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Post by Aj_June on Nov 29, 2019 23:36:46 GMT
A bit naturally sweeter than cow milk and probably a bit salty too. Would need to have it a few more times to decide whether i like it or not.
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Post by staggerstag on Nov 30, 2019 1:00:23 GMT
I've only ever seen camels in a zoo, hardly the place for them, I know, but I was a kid and knew no better, and hopefully camels aren't kept in zoos here nowadays. My most abiding memory of these animals is the unearthly, ear-splitting bellowing noises they occasionally made. I hope now that these thunderous bleats were not of anguish. They looked, as I distantly recall, quite calm and at ease at the time. Wonderful mysterious animals. Camel milk here costs £10 for 235ml or about 8 fluid ounces, and of course it is the inferior long life variety so I'm sure it would not taste the same as the fresh milk.
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Post by Aj_June on Nov 30, 2019 19:41:04 GMT
I've only ever seen camels in a zoo, hardly the place for them, I know, but I was a kid and knew no better, and hopefully camels aren't kept in zoos here nowadays. My most abiding memory of these animals is the unearthly, ear-splitting bellowing noises they occasionally made. I hope now that these thunderous bleats were not of anguish. They looked, as I distantly recall, quite calm and at ease at the time. Wonderful mysterious animals. Camel milk here costs £10 for 235ml or about 8 fluid ounces, and of course it is the inferior long life variety so I'm sure it would not taste the same as the fresh milk.Oh that's terribly costly. They are selling it many times the premium it deserves. Although I can understand that there are no deserts in UK and so there won't be any natural camel habitat, unlike here in India where the western part is desert (Thar Desert). That said Kazakhstan is on my list of places where I want to go and trying out fresh horse milk is one of the reasons for that. Although there are horses here in India I have never heard of horse milk being sold.
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