Yes. Whey is derived from milk. I'd be interested to know your source on the cell mutations, though.
2007-03-18 23:27:31
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answer #1
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answered by red stilletoes 2
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I'm not sure exactly what whey is, but I know it's a milk derivative, therefore is an animal protein. I'm not exactly sure about the whole mutation thing, I avoid animal products for a different reason. I guess you never can be too safe though!
2007-03-19 00:55:09
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answer #2
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answered by anne33khan 2
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No, and actual if I ever start to do not forget grams and numbers like that religiously daily i might desire to look a shrink. it is consumer-friendly journey, despite that seems absent in plenty persons. undemanding journey. consume modern fruit an veg, some carb stuff, rice, oatmeal, power giving stuff, and a few iron food- and vitaminc wealthy food. The protein is going to be in plenty food to boot. it extremely is a word no person used to assert. Iron, and food. SPinach, soymilk, cheese, tofu, lentils, chickpeas, brazil nuts. end of. i could question all and sundry who sits precise right down to make little sums on a paintings of paper daily. it is not any attitude to stay. Seeing as we are all born with instinct and consumer-friendly journey, why now no longer use it?
2016-10-02 09:10:17
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Yes, whey is from milk, which comes from cows, goat, or sheep, usually. What causes the cell mutations is likely from the growth hormones, steroids, and antibiotics found in most commercial milk. Raw milk, straight from the cow, has the enzymes to digest itself, and is tolerated well even by people highly allergic to milk or lactose intolerant
2007-03-19 01:32:19
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answer #4
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answered by beebs 6
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Whey!
2007-03-18 21:50:09
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answer #5
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answered by Jacques 4
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I heard it is protein from eggs., so not for vegan
2007-03-19 09:07:36
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answer #6
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answered by **B** 4
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no it is not
2007-03-19 00:30:05
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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