The npr story prompted me to tell my Tanzanian coworker about Snowville last week, so he tried some. His response?
It tastes like milk.





The npr story prompted me to tell my Tanzanian coworker about Snowville last week, so he tried some. His response?
It tastes like milk.
XLD wrote >>
The npr story prompted me to tell my Tanzanian coworker about Snowville last week, so he tried some. His response?
It tastes like milk.
I don't know anything about your coworker's history, or Tanzania, but maybe milk in Tanzania generally tastes more like Snowville's milk than like the watery American supermarket stuff? Or maybe he's one of those people who thinks that spending more than you have to for anything is just stupid?
I'm so glad that oatganic carries this...I wish Kroger would.
labi wrote >>
XLD wrote >>
The npr story prompted me to tell my Tanzanian coworker about Snowville last week, so he tried some. His response?
It tastes like milk.I don't know anything about your coworker's history, or Tanzania, but maybe milk in Tanzania generally tastes more like Snowville's milk than like the watery American supermarket stuff? Or maybe he's one of those people who thinks that spending more than you have to for anything is just stupid?
Sorry for being unclear.
'Tastes like milk' I imagine as being music to Warren's ears - the highest of compliments. And I imagine Tanzanian food sources to be nothing like the industrialized system we have here.
So I'm about to start a pretty extensive renovation of my home and skimming through apartment therapy for ideas, I came across this:
http://www.thekitchn.com/thekitchn/kitchen-tours/the-way-milk-should-be-a-visit-to-snowville-farm-tour-097864
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