Like that skim milk? You're essentially drinking pig slop
(NaturalNews) Americans have been conditioned to believe a great many
things, especially when it comes to our diet, so suffice it to say that,
when tidbits of truth seep out about some of our most common foods,
especially on sites like Natural News, it can be a bit of a jolt to the psyche.
Take "skim" milk. Please.
I
know, old joke. But seriously, at one time it was anything but the
wholesome, lower-calorie food that it is sold as today, as excerpted
from the book, Pure and Modern Milk: An Environmental History Since 1900, by Kendra Smith-Howard (hat tip Slate):
Do
you prefer the lighter flavor of skim milk to 1 percent, 2 percent, or
whole? Before World War II, skim milk - a byproduct of butter processing
- was not sold in stores, but either discarded or fed to chickens,
hogs, and calves as a protein-rich replacement for costlier animal feed.
The development of skim milk as an attractive product for sale only
came about because dairy producers, emboldened by their success selling
milk to Uncle Sam during World War II, seized on postwar marketing
opportunities to sell what once had been hog slop to housewives and
families.
The stench - and tourism - drove changes in the industry
During
the 1920s, Howard writes, and before environmental regulations were put
in place, rural areas with cheese factories and creameries dumped tons
of dairy discharge into local streams, which tended to accumulate and
rot, as you might expect.
Excess buttermilk also spilled out of creamery spouts and into adjacent fields, as well as directly into waterways.
"Ditches
brimmed with whey, attracting flies and creating a stinky mess. Many
creameries had no access to a city sewer. In 1930, only 17 percent of
waste released by Wisconsin milk plants was treated, leaving 42,513
pounds of untreated whey, skim milk, and other byproducts to be drained into the state's waterways," writes Howard.
Now
the release of skim milk and whey into streams wasn't new; however,
changes in the makeup of rural economies in the 1920s and '30s, coupled
with the advent of automobile-driven tourism and the Great Depression
that struck rural farms especially hard, altered the manner in which
industrialists came to grips with, and reacted to, pollution from milk plants.
"The
increase in rural tourism during the interwar period made it more
difficult for dairy plants to hide the deleterious effects of dairy
manufacturing from the public eye," Howard wrote. "As the number of
Americans with automobiles increased and rural roads improved, motorists
sought to take invigorating outdoor adventures in the countryside. When
tourists who ventured to the countryside to be energized by fresh
breezes found themselves breathing the foul vapors of 'dairy air'
instead, disappointment ensued."
Other uses for skim milk - airplane wings
As one manager elaborated in the 1920s:
The
automobile has brought the cheese factory odor and conditions to the
attention of countless thousands of people, and no amount of argument or
favorable advertising is going to convince the casual traveler that our
cheese is of a high quality, when the attending conditions are such as
to produce a feeling bordering on nausea.
Who knew that cars would ultimately drive - pardon the pun - changes to milk industry production?
Other uses for skim milk were developed as well. For instance, thanks to the introduction of chemurgy - the transformation of agricultural products into industrial resources - so-called chemurgists in the dairy industry were able to find many uses for casein, the protein of milk.
"Extracted
from skim milk, the byproduct of butter processing, casein could be
integrated into a wide variety of household goods," writes Howard. "As
early as 1900, Henry E. Alvord reported that casein could substitute for
eggs, replace glue in paper sizing, and be hardened into plastic to
make buttons, combs, or electrical insulators. During World War I,
casein coated airplane wings."
Sources:
http://www.slate.com
http://www.amazon.com
http://www.naturalnews.com
http://science.naturalnews.com
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