Whole Milk/2%/1%
I provided whole milk to my infants until my own son turned two and our dr told us to switch him to 2%, 1% or skim. I now provide only 1% which is our families preferred. I have one child in care who just turned 1. Should I provide whole to this child only? It is more expensive, and we have a small fridge so I don't really have room to have enough milk for my other 7 dck and then an extra whole milk for the only infant. Unless I only have 1 for dck and then have to go to the store 2-3x per week to pick up another one.
Does your food program require whole for your 1 yr olds? Do you think its out of line to only offer what works for my family? Would you be mad if your provider didnt offer whole to your 1 yr old? |
whole till they are two
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Originally Posted by nannyde: |
Yup, whole milk until they are two. You can try just buying a half gallon or pint at a time if you don't have room.
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I serve whole milk to all the kids, my own 7 and 12 year old included. But I have a bunch of very active, skinny minis who can use the extra fat.
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Whole til 2 is across the board advice, but more and more drs. are recommending 2% younger than that. I personally would (and did) ask my parents. Most of them wanted 2% by about 18 months, as that is what their drs. suggested. I buy a half gallon of whole for the one family who wanted whole.
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Originally Posted by WDW: |
Originally Posted by Meyou: |
I just talked to my food program lady and she said it is recommeded but not required they have whole until 2 however all kids 2 and older will be REQUIRED to be on 1% or skim starting October 1st of this year. Interesting. Likely because of all the obesity in kids I guess.
Has anyone else heard about this upcoming requirement? |
Originally Posted by jojosmommy: |
I have a friend who is on wic and her little one is about 14 months. Her vouchers say whole/2%/1%/skim. She only has the one child. Not sure how that'd work for both kids. They may just change all the milk to whole/2/1/s...
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Originally Posted by jen2651: |
Originally Posted by jojosmommy: Big agriculture will never go for that though. It would cut into the corn based foods. Monstanto wouldn't play that. |
Originally Posted by nannyde: |
I have a child that needs whole milk and only comes everyother week.
What I do is buy a smaller size of milk container and at the end of the week I give it to the mom to take home and use. That way the milk doesnt go to waste. His mom is also unemployed and a single mother so it is kinda like charity!:) |
Originally Posted by nannyde: Did anyone read the recent news articles about the whole milk being better for weight loss than skim? I only skimmed (no pun intended:lol:) it, but I think it was saying that the natural fats in milk were healthy for us, and taking them out/changing the milk made it worse for weight loss! If anyone read it or has the link I would like to have that info-thanks! |
See page 32 of this publication: http://teamnutrition.usda.gov/Resources/blocks2.pdf. Whole milk is no longer a requirement for the federal CACFP, though quite a few pediatricians still recommend it for children up to 2.
I use my best judgment when providing milk for the little ones, almost always serving whole milk until at least 1 year of age, lowering it to 2 or 1 percent milk after that, unless they are skinny minis or requested specifically by a parent. |
All my kids are over 2 and we do organic skim for everyone...my family included. Before 2 I do whole or 2% depending on the child.
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I buy 3 different kinds of milk each week! CRAZY!
I buy 1% for my family, and whole for my own daughter. My daughter's dr has told us to use whole milk, even tho she is 9, because she is severely underweight and we are trying to get her to gain some. I also buy soymilk for two DCK that are lactose intolerant. I just give the other daycare kids the whole, unless I am out, then I use the 1%. I usually have to go to the store twice a week, once on the weekends for a big trip, then once during the week for milk and fruit. My whole bottom shelf of the fridge is milk! I dont have any under 2 DCK, but when I did, I always gave them whole milk. I seem to remember our food program required it. |
We've been feeding our own children raw milk for 12 years. It's the raw cream that is good for them. They are thin and the fat is not an issue with unpasteurized dairy. I believe only a few states allow it.
