Organic milk/dairy v. Regular dairy for weight loss
saanjana
Posts: 20 Member
I have been told by various friends/family that the hormones in regular dairy cause weight gain. I am not quite sure of this. Personally I never bought into the whole "organic" wave, and am quite skeptical of it as another scam to hike prices.
I would like to get all your input into this. I take quite a bit of dairy in my daily meals - infact, I get most of my protein from dairy mostly skim milk, and greek yogurt. Would it be wise to switch to organic? I have tasted organic milk, and do think it tastes better. The yogurt tasted the same to me. So from a taste perspective, I would give into the organic wave. From a health, and weight loss perspective, is it worth it.
I would like to get all your input into this. I take quite a bit of dairy in my daily meals - infact, I get most of my protein from dairy mostly skim milk, and greek yogurt. Would it be wise to switch to organic? I have tasted organic milk, and do think it tastes better. The yogurt tasted the same to me. So from a taste perspective, I would give into the organic wave. From a health, and weight loss perspective, is it worth it.
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Replies
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There is a view that the extensive use of growth hormone in US herds translates to a higher incidence of artificial growth hormones in the resulting food products; dairy, beef. I've seen papers supporting both that view, and the view that there is no higher incidence of artificial growth hormone in those products. It's not conclusive either way.
Personally I prefer the taste of both organic dairy and beef, so it's worth paying the money. I use a reasonable amount of dairy but don't eat much meat, so it's worth extra expense when I do buy it. There's also an ethical component, I know the farms that produce the food that I eat, and that's important to me. The supply chain is personal.0 -
Excess calories causes weight gain.
You can make the argument on a flavor basis, absolutely. Anything else isn't supported by fact.0 -
I've never seen any evidence that this is true.
I'm not convinced that there are any health or weight related benefits to choosing organic/hormone free milk vs the cheap stuff.0 -
Also, I would either ask for evidence and then validate that evidence and/or stop listening to those friends.0
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There's only theory, with no science to support it at this point. However, organic, or even better, local, milk tastes way better than mass produced milk. Check to see if there are any small active dairy farms in your area and see if their website lists where they sell. Often they will even have visiting hours when you can tour the farm and see how the animals are treated.0
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none none none none none none none none...
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EIther way the milk has hormones --the cow is lactating.0
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EIther way the milk has hormones --the cow is lactating.
I know it wasn't explicit from the above post, but the concern is supplemental hormones given to cows to increase milk production. There is some debate on whether these growth hormones can be excreted in milk and whether they might have an effect of humans. Regardless of where you stand on that issue, the fact is that dairy from local producers is fresher and much tastier. Comparing even skim milk from a dairy farm in my area to whole milk from Sealtest or one of the other major producers...there's no comparison. It's so much creamier, even as skim milk, and the flavor is amazing. It's worth the extra money to get local whenever possible.
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I wouldn't worry about putting on weight like a baby calf because of hormones, but organic milk has a few good things going for it...http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2014/01/14/conventional-vs-organic-milk.aspx0
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Weight gain is caused my an excess of calories. There is a lot of other things to change for helping weight loss other than regular vs organic milk.
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There are so many 'options/opinions' about this. You need to do your own research. Milk, Organic Milk, Raw Milk. Each is a hot button topic for foodies.
We do raw at our house it's easier to digest and we are not getting any younger and need all the calcium we can get. Best of luck!0 -
Organic vs non-organic is not a weight loss debate. It's more of an environment issue, overall health, humane treatment of animals, using foods as they are intended to be and grow. It is more expensive for various reasons, one of them being just to be able to keep their "organic" label... So if you decide to pay the price for organic, it's more an ethical choice than for weight loss. I mean.. maybe the growth hormones could have an impact, I don't know... But what I am sure of is that the organic produce especially dairy has a different taste, it's much better. My kids don't know anything about labels but they sure feel the taste difference!0
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