Milk’s Identity Crisis
The ubiquity of plant-based alternatives has challenged ideas about what the word encompasses.
This is an edition of The Wonder Reader, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a set of stories to spark your curiosity and fill you with delight. Sign up here to get it every Saturday morning.
Forget “Got milk?”—the new question du jour is “What is milk?” The ubiquity of plant-based alternatives has challenged ideas about what the word means and what it encompasses. And it’s not just oats and almonds that are complicating milk’s identity; the liquid itself is the subject of scientific uncertainty. “If an alien life form landed on Earth tomorrow and called up some of the planet’s foremost experts on lactation, it would have a heck of time figuring out what, exactly, humans and other mammals are feeding their kids,” my colleague Katherine J. Wu wrote last year.
Researchers who focus on milk can describe who makes it, where it comes from, and what it does, “but few of these answers get at what milk materially, compositionally, is actually like,” Katie writes. Today’s newsletter doesn’t solve these big milk conundrums, but it does collect our writers’ reporting on milk’s past and future. This will give you something to forward to the aliens should they arrive asking questions.
On Milk
Milk Has Lost All Meaning
By Yasmin Tayag
Yes, it’s a white-ish liquid. Beyond that, milk’s identity is hard to pin down.
Go Ahead, Try to Explain Milk
By Katherine J. Wu
No one can define it, much less fully replicate it.
Milk Has Lost Its Magic
By Yasmin Tayag
The bird-flu panic is getting out of hand.
Still Curious?
- The truth about organic milk: Cows are suffering on even the most “humane” dairy farms.
- Lactose tolerance is an evolutionary puzzle: Could famine be the missing piece?
Other Diversions
- How Daniel Racliffe outran Harry Potter
- A critic’s case against cinema
- Medieval pets had one of humanity’s most cursed diseases.
P.S.
I recently asked readers to share a photo of something that sparks their sense of awe in the world. “Sunrises, nothing more to say,” wrote A. B. Swett from Buffalo, Wyoming.
— Isabel
What's Your Reaction?