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Originally Posted by Michael: Here you can't sell it but it can be "given" or "bartered". You can buy a share of a milk cow and get your share of the milk. I would switch to that in a heartbeat with grassfed cow milk. I couldn't feed it to the kids but I could my own kid. I grew up on this kind of milk. We loved to be the first to the gallon. ;) |
Originally Posted by nannyde: Many would be surprised to that process in how our regular grocery stores products are managed and delivered. Granted, the raw/grass-fed/cage-free/fertile/organic products are more expensive but we hardly ever get sick and never take medication unless it is a dire situation. I can go on about this all day. :p It is a commitment to our future wellbeing and saves us a lot of money in the long run. |
Originally Posted by Michael: It's worth EVERY penny. I will never go back to the regular food system. It's money well spent. I would rather be poor than skimp on food. I switched a little over a year ago and have kids that haven't missed a single day for being sick in the last fourteen months. My son didn't miss a day of school this year. Micheal does your family eat wild game? |
Originally Posted by nannyde: I just received a call from a family that only serves their kids milk from their farm (goat, dairy...depending on time of year). I know that I can't serve this to my daycare kids, but could they bring it in for themselves? I am not opposed, I just don't really want to mess up my food reimbursements. Also, for those who use only non processed foods, would you be willing to send your menu? I am pretty/almost really good about it, but if this family were to come, I would need to change a few of the items in my rotation. I would love to see some of your menus for new ideas! I have never served a chicken nugget to my kids, but I fear even my chili may be jeopardy of needing to be refined...I use canned beans as opposed to dry beans. I know, I shouldn't change anything for one family, but lets face it, I was using the cans because I am lazy! |
Originally Posted by nannyde: There is a place near us called the Deer Lodge that is a biker/restaurant near Ojai/Sant Barbara and they sometime serve up wild game. Great place. Don't get me going on steak tartare! Sorry, looks like I am hijacking my own form. :p |
We gave our own children 2% per our physician, and that is all I will buy for my daycare. If parents want whole milk, they will have to provide it as needed each day. I don't have room for a separate gallon of whole milk. It's funny, cuz they will ask what I buy, and even if they give their kid whole, they are either too cheap or too lazy to bring it in.
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Originally Posted by mac60: I do wish raw milk was not so inaccessible in my state too. |
Just saw something interesting today on the news. A new strain of MRSA has been found in raw milk that isn't responding to antibotics. The only way they are seeing it going away is by pasturizing it. Not to start a huge debate but passing on what I saw for everyones safety.
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Originally Posted by Country Kids: In my opinion the reasons the general public is experiencing these kinds or outbreaks is because we are overusing antibiotics and medication. Don't get me wrong, I've had bacterial pneumonia and a strong antibiotic was the magic in getting rid of it. It's important that we manage our immune systems. Afterall, it has had millions of years to adapt. The free range, grass fed, antibiotic free cows have good immune systems and that is passed along in their milk. I would suggest you use the internet to read both sides of the debate. I can only say that going raw is a personal choice (it is important that we have choices available) and it is VERY important that you engage in your food source if you consider going raw. Here are some articles from both sides that make great points: http://organicpastures.com/faq.html http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1736713,00.html http://www.fda.gov/Food/ResourcesForYou/Consumers/ucm079516.htm BTW, did you know most "fine" restaurants serve Steak Tartar: http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=ie7&q=steadk+tartar&rls=com.microsoft:en-us:IE-SearchBox&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&rlz=1I7ACGW_en Ever wonder why the rich are allowed to eat it and the CDC and FDA does not ban it? |
Originally Posted by Michael: We've also gotten rid of 95 percent of the corn based products. We eat organic corn but we don't eat any animal fed on corn and I don't buy products containing corn. It takes a lot of WORK to switch but it's so worth it... and the food is delicious. Michael have you seen Food Inc.? It's the best tutorial on the food system I've seen yet. King Corn is my second fave. The government can stay out of my relationship with the growers. I can manage that on my own thankyouverymuch ;) I trust them way more than I trust Monsanto (the devil) and Big Ag |
Originally Posted by nannyde: |
Originally Posted by Michael: |
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