Bren,
I tried to track down a Far Side cartoon that as far as I can see
explains it all: elder holding up a small squiggly thing and saying
"we don't have a name for this part; it's the only bit of the buffalo
we don't we don't use" (or something like that).
As far as I know for North American native peoples just about every
last bit of the animal was eaten or certainly used in some way - so
I'm sure any milk in an udder was consumed, raw or fermented in some
way. If you've not read it this may be of interest:
http://www.westonaprice.org/traditional-diets/guts-and-grease.
I think processed (pasteurized, and or homogenized) milk is a totally
different type of food to raw milk. I sometimes eat some aged cheese
made from un-pasteurized milk - and there are fermented milks such as
Kumis - I expect that the fermentation deals with the milk sugars that
may cause digestion problems.
I think that the principle that milk is a food for infants has to hold
true - but that adults can consume milk or derivatives without too
much harm depending on their degree of adaptation and how the milk is
presented.
Trashed my paleo credentials - admitted to eating cheese and placed a
link to weston a price in the same post. Doh!
Cheers
Neil
>Why is it "Paleo-OK" to consume all (or mostly all) parts of an animal, but not their >milk? (Unless it's pasteurized, obviously. I am talking raw milk here.)
--
Neil C Timms