Dairy: Difference between revisions

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==Dairy - Cows Introduction==
==Overview==
Hello, I'm Katie, Brittany's friend from college. I milk 4 jersey cows for raw milk and cheesemaking, on my family farm in Maine.  Our aim is to raise organic jersey and jersey-cross calves on their mothers milk, eventually amassing a herd of 20 or so, for shipping organic milk, or a small independant dairy-- we'll see how things work out.  But for now, jerseys make a great family cow, for sure.
[[Image:DairyProducts.svg|thumb|800px|Dairy Products]]
You wanna talk cows?


==General Family Cow Information==
Dairy products are high energy food products from cow's milk.
===Milking===
Milking 20 cows manually is not a problem if you are used to. You write you will feed the calves on their mother milk, I think it would not be necessary to milk that milk you will give to the calves.


===Management===
==Research==
====Grasses and Grazing====
Dairy products can include
====Fields and Fences====
====Milking equipment====
====Barn set-up====
====Calves====
====Time requirements====
===Cow Health, Vet Visits and home management===
====Mastitis, treat without antibiotics===
===Using the milk===
====Raw milk====
=====Legal=====
=====Nutritional=====
====Cheese-making====
Cheese is fermented milk. You can start the fermentation process with lab-ferment or with a kind of acid like citric acid. The taste of the resulting cheese will differ depending upon the ingredient which started the fermentation process. Cheese from lab-ferment has the typical cheese taste, cheese from citric acid is much sweeter and you would use it for cream cheese.


The taste also depends on other ingredients you can add to the milk, like salt, pepper, pieces of chilies, peppercorns, garlic, herbs and so on.
* Milk
The taste also depends on the kinds of milk you will use (unskimmed milk, skimmed milk, clabber, buttermilk, whey, mix of some of them).
* [[Cheese]]
The taste also depends on the temperature you are "burning" the cheese. The higher the temperature is, the more "poignant" the taste will be.
* [[Butter]]
The taste also depends on the size of the pieces you will cut the fermented milk. The more whey which stays in the cheese, the more the cheese will taste "sour".
* Ice Cream
The taste also depends on the time it will takes until you will eat him. The longer this time will be, the harder and dryer the cheese will be and the more you will recognize his natural flavor.
* Keifer
The taste also depends on the kind of care you will use. You can storage cheese in brine or dry in salt, or without salt. You can use some kinds of mold fungus to increase his resilience, e.g. many kinds of soft cheese like Camembert or Gorgonzola.
* Yogurt
And the taste and also the resilience and the work you will have to do depends on the moon, if you don't use much chemistry for making cheese. (I would like to explain it better because this is the most important thing to make good and resilience cheese whithout chemistry but I don't know the English words for that explanation.)
* Ghee


To start making cheese you should have enough milk. What is enough? That depends upon how much cheese you want to produce and which kind of milk you will use and which kind of cheese you are making and, and, and ... but you can say that you will need about 12 to 20 liters of milk to earn about 1 kilogramm of hard cheese. (For soft cheese even less milk)


We used our evening milk as unskimmed milk and our morning milk as skimmed milk, like our forefathers did during the last century. There are some reasons for that decision. First, you don't have so much work in the evening after milking, only to look for cooling the milk. In the morning the milk is warm after milking and this is best for skimming it with mechanical support. And you have to clean that machine which is used for skimming. That is not nice in the evening when you first have to prepare hot water. And, of course the taste of the cheese is best if you use skimmed and unskimmed milk nearly with the same amount.
==See Also==
*[[Cows]]
*[[Milker]]
*[[http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/Management_Plan_for_Dairy_Cow]]


Now put the whole milk in a big pot and put it on the stove. Heat the milk up to 32 - 45 ° Celsius (depending on the receipt you are using) while you are stirring the milk. Put the fermentation ingredient and some salt (depending on the receipt you are using) into the milk and stir the milk to make sure that salt and fermentation ingredient will interfuse the whole milk. Then stop stirring and stop the movement of the milk in the pot. Now you have to wait (depending on the receipt you are using) some time. When the milk becomes a white mass like pudding or mozzarella you should cut this mass into small cubes (size is depending on the receipt you are using, some kinds of cheese wouldn't be cut, some kinds would be cut and stirred with an egg whisk until the pieces have the size of only some millimeters during you will heat the pot up to 45 ° Celsius).
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dairy_product Wikipedia: Dairy Products]
*[http://www.food-info.net/uk/qa/dairy.htm Dairy FAQ]


After cutting and stirring you will strain the cheese mass in a cheese cloth and put the mass with the cloth into a cheese form like a colander. This cheese form will affect the form of the ready cheese. Now you put the top cover on the cheese form and a weight on the top cover. After some time you have to turn around the cheese in the cheese form and pin down the top cover agian. After one day you will take the cheese out of the cheese form.  
=Safety=
 
