Sport2 mins ago
Milk
My partner gives her 8 year old full fat milk because she believes it contains more calcium than semi skimmed. Is this true? I would have thought that the nutrition content of the semi skimmed was the same as whole milk, without the disadvantage of all tha textra fat. Any thoughts?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you family claims income support and you have young children, they give you milk tokens.
The milk tokens can only be redemmed against full fat milk, because the milk is for the children not the family. So the government advocate it as better for children- although i like you cannot see how.
When i worked at Tesco- i used to enjoy making people put the semi skimmed back and only giving them the full fat in exchange for the tokens. What a jobs worth!!
Children under 2: Only full fat milk should be given to all children.
Children between 2 and 5: Only full fat milk should be given (except when the child is significantly overweight).
Children 5 and over: Reduced fat milk can be given but parents should ensure that sufficient Vitamin A can be derived from an alternative source. (Reduced fat milk also has less Vitamin D than full-fat milk but, since there was never much present to start with, this is not really significant).
Chris
And have a look at the Dairy Councils site at : http://www.milk.co.uk/
Lots of info including the pretty little cartoon cow you can 'milk' while reading the facts - cows have 32 teeth, so do they drink milk to make them strong as well??
/discuss (as the advert says)