size. When the milk fat particles are that tiny, they stay evenly suspended.

Enrichment and Fortification

A very special nutrient, vitamin D, is added to milk because we need it, along with calcium, to grow strong, healthy bones and teeth. When we add nutrients to food, we say that food has been enriched or fortified. Partly skimmed and skim milk are also fortified with vitamin A for good eyesight. Homo milk is not fortified with vitamin A because it contains enough naturally.

Packaging

Machines in the dairy put the cold milk into cartons, plastic jugs or plastic bags. These containers of milk are taken by a refrigerated truck to your local grocery store where you can buy them. You will notice there is a Best Before date on the containers of milk. The store cannot sell the milk after this date. If the milk has been kept refrigerated in your home, it should still be good for a few days after the best before date.


HAVE YOU "HERD" THE LATEST?

Computerized Feeding

We know that some people are able to eat more food in a day than other people. Well, some cows do the same! The farmer must be able to tell how much food each individual cow needs. This is easy on a small farm because the farmer knows each cow. But once the herd becomes larger, the farmer may need the help of a computer to keep track.

In some herds, each cow wears a computer chip in her collar containing her identification. As the cow enters the feeding stall during the day, the computer, built into the stall, scans the chip and dispenses the proper amount and type of food for her.

Computer Dating?

No, cows do not date! But farmers do try to match their cows with the right bulls to make good milk-producing calves. This is called selective breeding.

Computer matching is based on the fact that a high milk-producing cow tends to have daughters who also produce above average amounts of milk. When this cow is paired with a bull whose daughters are known to be good milk producers, the result is usually a high milk-producing daughter.

When farmers want to breed their cows, they begin by listing the traits they would like to improve in their herd such as good milk production. The traits of every cow are listed on a computer program. The bulls are listed according to their daughters' traits. Farmers can then search with the computer for the cow and bull which have the traits they want to breed in the offspring.

Because of selective breeding, a modern dairy cow now produces far more milk than is needed for feeding her calf. The average dairy cow today can produce about 2,526 kg more milk per year than the average dairy cow of 30 years ago.

Computer Records

Well, cows may enjoy listening to music but this is a different type of record. Dairy Herd Improvement is a computerized record keeping system which helps the dairy farmers keep track of milk production. Each month, each cow's milk is weighed and a sample of it is sent to a lab for testing. At the lab, the milk is tested for fat and protein content and somatic cell count. The somatic cell count, which is a measure of white blood cells, helps to determine the cow's udder health.

Computer reports summarize each cow's milk production and evaluates it against a standard. Recommendations are made on how the farmer can improve the herd's milk production and health. By using the computerized services, a farmer is able to make good decisions about feeding and breeding cows.


MOO TRIVIA

The largest sundae ever made was in Alberta at Edmonton Centre on July 24, 1988 by Palm Dairies: 20,270.7 kg ice cream, 4,394.4 kg syrup and 243.7 kg topping; in total, a 24,908.8 kg ice cream sundae!

Cheese is actually a concentrated form of milk with the same types of protein, calcium, vitamins and other nutrients as milk.

Speaking of milk...People who speak two languages are called bilingual. Now you can be moolingual. Learn how to say "Milk, really cool" in some other languages: - French: lait, tres cool - German: milch, sehr cool - Ukrainian: moloko, douzha cool - Italian: latte, molto cool - Spanish: leche, mucha cool - Dutch: melek, hael cool - Chinese: nai, ho cool

 

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