Butter good. Don't eat too much, though. 1 tablespoon per day [https://www.besthealthmag.ca/article/health-benefits-butter/] - 1/8 of a stick of butter. This one says 2 tablespoons [https://runnerclick.com/why-its-okay-to-eat-butter/]. This one says 3 tablespoons [https://www.google.com/search?sxsrf=ALeKk026QG9BbsZl0rNsBS9KmerMgczY_w%3A1602863734253&source=hp&ei=dsKJX6q8DJDYsAXHkpG4Cw&q=how+much+butter+is+safe+per+day&btnK=Google+Search&oq=how+to+configure+nvidia+geforce+gtx+1650+super+on+linux+mint&gs_lcp=CgZwc3ktYWIQAzIFCCEQoAEyBQghEKsCMgUIIRCrAjoOCAAQ6gIQtAIQmgEQ5QI6DgguELEDEMcBEKMCEJMCOggILhDHARCvAToLCC4QsQMQxwEQowI6CAgAELEDEIMBOggILhCxAxCDAToFCAAQsQM6AggAOgQIABAKOgYIABAWEB46CAghEBYQHRAeOgcIIRAKEKABUMsQWOmzAWD8tAFoBnAAeACAAeQGiAGhS5IBDTExLjQ3LjMuMi42LTGYAQCgAQGqAQdnd3Mtd2l6sAEG&sclient=psy-ab&ved=0ahUKEwiqz4DcvLnsAhUQLKwKHUdJBLcQ4dUDCAk&uact=5]. This one says 11-13 g saturated fat in a 2000 cal diet. That is less than 2 tablespoons.
Now you have to take care of the cheese depending on the receipt you are using.
 
====Butter====
====Keifer, Yogurt====
====Clabbered Milk====
====Other products====
===Economics===
====Buying a cow====
====Costs====
====Profits====
====Selling Milk====
====Selling Milk Products====
==Resources==
 
 
=Development Work Template=
#[[Dairy - Product Definition]]
##[[Dairy - General]]
##[[Dairy - General Scope]]
##[[Dairy - Product Ecology]]
###[[Dairy - Localization]]
###[[Dairy - Scaleability]]
###[[Dairy - Analysis of Scale]]
###[[Dairy - Lifecycle Analysis]]
##[[Dairy - Enterprise Options]]
##[[Dairy - Development Approach]]
###[[Dairy - Timeline]]
###[[Dairy - Development Budget]]
####[[Dairy - Value Spent]]
####[[Dairy - Value available]]
####[[Dairy - Value needed]]
##[[Dairy - Deliverables and Product Specifications]]
##[[Dairy - Industry Standards]]
##[[Dairy - Market and Market Segmentation]]
##[[Dairy - Salient Features and Keys to Success]]
#[[Dairy - Technical Design]]
##[[Dairy - Product System Design]]
###[[Dairy - Diagrams and Conceptual Drawings]]
####[[Dairy - Pattern Language Icons]]
####[[Dairy - Structural Diagram]]
####[[Dairy - Funcional or Process Diagram]]
####[[Dairy - Workflow]]
###[[Dairy - Technical Issues]]
###[[Dairy - Deployment Strategy]]
###[[Dairy - Performance specifications]]
###[[Dairy - Calculations]]
####[[Dairy - Design Calculations]]
####[[Dairy - Yields]]
####[[Dairy - Rates]]
####[[Dairy - Structural Calculations]]
####[[Dairy - Power Requirements]]
####[[Dairy - Ergonomics of Production]]
####[[Dairy -Time Requirements]]
####[[Dairy - Economic Breakeven Analysis
####[[Dairy - Growth Calculations]]
###[[Dairy - Technical Drawings and CAD]]
###[[Dairy - CAM Files]]
##[[Dairy - Component Design]]
###[[Dairy - Diagrams]]
###[[Dairy - Conceptual drawings]]
###[[Dairy - Performance specifications]]
###[[Dairy - Performance calculations]]
###[[Dairy - Technical drawings and CAD]]
###[[Dairy - CAM files whenever available]]
##[[Dairy - Subcomponents]]
#[[Dairy - Deployment and Results]]
##[[Dairy - Production steps]]
##[[Dairy - Flexible Fabrication or Production]]
##[[Dairy - Bill of materials]]
##[[Dairy - Pictures and Video]]
##[[Dairy - Data]]
#[[Dairy - Documentation and Education]]
##[[Dairy - Documentation]]
##[[Dairy - Enterprise Plans]]
#[[Dairy - Resource Development]]
##[[Dairy - Identifying Stakeholders]]
###[[Dairy - Information Collaboration]]
####[[Dairy - Wiki Markup]]
####[[Dairy - Addition of Supporting References]]
####[[Dairy - Production of diagrams, flowcharts, 3D computer models, and other qualitative information architecture]]
####[[Dairy - Technical Calculations, Drawings, CAD, CAM, other]]
###[[Dairy - Prototyping]]
###[[Dairy - Funding]]
###[[Dairy - Preordering working products]]
###[[Dairy - Grantwriting]]
###[[Dairy - Publicity]]
###[[Dairy - User/Fabricator Training and Accreditation]]
###[[Dairy - Standards and Certification Developmen]]
###[[Dairy - Other]]
##[[Dairy - Grantwriting]]
###[[Dairy - Volunteer grantwriters]]
###[[Dairy - Professional, Outcome-Based Grantwriters]]
##[[Dairy - Collaborative Stakeholder Funding]]
##[[Dairy - Tool and Material Donations]]
##[[Dairy - Charitable Contributions]]
 
[[Category:OSA]]

Latest revision as of 23:04, 6 April 2022

Overview

Dairy Products

Dairy products are high energy food products from cow's milk.

Research

Dairy products can include


See Also

Safety

Butter good. Don't eat too much, though. 1 tablespoon per day [2] - 1/8 of a stick of butter. This one says 2 tablespoons [3]. This one says 3 tablespoons [4]. This one says 11-13 g saturated fat in a 2000 cal diet. That is less than 2 tablespoons.