Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

PatSeg

(52,593 posts)
12. Same here
Mon Feb 9, 2026, 11:34 AM
22 hrs ago

and I drink whole milk and eat whole milk yogurt. The body needs fat to absorb vitamin D and calcium.

Recommendations

4 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Little did I know EYESORE 9001 23 hrs ago #1
Not to mention BonnieJW 20 hrs ago #26
You had me worried, I eat a lot of cheese dickthegrouch 23 hrs ago #2
Same here PatSeg 22 hrs ago #12
I'm a bit addicted to very sharp aged cheddars - so this is great news. Also like Stiltons, bries, etc., etc., etc. erronis 23 hrs ago #3
Me, too. Bumbles 21 hrs ago #19
It is a retrospective study, not a double blind study, and also doesn't factor in other variables. lostincalifornia 23 hrs ago #4
It calls for further study and explains that. multigraincracker 23 hrs ago #6
I wasn't disparaging anything. I was just pointing out that it was a retrospective observation. In addition there are lostincalifornia 22 hrs ago #8
Whew!...I live half hour away from Pinconning, Mi. ... MiHale 23 hrs ago #5
I've stopped there many time and multigraincracker 23 hrs ago #7
Looks like I can keep getting my Dubliner Irish cheese & Kerrygold butter from grass-fed Irish cows. NBachers 22 hrs ago #9
That's my favorite! DUgosh 22 hrs ago #10
Best butter on the planet. SergeStorms 21 hrs ago #23
I think this final paragrah mwmisses4289 22 hrs ago #11
I believe we've been going through a course correction from the belief that whole milk and associated products are Martin68 22 hrs ago #14
Unfortunately "factory farm" dairy is bad for the natural environment, not to mention the cows. hunter 20 hrs ago #32
I've been fortunate that my family, and my Japanese wife, all love cheese as much as I do. Martin68 20 hrs ago #34
Then I am well-protected. Martin68 22 hrs ago #13
I'm on my way to Hoggy-days as soon as I finish posting this. 3Hotdogs 22 hrs ago #15
Good! I'm a cheese lover. CaptainTruth 21 hrs ago #16
Yea! Jean Genie 21 hrs ago #17
So, pick your poison! Mtnmama 21 hrs ago #18
Excellent, but like you said--caveats. pandr32 21 hrs ago #20
wonder if there is some sort of wealth/lifestyle link there JT45242 21 hrs ago #21
My husband's been telling me this for years. He just turned 79, by the way and has all his wits about him. Vinca 21 hrs ago #22
I don't want to know the caveats! LymphocyteLover 21 hrs ago #24
I wonder if the same would extend to BUTTER!!! maspaha 20 hrs ago #25
Actually, 80% butterfat PhylliPretzel 20 hrs ago #33
I now live in cheese paradise. GoneOffShore 20 hrs ago #27
"How can anyone govern a nation that has two hundred and forty-six different kinds of cheese?" - Charles de Gaulle eppur_se_muova 11 hrs ago #36
I wonder AncientOfDays 20 hrs ago #28
Old world diets included whole milk dairy, goat's milk and various cheeses bucolic_frolic 20 hrs ago #29
Negative thinker. I automatically took the topic headline as a bad result. Norrrm 20 hrs ago #30
My initial reaction was "Oh, nooooooo !". Seldom been happier to be wrong ! eppur_se_muova 11 hrs ago #37
Correlation is not causation dlk 20 hrs ago #31
I guess that Amish cheese online is safe! GreenWave 18 hrs ago #35
Latest Discussions»Culture Forums»Science»A 25-year study found an ...»Reply #12