What can I do with off milk?

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Annpan
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What can I do with off milk?

Post: # 75905Post Annpan »

I noticed a mark on the inside of a bottle of milk we had delivered and I didn' fancy drinking it, so it had been left on the counter top, I forgot to return it to the milk man the next morning so now (3 weeks later) I have a glass bottle with some very off milk in it.

I was wondering if I can use it to make paint or something... does anyone have any suggestions?

To add - it has seperated, the bottom half is solidish white stuff, the top is clear liquid.
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Chickenlady
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Post: # 75910Post Chickenlady »

Er...drain cleaner?? Sorry, can't think of anything except chucking it.
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Post: # 75939Post ilan »

Think you can use it to "paint" on new or harsh concrete/brick work/ terroacotta pots etc to encourage a aged greenish growth type look
we just borrow the earth leave it better than you found it

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Post: # 75961Post Eigon »

Sounds like you've got curds and whey.

I used to use milk that had gone off to make a basic cottage cheese - I put the lumpy bits in a coffee filter to get the moisture out, and it tasted okay. I used to add chives and a bit of salt.
Now I hardly ever get to the stage of having milk hanging around, so the practice has lapsed.
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Jack
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Post: # 76060Post Jack »

Gidday

Feed it to your chooks, or use it in your garden as a fertilizer. Put it in your compost.

Don't put it down the drain cos that's a waste.
Cheers
just a Rough Country Boy.

yugogypsy

"off milk"

Post: # 76097Post yugogypsy »

Yup, feed it to the chooks, if you get some thats only a BIT sour sometime-try making sourdough starter, 1 cup milk, 1 pinch salt, 1/2 tsp baking powder and a pinch of baking soda, mix with the milk until its like a custard consistency, cover with cheesecloth and set somewhere reasonably warm to "work"

Note: Put a plate under it in case it gets over excited and bubbles out of whatever jar you make it in

:cheers: Lois

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Re: "off milk"

Post: # 76114Post snapdragon »

yugogypsy wrote:Yup, feed it to the chooks, if you get some thats only a BIT sour sometime-try making sourdough starter, 1 cup milk, 1 pinch salt, 1/2 tsp baking powder and a pinch of baking soda, mix with the milk until its like a custard consistency, cover with cheesecloth and set somewhere reasonably warm to "work"

Note: Put a plate under it in case it gets over excited and bubbles out of whatever jar you make it in

:cheers: Lois
that sounds very interesting :mrgreen: what do you do with it next? recipe needed please? :oops:
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yugogypsy

Off Milk

Post: # 76115Post yugogypsy »

Use it in any sourdough bread recipe-lots out there, sourdough French bread is the easiest.

:cheers: Lois

QuakerBear
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Post: # 76271Post QuakerBear »

Put it in the compost.

I chucked some gone off milk out on the lawn once and a couple of days latter I noticed the grass there was really green, thick and much longer then the surrounding area.

Grass likes milk.
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ina
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Post: # 76281Post ina »

The problem with modern milk is, it doesn't go sour, it just goes off. Sour milk (what we used to call thick milk) was what we had instead of yoghurt when I was little: all the milk we got was "raw" milk then. Pasteurised milk keeps forever and a day (if it's done properly), and then it goes off - but you can't get proper sour milk from it. So I'd just chuck it out (on the compost, of course - although some might say that could attract vermin).

There was something on raw milk and the latest craze about it as "superfood" on radio 4, Farming Today this morning.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/news/farmingtoday/
Ina
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Jack
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Post: # 76302Post Jack »

Gidday

There is an almost religion based on the worship of raw milk, and I am a paid up member, well not paid but a believer anyway.
Cheers
just a Rough Country Boy.

ina
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Post: # 76338Post ina »

So am I... Although I resent the title "superfood" - it's just real food!

I worked for a market garden here a few years back,. where we also had dairy goats. As the milk couldn't be sold any more (no equipment for pasteurisation), we had to throw out a lot. Can't say I ever noticed whether the grass was greener on those patches, but then, I never looked out for it, either... I tried to not chuck it on the same place every time, so maybe it all benefited in the end!
Ina
I'm a size 10, really; I wear a 20 for comfort. (Gina Yashere)

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