Mini Horses
Herd Master
Beyond all this --
How'd your farm visit go...?
How'd your farm visit go...?
Choose your breed, visit the animal, test her milk...actually milk her. Then, jump in!! I like to buy 2 buddies at a time from same herd. Then there's no "make a friend issue".
X2.So, you put up fence, get all ready for goats and then decide it’s not for you, not to worry! That shelter and fenced area will quickly fill with something else!
Always strain first then chill. Straining removes all hair, dirt, and anything else that could taint the milk. Chilling before straining leaves any foreign contaminant in the milk and can ruin the flavor. Hopefully she is straining first into clean glass containers before chilling.As soon as it's milked, she puts it in her freezer in her milk parlor (it's a mini fridge that sits next to the stanchion). I could be wrong about the order but I believe she chills it in the freezer for an hour or so, then removes it to filter and put in the fridge.
Goat milk changes flavor within 24 hours. It is still fine for use in cooking, making cheese, pasteurizing and bottle feeding baby goats. Goat milk is best drunk within the first 24 hours (preferably first 12).I also know that the milk we pick up is sometimes a couple of days old (she dates the bottles).
Mixing all the milk together is not a problem unless one of the goats or breeds has off flavored milk. Or one of the individual goats has off flavored milk. Then the off flavor will permeate all the milk. I have had LaMancha milk (DS2's herd were LaManchas) and it was good. I have never had Nigerian milk so can't comment. Why does she "mix the milk for better taste"? Does some of the milk not taste good? If some of the milk had an unpleasant flavor, it could be affecting the flavor of all the milk after mixing together.She milks them, then mixes the milk to get a better taste and have the quantity to supply her herdshare holders
If your husband doesn't like extra rich foods, he may be able to taste the extra butterfat in the milk and this may contribute to his dislike of goat milk. As DS1 got older he stopped liking rich foods (including chocolate!) and now won't even eat much ice cream. DS1 can taste the cream in the milk.I believe her thought process was the higher butterfat in the ND's milk would bring a richness/creaminess to the Lamancha milk and kind of compliment each other--not necessarily mask a bad taste, but moreso enhance the milk flavor.
Also does milk have to be pasturized to feed to babies? Pardon my ignorance by why is that?