Ever wonder where delicious milk comes from? It all starts
with healthy, well-fed cows that live on farms all around
America the beautiful.
Cows are fed up to eight times a day. Their feed is a
combination of hay and silage. This mix is known as a
TMR, or Total Mixed Ration. This TMR generally consists
of: hay, corn, barley, field grasses, cotton seed, bakery
or grocery by-products. Cows eat approximately 80 pounds
a day at a cost of $3.50, which varies with rising/falling
feed costs. And cows drink 30 to 40 gallons of water each
day. A cow is a ruminant with four compartments to her
digestive system.
A cow makes milk after she has a calf. The mother cow
makes a very special milk for her calf; it is called colostrum.
Colostrum has extra vitamins and protein and is very good
for the calf.

Even after the calf is weaned, the mother cow still makes
milk. In fact, milk cows produce up to 8 gallons of milk
per day. Milk is stored in the cows udder. The udder
is a large bag with four teats. Now she is ready to be
milked.
The cows go to the milking parlor where the dairy farmer
washes their teats. A milking machine with four teat cups
is attached to the cow and the milk is cooled and pumped
into a large storage tank. Milking never hurts the cow.
Raw milk is cooled to 38 degrees and is stored in refrigerated
storage tanks. A truck comes to pick up the milk daily
and take it to the processing plant. The truck driver
sample tests the milk before pumping it into the truck
to make sure it's safe to drink. Milk trucks have very
large shiny metal tanks to carry the milk. Each truck
has a special feature to keep it cool, it's like a thermos
on wheels... it's insulated.
Raw milk is sampled and checked again and then pumped
from the milk truck into a storage tank. Next, the milk
is sent to the homogenizer and the pasteurizer. Homogenized
means the same all the way through. In this step, the
butter fat is broken up and mixed into the rest of the
milk. Pasteurization is quickly heating the milk to 145
degrees Fahrenheit, which kills any bacteria that are
in the milk.
There are many different milk and dairy products that
fit into every diet from whole milk to skim. All
types of milk are put into bottles and cartons and taken
to grocery stores for you to buy. Milk is good for you.
In the morning you probably have milk on your cereal.
Did you know that cows love cereal too?
Source: got-milk.com