BethM
Well-Known Member
missyscove wrote:
Maybe I'm spoiled for good milk, though. I grew up in Manhattan, Kansas, home to Kansas State University, which has a really good animal science program. When I was growing up, my family would often go to the dairy on campus to get milk, it came in big glass gallon jars, and was about as fresh as it could get.
They also have a place on campus where the animal science students sell their products; they have milk, the awesome-ist ice cream in the world, cheese, and bacon regularly, plus other cuts of meat sometimes.
That sucks about having to switch from glass to plastic bottles. I have never seen anyone return a dirty bottle, and I would be completely emberassed to return a dirty bottle.Local dairies can do really well- if they have the right niche market for their products.
The problem is that most small dairies don't have the ability- let alone the desire or the marketing ability- to process their own milk. What happens then is that they buy everything- feed, milking machines, labor, medications, barns- retail where they can't control the price and then they sell their milk at a wholesale price that they can't control either.
Interesting you should mention the glass bottles- one small dairy we visited that bottles their own milk and makes thier own ice cream mentioned that they switched from glass bottles to plastic and cartons after discovering that their customers weren't rinsing the bottles out and bacteria would grow inside and they ended up having to hand wash them after running them through their dish washer.
As far as the shelf life, yeah, that varies from dairy to dairy. For example, the Cornell dairy on campus can put a few more days on their milk than most can because they were able to track pathogens back to specific cows and solve the problems right here on our dairy.
Maybe I'm spoiled for good milk, though. I grew up in Manhattan, Kansas, home to Kansas State University, which has a really good animal science program. When I was growing up, my family would often go to the dairy on campus to get milk, it came in big glass gallon jars, and was about as fresh as it could get.
They also have a place on campus where the animal science students sell their products; they have milk, the awesome-ist ice cream in the world, cheese, and bacon regularly, plus other cuts of meat sometimes.