Please take part in this very scientific poll.
Please take part in this very scientific poll.
Last edited by bruhnaldo; 23-03-2020 at 06:35 PM.
Whole and filtered. I go through 0.75l a day atm but I've just been informed it may be inhibiting my immune system through having antibiotics. Now I ain't fact-checked it but I'm trying all manner of juju shit in my battle against Covid so why tf not. Once I'm through the remaining stock in the fridge I'll go on a break.
I just buy milk.
Isn’t there loads of estrogen in milk? Might explain why you’ve turned into a fanny.
(I love you and the above is fake news)
EDIT: @Taz
2% isn't semi-skimmed.
I drink filtered semi-skimmed.
2% is great, you nonce.
Also, skimmed is 0.3% or less.
It's just water with milk powder added.
Skim milk is just bad water.
Blue milk but I can have green if need be. Fuck the red
Semi-Skimmed
Skimmed is for dull women, and full fat is for children and the simple.
I buy semi-skimmed, but when you get it out and about they tend to give you full fat. It's all good except for skimmed.
Full fat.
#simple
Red top isn't milk.
Semi skimmed - the best of both worlds.
We have milk (blue), low-fat milk (green), and then there's a load of wastes of time in pink and red packaging.
The skimmed/semi-skimmed naming started to creep in a few years ago but has mostly gone as quick as it came.
There's also one which I saw advertised as being yellow top but claimed to have "all the flavour of skimmed" which is about as appealing as if they just said they'd flobbed in every bottle.
Yellow here is normally buttermilk.
I think yellow top is trying to fool people who wanted gold top.
I've always thought that gold top sounds wrong. It's pretty much single cream, no?
I think it's partway between full fat and single cream.
Above whole milk, they have the percentages all wonky heres. There’s really no mass-produced equivalent to single and double cream. You’ll find them, of course, but they’re usually from smaller producers.
We have “whipping cream,” which is 35%, and then half-and-half, which is somewhere between 10-12%.
I think single is 18% and double is closer to 50% in the UK, no?
Almond or oat.
Of course.
Wikipedia concurs, with clotted cream at 55%.
EDIT: @Luca
The best non-dairy milk I've tried is hazelnut.
Gold top.
I don't get the point in bothering with semi-skimmed and skimmed can fuck right off, just dye water white if that's what you're after you daft shite.
Depends what you're doing with it. For coffee, soya (sweetener), almond (same), and oat are the best.
Smoothies you can go for the other ones.
With cereal they're all awful.
Cereal = blue milk
Tea = green
Soya, Almond = good
Oat = rank
Whatever this one is, no idea what my preference would be, it's whatever my parents used to get. I think it's whole milk?
Replaced with a slightly smaller picture.
The man never drank a milk in his life.
Lol, prix.
Here I've been having 1% and it's still pretty good. Back in the UK I was a semi-skimmed man as I agree with Jimmy's views.
For my smoothies though I go for Almond as it makes it so creamy without the calories
I can’t imagine all of you people drink milk?
Whatever Kurt Angle used to drown himself in.
0.2% for those lean gainz.
I put skimmed in my tea, on the odd occasion I don’t have green/rooibos.
I don’t drink milk because it’s horrendous.
I'm a twit
Lactofree, semi-skimmed.
I read somewhere once that some large percentage of Britons has only ever tried instant coffee (in terms of coffee). If that's the only "coffee" most residents of an entire nation have tried, then it's no wonder why they prefer hot flower water
80% according to this https://www.ceutagroup.com/the-coffee-market-in-2019/
CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR
In the UK, people drink 95 million cups of coffee per day – an increase of 25 million over the last ten years, according to the Centre for Economics and Business Research. 65% is drunk at home, 25% at work or while studying, and the rest is consumed in shops, bars and restaurants.
While 80% of UK households prefer to buy instant coffee for in-home consumption, particularly those aged 65 and older, roast and ground coffee, and single-serve coffee pods are becoming increasingly popular, particularly amongst Millennials who account for 16% of all buyers (British Coffee Association).
On the high street, café culture continues to boom, 80% of people who visit coffee shops do so at least once a week, whilst 16% of us visit on a daily basis.
A challenge for brands, according to the British Coffee Association (BCA) is tapping into the younger end of the market, who are turning away from instant coffee, saying “long term growth in the market will very much depend upon how coffee brands can make coffee drinking appealing to a younger audience”.
Globally, The Netherlands tops the list of global coffee consuming countries followed by Finland, Canada and Sweden (Statista).
Instant coffee is a no brainer. Weeks of caffeine boosting pleasure in a jar for four quid (or seven quid, if you're fancy).
'Proper' coffee may be of superior quality but it's expensive and a faff to make.
Instant coffee is absolutely disgusting. Buy a french press from IKEA for $15 and it’s genuinely no more of a pain to make than tea
Instant coffee? Man fuck this guy.