Got Milk? You Don’t Need It
Drinking
milk is as American as Mom and apple pie. Until not long ago, Americans
were encouraged not only by the lobbying group called the American
Dairy Association but by parents, doctors and teachers to drink four
8-ounce glasses of milk, “nature’s perfect food,” every day. That’s two
pounds! We don’t consume two pounds a day of anything else; even our per
capita soda consumption is “only” a pound a day.
Today
the Department of Agriculture’s recommendation for dairy is a mere
three cups daily — still 1½ pounds by weight — for every man, woman and
child over age 9. This in a country where as many as 50 million people
are lactose intolerant, including 90 percent of all Asian-Americans and
75 percent of all African-Americans, Mexican-Americans and Jews. The myplate.gov site helpfully suggests that those people drink lactose-free beverages. (To its credit, it now counts soy milk as “dairy.”)
There’s
no mention of water, which is truly nature’s perfect beverage; the site
simply encourages us to switch to low-fat milk. But, says Neal Barnard,
president of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, “Sugar —
in the form of lactose — contributes about 55 percent of skim milk’s
calories, giving it ounce for ounce the same calorie load as soda.”
O.K., dairy products contain nutrients, and for those who like them, a serving or two daily is probably fine. (Worth noting: they’re far more easily digested as yogurt or cheese than as fluid milk.) But in addition to intolerance, there’s a milk allergy — the second most common food allergy after peanuts, affecting an estimated 1.3 million children — that can be life-threatening.
O.K., dairy products contain nutrients, and for those who like them, a serving or two daily is probably fine. (Worth noting: they’re far more easily digested as yogurt or cheese than as fluid milk.) But in addition to intolerance, there’s a milk allergy — the second most common food allergy after peanuts, affecting an estimated 1.3 million children — that can be life-threatening.
Emily Robertson
Other
conditions are not easily classified, and I have one of those. When I
was growing up, drinking milk at every meal, I had a chronic upset
stomach. (Channeling my inner Woody Allen, I’ll note that I was
therefore treated as a neurotic, which, in fairness, I was anyway.) In
adolescence, this became chronic heartburn, trendily known as GERD or
acid reflux, and that led to a lifelong Tums habit (favorite flavor:
wintergreen) and an adult dependence on Prevacid, a proton-pump
inhibitor. Which, my gastroenterologist assured me, is benign. (Wrong.)
Fortunately my long-term general practitioner, Sidney M. Baker, author of “Detoxification and Healing.”
insisted that I make every attempt to break the Prevacid addiction.
Thus followed a seven-year period of trials of various “cures,”
including licorice pills, lemon juice, antibiotics, famotidine (Pepcid)
and almost anything else that might give my poor, sore esophagus some
relief. At some point, Dr. Baker suggested that despite my omnivorous
diet I consider a “vacation” from various foods.
So,
three months ago, I decided to give up dairy products as a test.
Twenty-four hours later, my heartburn was gone. Never, it seems, to
return. In fact, I can devour linguine puttanesca (with
anchovies) and go to bed an hour later; fellow heartburn sufferers will
be impressed. Perhaps equally impressive is that I mentioned this to a
friend who had the same problem, tried the same approach, and had the
same results. Presto! No dairy, no heartburn! (A third had no success.
Hey, it’s not a controlled double-blind experiment, but there is no
downside to trying it.)
Conditions
like mine are barely on the radar. Although treating heartburn is a
business worth more than $10 billion a year, the solution may be as
simple as laying off dairy. (Which, need I point out, is free.) What’s
clear is that the widespread existence of lactose intolerance, says Dr.
Baker, is “a pretty good sign that we’ve evolved to drink human milk
when we’re babies but have no need for the milk of any animals. And no
matter what you call a chronic dairy problem — milk allergy, milk
intolerance, lactose intolerance — the action is the same: avoid all
foods derived from milk for at least five days and see what happens.”
Adds
Dr. Barnard, “It’s worth noting that milk and other dairy products are
our biggest source of saturated fat, and there are very credible links
between dairy consumption and both Type 1 diabetes and the most
dangerous form of prostate cancer.” Then, of course, there are our 9
million dairy cows, most of whom live tortured, miserable lives while
making a significant contribution to greenhouse gases.
But what about the bucolic cow on the family farm? What about bone density and osteoporosis? What about Mom, and apple pie?
Mom: Don’t know about yours, but mine’s doing pretty well. Apple pie (best made with one crust, plenty of apples) will be fine.
But
the bucolic cow and family farm barely exist: “Given the Kafkaesque
federal milk marketing order system, it’s impossible for anyone to make a
living producing and selling milk,” says Anne Mendelson, author of “Milk.”
“The exceptions are the very largest dairy farms, factory operations
with anything from 10,000 to 30,000 cows, which can exploit the system,
and the few small farmers who can opt out of it and sell directly to an
assured market, and who can afford the luxury of treating the animals
decently.”
Osteoporosis? You don’t
need milk, or large amounts of calcium, for bone integrity. In fact,
the rate of fractures is highest in milk-drinking countries, and it
turns out that the keys to bone strength are lifelong exercise and
vitamin D, which you can get from sunshine. Most humans never tasted
fresh milk from any source other than their mother for almost all of
human history, and fresh cow’s milk could not be routinely available to
urbanites without industrial production. The federal government not
only supports the milk industry by spending more money on dairy than any
other item in the school lunch program, but by contributing free
propaganda as well as subsidies amounting to well over 4billion in the last 10 years.There’s nothing un-American about re-evaluating those commitments with an eye toward sensibility. Meanwhile, pass the water... Mark Bittman on food and all things related.
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