Newsletter 4 :: 02/15/2012
Goats' Milk
A Stomach-friendly alternative
By Stephenie Raymond
Watch out cows' milk, you've got competition. Brimming with health-promoting minerals such as calcium, phosphorus, and potassium, goats' milk is proving to be just as nutritious as and even more digestible than cows' milk.
Thought to be one of the first domesticated animals, goats have a long history of providing humans with nourishing milk. But while goats' milk has been favoured over cows' milk in most of the world for centuries cow's milk is still the milk of choice in many Western countries.
However, this may be changing. As research showing the value of goats' milk as a nutrient-rich beverage with many benefits to human health grows, so does its popularity.
Easily Digestible
One advantage goats' milk has over cows' milk is greater digestibility by people with milk sensitivities such as lactose intolerance.
Researchers from the University of Granada believe goats' milk's many nutritional similarities to human milk may be behind its properties. The research shows that, like human milk, goats' milk contains less of the milk sugar, lactose and the milk allergen, casein alpha 1, thank cows' milk, making its easier to digest.
In another preliminary study, Norwegian researchers found that when exposed to human gastric and duodenal juices, the beta-lactoglobulin in goats' milk was digested three times faster than the beta-lactoglobulin in clows' milk. Like casein, beta-lactoglobulin is a milk protein that can cause an allergic reaction.
Potential anti-Inflammatory
Other potential digestive aids found in high quantities in goats' milk are oligosaccharides. Oligosaccharides are short chain sugar molecules that act as a prebiotic in the intestine, feeding the healthy bacteria and suppressing the bad.
In addition to promoting healthy intestinal flora, oligosaccharides are also thought to have anti-inflammatory properties. In one animal study, researchers found the oligosaccharides in goats' milk provided protection against colonic inflammation. This anti-inflammatory effect may be useful in treating the symptoms of irritable bowel disease.
Nutrient Dense
Although goats' milk and cows' milk are similar in terms of mineral content, goats' milk may pack the stronger nutritional punch.
Preliminary studies have found that the calcium, phosphorus, iron, copper, zinc, magnesium, and selenium found in goats' milk are better absorbed and utilized by the body than the same minerals in cows' milk. This higher bioavailability of minerals is showing promise in treating conditions caused by nutritional deficiencies such as anemia and bone demineralization.
Heart Healthy
The benefits of goats milk don't stop there. Although evidence is still preliminary, goats' milk may also contain properties that ward off heart disease.
Italian researchers have found goats' milk to have the ability to stimulate the release of nitric oxide in vitro. Nitric oxide causes arteries to relax and widen, allowing blood to flow freely.
Goats milk is also a good source of medium-chain fatty acids, healthy fats that have been shown to keep triglyceride and cholesterol levels in check. Healthy blood pressure and cholesterol levels are essential in reducing the risk of heart disease and stroke.
Nutritional Stats
Low in calories and high in many health-promoting nutrients,
the numbers speak for themselves-goats; milk is one healthy beverage.
One cup (250ml) of goats' milk contains:
Daily
value
Calories 168
8%
Calcium 327mg 33%
Phosphorus 271mg 27%
Riboflavin 0.3mg 20%
Protein 9g
17%
Fat 10g 16%
Potassium 498mg 14%
Vitamin A 483IU 10%
Magnesium 34.2mg 9%
Cholesterol 27mg 9%
Thiamine 0.1mg 8%
Vitamin D 29.3IU 7%
Vitamin C 3.2mg 5%
Pantothenic acid 0.8mg 8%
Vitamin B6 0.1mg 6%
Zinc 07mcg 5%
Sodium 122mg 5%
Carbohydrates 11g 4%
Iron 0.1mg 1%
*% of daily value is based on a diet of 2,000 calories per
day.
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Serve It
Any way you would cows' milk
Try adding it to your
morning coffee, pouring it over your cereal, or mixing it into an omelette.
As a pizza topping
Creaming goat cheese
such as chevre makes a flavourful substitution or addition to traditional
mozzarella.
Blended
Blend a cup of goats'
milk with a handful of your favourite fruits to make a refreshingly healthy
smoothie.
With a salad
Add Dijon mustard and
honey to a plain goats' milk yogurt to make a delicious dressing.
As a snack
Spread soft goat
cheese on a whole wheat cracker and top with an apple slice to make a filling
midday snack.
Buyers Guide
SELECT IT
As goats' milk sours
easily when exposed to heat, try to purchase goats; milk from the coldest area
of your grocery stores refrigerator case. This is typically the lower section.
To get the biggest
nutritional bank for your buck, look for goats' milk fortified with vitamin a,
vitamin d, and colic acid.
When possible, opt for
organic goats' milk, cheeses, yogurts, and other goats milk-derived products
to avoid pesticide and chemical contamination.
STORE IT
Store goats' milk in
the back of the refrigerator. Storing the milk too close to the door may expose
it to extra heat and cause it to sour.
Keep the milk
container rightly closed when not in use. This will prevent surrounding food
odours form tainting the milk's taste.
Before use, smell the
top off the container to make sure the milk hasn't gone bad. Always consume
before the exp date.
TRY IT
Like cows' milk,
goats' milk can be found in many forms. Yogurt, cheese, and even ice cream made
from goats' milk can be found in most grocery stores or health food stores.
Another bonus-goats'
milk-derived products are often lower in calories, fat and cholesterol than
those made from cows milk.
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