I've never thrown out any raw milk either (regardless of its age). I agree
that it never spoils. it just changes consistency :-)

But, certainly my kids won't drink the cheesy, clumpy stuff let alone put it
on their oatmeal.and I haven't made cheese in awhile - so I rarely let it
get to that point if when it does get to the stage where the flavor
changes.I mix it in the chicken feed and they eat it like there's no
tomorrow! No waste here.

 

  _____  

From: Nenah Sylver [mailto:nenahsyl...@cox.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2010 2:25 PM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: RE: CS>Excerpt from Ole Bob's CS Book

 

Excerpt from Ole Bob's CS Book: The History of Colloidal Silver

Silver has been used throughout history by the aristocracy for plates and
drinking vessels, and its use has been a source of protection from the
ravages that affect the mass of humanity. Our pioneers would add a silver
dollar to the milk buckets to prolong the useful life. If you so choose you
can add a tablespoon of your silver product to a gallon of milk and it will
not spoil for weeks.

---------------------------------------------------------

[Lisa] Would adding EIS to a gallon of raw milk inhibit the benefits of
actually consuming raw milk (for the healthy critters etc)???

---------------------------------------------------------

Great question, Lisa.

 

Yes, adding CS to raw milk would kill the beneficial bacteria. However, the
advantage to milk that's raw and unadulterated is that for the most part, it
DOES NOT SPOIL. It will ferment naturally into something that's quite
drinkable. I say "for the most part," because the types and amounts of
bacteria in raw milk can vary and sometimes you get a fermented end product
that's more drinkable than what you get at other times.

 

CS is most useful for adulterated (pasteurized and homogenized) milk.
Adulterated milk DOES spoil, and quickly (because there are no beneficial
bacteria present to produce a natural ferment.) That's where CS can do the
most good.

 

When I have had raw milk in the past, I've gotten some lovely ferments
simply by keeping the milk in the fridge for several weeks. I have very
rarely had to throw it out.

 

Nenah 

 

Nenah Sylver, PhD

electromedicine specialist and author

The Rife Handbook of Frequency Therapy (2009)

& The Holistic Handbook of Sauna Therapy (2004)

www.nenahsylver.com <http://www.nenahsylver.com/>