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June Is National Dairy Month: Fun Facts About Dairy Foods
The Wisconsin Cheeseman ^ | June, 2024 | The Wisconsin Cheeseman

Posted on 06/08/2024 9:08:30 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin

Few things are as refreshing—or nutritious—on a warm summer day as a tall glass of cold milk. With essential nutrients like calcium, potassium and vitamin A, plus protein to help build and repair muscle tissue, milk is a great choice for many active people. Even more exciting are the foods made from milk: a slice of cheese temptingly melted over a grilled hamburger or a dish of ice cream providing the perfect summer dessert. No wonder the dairy industry chose June as the perfect month to celebrate dairy foods and the family dairy farms that produce them.

What Is National Dairy Month?

National Dairy Month is an annual observance in the United States that takes place during the month of June. It is a celebration of the dairy industry and aims to promote the consumption of dairy products while recognizing the contributions of dairy farmers and the importance of dairy in the American diet.

During National Dairy Month, various activities and events are organized to raise awareness about the nutritional benefits of dairy products and the economic impact of the dairy industry. It serves as an opportunity to educate the public about the role of dairy in a healthy diet, highlighting its contribution to providing essential nutrients like calcium, vitamin D, protein, and more.

The History of National Dairy Month

National Milk Month was established in 1937 by a group of chain stores to promote drinking milk and increase demand at a time when cows were turned out to pasture and milk production was at a peak. It ran from June 10 to July 10, with the original theme of “Keep Youthful—Drink Milk.” The National Dairy Council stepped in to promote the cause in 1939, adjusted the timeframe to encompass the month of June, and renamed the event “June Dairy Month.” In 1955, the American Dairy Association took over the promotion of June Dairy Month, which has developed into an annual celebration of the contributions the dairy industry has made to the world over the centuries…actually, millennia.

Fun Facts About Dairy Foods

Milk Facts

U.S. dairy farms produce roughly 21 billion gallons of milk annually.

All 50 states in the U.S. have dairy farms.

Dairy farmers are paid by the hundredweight (100 pounds), not by the gallon. There are approximately 8.6 pounds of milk per gallon.

99 percent of all U.S. households purchase milk. The average American consumes almost 25 gallons of milk each year.

About 72 percent of the calcium in the U.S. food supply comes from dairy foods.

To get the amount of calcium in an 8-ounce glass of milk, you’d have to eat seven oranges or six slices of wheat bread.

Fresh milk will stay fresher longer if you add a pinch of salt to each quart.

Fun Facts About Cheese & Other Dairy Products

The natural yellow color of butter comes mainly from the beta-carotene found in the grass cows eat.

Americans eat more than 300,000 tons of yogurt per year.

About 300 varieties of cheese are sold in the United States.

The most popular cheese in America is Cheddar.

Vanilla is America’s favorite ice cream flavor.

It takes 10 pounds of milk to make one pound of cheese.

It takes 12 pounds of whole milk to make one gallon of ice cream.

It takes 21.8 pounds of milk to make one pound of butter.

If Wisconsin (America’s Dairyland) were a country, it would rank fourth in the world in terms of total cheese production, behind the U.S., Germany and France, and just ahead of Italy.

Dairy Cow Facts

The modern cow is descended from a now-extinct wild bovine called the aurochs (pronounced OR-ox). Humans domesticated the aurochs about 10,000 years ago, and have been consuming cows’ milk ever since. The first cow in America arrived in the Jamestown colony in 1611 and, until the 1850s, nearly every family had its own cow. So for June Dairy Month, let’s celebrate the dairy cow and the products made from her milk with some fun dairy facts!

The average dairy cow weighs about 1,400 lbs.

Cows have 32 teeth, all of them on the bottom with a dental pad on top.

Cows have an acute sense of smell, and can smell something up to six miles away.

A cow eats 90–100 pounds of food and drinks about 35 gallons of water (the equivalent of a bathtub full) every day.

A cow spends about 6 hours eating and 8 hours chewing its cud every day.

A cow does not actually have four stomachs, but a single stomach with four compartments:

Rumen – The first part of the cow’s stomach helps break down complex plant products like grass.

Reticulum – The food is then mixed with saliva to produce a cud, which the cow brings back up to her mouth to chew and break down further.

Omasum – Where all the water is absorbed out of the food.

Abomasum – Where the food is finally digested, as in a human stomach.

A dairy cow produces an average of 6.3 gallons of milk daily. That’s more than 2,300 gallons each year and 350,000 glasses of milk in a lifetime.

A cow is more valuable for its milk, cheese, butter, and yogurt than for its beef.

So now that you know more about milk and dairy products than your friends do, why not get everyone together for a grilled cheese and ice cream? Celebrate June Dairy Month!


TOPICS: Agriculture; Business/Economy; Food
KEYWORDS: cheese; cows; dairy; facts; milk; wisconsin
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To: Lizavetta
It is true.

Of course it also depends on the cow as to how yellow it is. Our Jerseys have naturally very yellow cream and the cream of a Guernsey is even deeper yet.

The butter we get is a deeper yellow than the store butter like the yokes of our eggs are a deeper yellow than the eggs in the store but the store butter is not dyed.

Now margarine is dyed.

21 posted on 06/08/2024 12:40:38 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear ( Roses are red, Violets are blue, I love being on the government watch list, along with all of you.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

Additional facts:

There are no rainbows in milk.

Even though milk is white, it is not racist.


22 posted on 06/08/2024 1:03:08 PM PDT by Adder (End fascism...defeat all Democrats.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
All mammals drink their mother's milk when they are young but later become lactose intolerant.

People are unusual in drinking the milk of another species and in drinking milk after infancy--but that is thanks to a mutation present in some populations (mostly Europe and parts of Asia) but not others. A different mutation in one part of Africa gives people there lactose tolerance (but I think that is a very small part of the sub-Saharan African population).

23 posted on 06/08/2024 2:49:16 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

YAY!

I would much rather celebrate cheese than sleaze.


24 posted on 06/08/2024 3:54:49 PM PDT by left that other site (For what is hidden is meant to be disclosed, and whatever is concealed ...to be brought out. Mk 4:22)
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To: spel_grammer_an_punct_polise

Thats true. Most of us living in rural Wisconsin are out here because someone needs to take care of all of those retired dairy cows. Not all of them invest well enough to spend their last days on cruise ships.


25 posted on 06/08/2024 8:31:55 PM PDT by gnarledmaw (Hivemind liberals worship leaders, sovereign conservatives select servants.)
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To: Lizavetta

Modern dairy cows dont get most of their food from grazing fresh grasses. So some butter is quite yellow by comparison but most is only very slightly so. Depending on where you read that too could have an effect in that these days people tend to use “butter” as the term for some awful margarine substance and that is definitely going to need something to make it look like something other than bug guts.


26 posted on 06/08/2024 8:38:11 PM PDT by gnarledmaw (Hivemind liberals worship leaders, sovereign conservatives select servants.)
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To: spel_grammer_an_punct_polise

Its really the hill cows that I feel the worst for because they need assistance putting on their prosthetic limbs on the short side.


27 posted on 06/08/2024 8:40:38 PM PDT by gnarledmaw (Hivemind liberals worship leaders, sovereign conservatives select servants.)
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To: Veto!

“When is Extra virgin Olive Oil month?”

Them’s Fightin’ Words on this thread, Buddy! ;)


28 posted on 06/09/2024 6:58:21 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have, 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust Post-Apocalyptic skill set. )
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