commodity
milk
California's number one legal commodity is dairy products--milk, butter and cheese. California's number one commodity is marijuana, but you're not supposed to be growing that.
A Commodity Product is any homogenous goods traded in bulk on an exchange. Example: 1.Corn 2.Oats 3.Rough Rice 4.Soybeans 5.Rapeseed 6.Soybean Oil 7.Wheat 8.Milk 9.Cocoa 10.Coffee 11.Cotton 12.Sugar
no it is not because of the stomach
A commodity is something sold primarily on price rather than on some characteristic of the product. Because non-organic cow's milk is pretty much the same no matter where you get it, it is sold primarily on price and is therefore considered a commodity. Specialty milks--organic, lactose-free, flavored, from Jersey cattle--are sold on a particular characteristic of the product, so they're not commodities.
commodity
milk
There is no chemical solution for milk because milk is not a chemical. Milk is usually considered a type of colloid.
California's number one legal commodity is dairy products--milk, butter and cheese. California's number one commodity is marijuana, but you're not supposed to be growing that.
because of the absence of Iron and Vitamin A
A Commodity Product is any homogenous goods traded in bulk on an exchange. Example: 1.Corn 2.Oats 3.Rough Rice 4.Soybeans 5.Rapeseed 6.Soybean Oil 7.Wheat 8.Milk 9.Cocoa 10.Coffee 11.Cotton 12.Sugar
No, milk is not alive.
No, coffee with milk is not a solution. It would be considered a suspension because the milk can still separate after some time has passed.
I don't think so, because it's processed milk
'Got Milk' by Californian dairy producers is the most successful example of using branding to turn around a food commodity. Zespri kiwifruit out of New Zealand is another example of building value with admittedly a niche product in a commodity market.
Yes. All milk and milk products from any source is considered dairy.