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Minnesota State Drink

Milk

 

Adopted in 1984.

 

Milk was adopted as the official State drink

in 1984. Minnesota produces 9.7 billion

pounds of milk a year (6 percent of the

nation's total) and ranks fifth in dairy

production among the states.

 

MINNESOTA STATE DRINK: Milk; adopted 1984.
Statutory citation: Minn. Stat. 1.1495
History:

1984 Minn. Laws Chap. 645 Sec. 1 (HF1532)
 
Minnesota Statutes 2002
1.1495 State drink.
Milk is adopted as the official drink of the state of Minnesota.
HIST: 1984 c 645 s 1
Copyright 2002 by the Office of Revisor of Statutes, State of Minnesota.

 

 

Where milk comes from and how it's made.
Ever wonder where delicious milk comes from? It all starts with healthy, well-fed cows that live on farms all around America the beautiful.

Did you know that: Milk has been proclaimed the official state beverage or drink in each of the following states:

 

State Symbol: Milk

Arkansas | Delaware | Louisiana | Minnesota | Mississippi | Nebraska
New York | North Carolina | North Dakota | Oregon | Oklahoma | Pennsylvania |South Carolina | South Dakota | Vermont | Virginia | Wisconsin

  • All cows are females (males are called bulls).
  • A cow can't give milk until she's given birth to a calf.
  • Cows provide 90% of the world's milk supply.
  • A cow's udder can hold 25-50 pounds of milk at a time -- no wonder she's so eager to be milked -- and a cow gives nearly 200,000 glasses of milk in her lifetime.

Can You Say, "I'm Full?"
Cows are BIG eaters. Did you know that cows have four stomachs and eat 90 pounds of food a day? That's probably more than you weigh! A cow that chows on only grass can make 50 glasses of milk a day. But one that eats grass, corn and hay can make 100 glasses of milk a day!

 

See Moo Milk

 

Milk has a long and rich history. For example, did you know?

  1. Sanskrit records mentioned milk 6,000 years ago.
  2. The Bible describes the Promised Land as Aa land flowing with milk and honey."
  3. The Greek physician Hippocrates recommended milk as a medicine some 2,300 years ago.
  4. Christopher Columbus brought cattle to the New World on his second voyage.
  5. It has been said that one reason for the high death rate among those who traveled to the New World on the Mayflower was that they had no fresh milk to drink.
  6. Cows were brought from Europe to the Jamestown colony in 1611 and to the Plymouth colony in 1624.
  7. Cheese was an important item in the diet of the Vikings, who from about the 8th to the 10th century sailed the seas on long voyages.
  8. Cheese was an article of commerce in ancient Rome. Monks developed the art of cheese making in Europe in the Middle Ages.

 

 

 

 

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