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''You’ve heard this one before. Perhaps, you’ve even said it. “Low-fat milk is watered-down milk.” The whole truth is, that couldn’t be further from the truth. Milk is highly regulated and there is a “standard of identity” of milk, meaning cows’ milk cannot include added water and still be called milk.
Let’s look at the composition of cows’ milk. When you break it down, milk is water, lactose, fat, protein, minerals and vitamins. All of that comes from the cow (except the Vitamin D and some Vitamin A – which is added to all cows’ milk). Pretty cool, if you ask me.
To make reduced or low-fat milk, large strainers are used to separate the fat particles from the rest of the milk. No water is added. You can confirm this by checking the label. If the dairy processors were adding water, the label would have to indicate as such. Look at the label in your fridge. If it’s cows’ milk, it says milk, Vitamin A, and Vitamin D. That’s it. Good. Fresh. Natural.
So, why then does reduced fat or fat-free milk look less, well, milky? Because the fat is part of what makes milk white – it’s naturally present as tiny particles suspended in the milk (thanks, homogenization). The particles reflect light, making the milk appear more opaque, dense…milky!
Pour a glass of low-fat milk and you still get all benefits of whole milk, just with less fat.
So, there you have it scientists, that’s the whole truth. Want more milk matters materials? Learn more here.''
They started putting less cereal in the boxes when the recession hit. It was a way of keeping the price of a box from going up. Cereal and chips are sold by weight, not volume.
It was a ruse, but not a scam.
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