Uh, it is 2% butterfat. 4% butterfat is closer to what it was when it came out of the cow.
Oh, wait a minute, you said YOUR milk.
Never mind.
2006-08-08 16:47:47
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answer #1
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answered by who WAS #1? 7
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Well, mostly milk, proabaly some water - small percentage. The marking tells you the fat content or moste accurately the milk fat content.
Whole milk has the highest fat content, if your watching your diet or older than 30, your probably don't need the fat content in whole milk. 1% or 2% should be fine and though the taste is not what your use to like from whole milk, you'll get use to it.
So drink up and enjoy and it great for shakes, with lots of berries, bananas and honey.
Matt
And the person who said you were stupid was rather rude, because your not, you just weren't sure and did not know, nothing wrong with that.
2006-08-08 23:22:22
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answer #2
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answered by mjh3056 2
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The girl above is right. The 2% is only the amount of fat in the milk. The rest is just...Milk!
2006-08-08 23:16:49
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answer #3
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answered by vinible2006 4
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The 2% figure refers to the percentage of fat in the milk; non-fat milk, or skimmed milk, would have less. Whole milk has about 4% fat (the cream has not been removed). Raw milk would be whole milk straight from the cow. (YUM...nothing like fresh raw milk!)
2006-08-08 23:27:59
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answer #4
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answered by ax2usn 4
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The milk has a fat content of 2%.you also have skim milk, 1% and whole milk. These are just labeled differently for their fat content for people who are watching their fat intake due to obesity or health problems
2006-08-08 23:20:37
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Milk labeled 2 percent means that 2 percent of the weight of the milk comes from fat. However, percent of weight isn't what we normally measure in; all the FDA information reports percent of calories. "2 percent milk" actually means that about 35% of the calories in the milk come from fat.
2006-08-08 23:26:13
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answer #6
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answered by Muralasa 3
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That's 2% Milkfat. Not 2% milk
2006-08-08 23:18:16
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answer #7
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answered by Ananke402 5
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haha that would be very funny my friend if that were the case, but what the 2% is referring to would be the fat content of the milk.
2006-08-08 23:18:03
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answer #8
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answered by Travis L 3
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Well, considering which area of the cow milk comes from, I wouldn't ask too many questions if I were you! :)
2006-08-08 23:16:59
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answer #9
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answered by SuzeY 5
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2% of the milk is fat, 100% of it is milk.
2006-08-08 23:21:26
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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That's 2% milk fat.
2006-08-08 23:17:57
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answer #11
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answered by Chris 5
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