I h.a.t.e. cows milk but I have goats milk/cheese/yoghurt and I will not eat pasteurised cheeses, so thanks to the French I can buy un-pasteurised Camenbert etc…. much healthier and tastier.
All my pups were brought up on goats milk and still have goats yoghurt. They are healthy and never see a vet.
Now I really am intrigued about Camel milk! Shall I have to persuade the supermarkets again (like with goats milk to put Camel milk on the shelves? No doubt our dilly-dallying health authorities will try to stop such import.
I don’t think the ‘salty taste’ is that of sea or other salts, it’s part of the Camel’s natural body function.. it prevents them from dehydrating!.
I rather have some ‘salt’ than the chemicals cows are injected with!!
Will Britons Lap Up Creamy Camel Milk?
12:23pm UK, Thursday December 31, 2009
Ashish Joshi, Gulf correspondent
Camel milk could soon be on supermarket shelves in Europe after a Dubai-based dairy applied for an export licence.
Camelicious already sells its products across the Gulf region and now the company has ambitious plans to break the European market.
But it needs to convince EU officials the camel milk meets stringent health and safety tests.
Camelicious lawyer David Wernery says camel milk is far more nutritious than its cow counterpart.
“First of all, the vitamin C content is very much higher in camel milk than in cow’s milk, about 4 or 5% more,” he said.
“It is low in fat, naturally low in fat, so cow’s milk has about 4%, camel milk has almost 2% fat.
“So it is like drinking skimmed cow’s milk but it still has the rich texture and full body taste of normal milk.”
The idea was first hatched almost 10 years ago by David’s father Ulrich, who is Dubai’s chief veterinarian.
He had just returned from a conference on camel husbandry in Tajikistan.
This is where he first tasted milk from the humped beast.
Mr Wernery Sr was so taken with the milk that he set about persuading his employer, Dubai’s ruler Sheikh Mohammed, to invest in his plan.
“The Bedouins who lived in the desert lived mainly from camel milk and dates,” he said.
“Without camels, they would not have survived in the desert.
“The milk was a very good source of protein but it has never been used for commerce.
“When I came back from the conference, I told Sheikh Mohammed that he has wonderful race camels but they also produce milk.
“It is the white gold of the desert and I tried to convince him to open a commercial dairy farm. He was very enthusiastic.
“For two years we tested 16 camels with a camel-milking machine and a stand.
“It was then that Sheikh Mohammed called me and said ‘let’s start the dairy farm tomorrow’.”
That small experiment has grown into a multi-million pound dairy and the specialist hand-selected herd is now over 3,000 strong.
The custom-made machinery and the state-of-the-art milking plant are top secret.
Journalists are not allowed on site because, according to the dairy managers, they “may carry infections that could compromise the camel herd”.
But it’s more probably because the race is on in the Arab world to farm and harvest one of the few abundantly available resources.
One problem facing potential dairy farmers is that most camels produce insufficient milk to make commercial profit.
One way around that is to invent one that does. Earlier this year scientists in Dubai unveiled Injaz, the world’s first cloned camel.
She was created in a laboratory using cells taken from the ear of a slaughtered camel.
Injaz represents hope for the future of the uber camel: one that is stronger, faster and more productive.
One by-product of camel milk that is already available in Europe is chocolate.
Because it is less than 50% animal product, it is not subject to the same rules as the milk.
The chocolate is popular in the Far East and Camelicious claims it struggles to meet growing demand from its local Middle Eastern customers.
General manager Martin Van Almsick reckons once customers get over their initial reservations they are hooked after their first bite.
“What is inside the chocolate fulfils the promise. Everyone who has a chocolate in their mouth is able to tell,” he said.
“Camel milk has a slightly salty taste, we tried to preserve that special quality in the chocolate and everybody can tell.”
// //

American Made
/ 01/07/2010No way will I drink camel milk….we have to remember the bedouins were raised on it, but not us…
newsdeskinternational
/ 05/15/2010Harrods Could Play Host To Camel Milk Chocs
Al Nassma is in talks with the British department store and San Francisco’s Chocolate Covered.
The Dubai-based brand plans to expand into new Arab markets, Europe, Japan and the United States, its general manager said.
Al Nassma was formally established in October 2008 and aims to produce 100 tons of premium camels’ milk chocolate a year.
In partnership with Austrian chocolate maker Manner, Al Nassma manufactures the end product at its Dubai facility.
The company is set to open its second store in the UAE in one of Dubai’s large malls and is in talks with mall operator Majid Al Futtaim and others, Van Almsick said.
It plans to launch an online shopping facility too.
“It’s a luxury product, so we will never be in supermarkets.
“The plan is to be in one mall in each UAE city,” Van Almsick said in an interview.
Al Nassma is also looking at the possibility of setting up a store in Japan, where demand for the product is high, he said.
All chocolates are produced without preservatives or chemical additives with a range of locally popular spices, nuts and honey, the company says.
Camel milk contains five times more vitamin C than cow milk, less fat, less lactose and more insulin, making it a good option for diabetics and the lactose intolerant, Van Almsick added.
With 3,000 camels on its Dubai farm, the company currently sells chocolates through its farm-attached store as well as in luxury hotels and private airlines.
http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/World-News/Dubai-Worlds-First-Camel-Milk-Chocolate-Al-Nassma-Could-Be-Sold-In-Harrods/Article/200907415344169?lpos=World_News_First_Buisness_Article_Teaser_Region_4&lid=ARTICLE_15344169_Dubai%3A_Worlds_First_Camel-Milk_Chocolate%2C_Al_Nassma_Could_Be_Sold_In_Harrods
newsdeskinternational
/ 08/21/2010Dubai camel dairy hopes to milk health food market
The camels know the drill by heart.
Just after dawn, they file on their own — always in groups of 12 — into metal stalls for milking. Workers attach automated pumps. The milk flows into a system of chilled pipes that empty into a sealed metal vat.
http://home.peoplepc.com/psp/newsstory.asp?category=TopStories&id=20100821/488be1b3-d02f-4051-80e5-f33d75828c69