You ever see the amount of processing it takes to get milk fat free? No thanks. And the protein....is it artificially added after the fact? What's stopping you from mixing in a scoop of your favorite protein powder to regular milk? It's funny. I work for a good packaging machinery company and was at head office a few weeks ago. They get samples of products to be wrapped to see if potential customers like it. They had this nasty ass cookie that looked absolutely nothing like the packaging it was going showed it as. Marketed as all natural, preservative free, all the latest granola muching lovers wet dream key words. But if you read further and know what you're looking at, they were spraying acid on the mix to preserve it plus a bunch of other nasty stuff. So in their quest to be able to have all these buzz words on the label they were processing the shit out of it. And it tasted like ass.....
Nothing is. I already said I use this milk to make my protein smoothies. But when I just want to drink milk (like with breakfast), I don't want to add protein powder. Since I'm going to drink milk anyway, I might as well drink the one that tastes the best, has half the sugars, and double the protein.
Kale like other cruciferous veggies is high in Indole-3 Carbinole. A compound that helps the body metabolize and excrete estrogen. In other words kale (like broccoli) makes you more manly. Beer is estrogenic and inhibits test production and makes you more feminine.
One of the biggest nutrition lies on the planet is that milk fat is bad for you. Milk fat contains some of the most critical FAT-SOLUBLE vitamins the human body needs, not to mention that the fat will slow down the absorption of lactose in the milk thereby reducing its glycemic index. Skimmed milk is the absolute worst kind of milk you can drink. Chaotic, Fairlife sounds like a great option for when you need the protein but not the calories. It's not a complete replacement for milk but it looks like it would have its place in a solid diet. I hope the nutritional profile data is accurate. I'm going to give it a try.