Milk Guard
Cows that graze on
fresh pasture produce milk with higher levels of antioxidants and
beneficial fatty acids, such as conjugated linoleic acid and omega-3's, as
shown by a recently published study from Newcastle University in the UK.
"Grazing dairy cows on grass or grass and clover swards produces milk
with a healthier fatty acid profile and higher levels of fat soluble
vitamins and antioxidants," notes Gillian Butler, livestock project manager
for the Nafferton Ecological Farming Group at Newcastle University, who led
the study.
This study points to the diet of organic cows -- fresh grass and clover
-- as the major reason for these nutritional benefits.
"This study joins a growing body of science indicating strong links
between what we feed our farm animals and the nutritional quality of what
they feed us. Not only are you what you eat, but you are what what you eat
eats too," says Michael Pollan, author of the best sellers The Omnivore's
Dilemma and In Defense of Food.
Consumers who purchase organic foods often do so for various reasons,
ranging from a desire to support an ecologically sustainable agricultural
system, the humane treatment of livestock, to wanting to reduce their
exposure to dangerous pesticide residues. Studies showing that organically
produced foods are also of higher nutritional quality offer another reason
for consumers to buy organic.
"Organic consumers can be very confident that the vast majority of
brand name organic milk comes from cows that were given the opportunity to
graze on fresh pasture whenever possible," says Mark Kastel, codirector of
The Cornucopia Institute, a farm and food policy research group based in
Cornucopia, Wisconsin.
Some large industrial-scale organic dairies, or "factory farms,"
milking thousands of cows each, however, have come under fire from
Cornucopia for not adequately pasturing their cows, as federal regulations
require.
Organic farmers like Kevin and Lisa Engelbert from Nichols, NY are
among the hundreds of family farmers who supply organic milk from pastured
cows. "We're glad to know that there is now a growing body of scientific
evidence to support what we've always believed, which is that allowing our
cows to eat their natural diet and exhibit their natural behavior on
pasture has real benefits for consumers as well," says Lisa Engelbert.
SOURCE The Cornucopia Institute