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Mooove over: Dromedary dairy could be on horizon

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Tony Karumba, AFP/Getty Images
Camel milk products at a dairy in Nanyuki, 280 kilometers north of Nairobi, Kenya.

There is pent-up demand among Somali Minnesotans for camel milk, a traditional drink in much of Africa and the Middle East. But getting it poses a few problems.

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Appearing soon in a store near you -- camel milk. Whiter and sweeter than cow's milk, it is thought in some cultures to have health benefits not found in ol' Bessie's milk.

Camel milk? In Minnesota? Who's going to drink that? About 70,000 Somali Minnesotans, for starters.

"It's a little sweet, hard to describe," said 19-year-old Jamilla Mohamed, of Minneapolis, who remembers drinking camel milk in Somali when she was 11. "My grandma said it was healthy to drink."

A traditional drink in much of Africa, the Middle East and points east, camel milk is not available in the United States right now. But Millie Hinkle, a North Carolina homeopathic physician who is leading the camel milk cause in this country, is fielding hundreds of requests -- including regular queries from a potential distributor in Minnesota.

Hinkle, who has successfully lobbied to change federal rules allowing the sale of camel milk and is organizing a camel farm co-op in several states, predicts that camel milk will be on Minnesota shelves within a year, and that camel dairies will follow, depending on demand.

The Minnesota Department of Agriculture said it has no problem with camel dairies or the sale of camel milk, as long as it's done according to law. But it's no simple trick getting camel milk from teat to table.

Milk with a killer kick

Camel milking is notoriously difficult. It's done mostly by hand, on large, often uncooperative animals that can deliver a killer kick sideways. Output per camel is about half that of a traditional dairy cow, and what a camel gives has to be shared.

Camels won't give milk unless their young are near them. "The baby has to latch on and start sucking," said Hinkle. With the calf on one teat, milk is taken from the other three.

That's not how milking chores are done in Minnesota -- and who knows how to feed and house a camel?

Source: Star Tribune, August 18, 2009