We’d have the same history of fresh milk delivered in bottles every morning by the milkman. They still exist but have disappeared in many areas. There’s a push to bring them back as they used glass milk bottles that were collected, washed (in giant bottle washers - sort of like continuous dishwashers ) and refilled every day. Many also delivered fresh yougurt, cheese, butter and even orange juice and the newspapers.
You’d a milk crate (basket with segments for each bottle) which had a dial on the side which you set for how many of each type of milk you wanted & you got a milk bill each week or month.
The extra products were often ordered on a slip of paper you just inserted into the basket with your empties.
The milk bottles had coloured foil caps for different types and the birds knew how to recognise the bottles that were non homogenised (cream at the top) by the colour of the foil and would peck the gold or red (depended on the area) bottles!
That service disappeared in most places, but is making a comeback and milk is normally in tetrapak or plastic jugs. I prefer tertrapak as it’s better at keeping the milk from reacting with light.
Schools also have always provided fresh milk - either in little tiny milk bottles with foil caps (about 1/3 imperial pint) or small tetra bricks.
You’d definitely drink milk cold, fresh & pasteurised.
Normal here you’ve:
Full fat - homogenised & pasteurised (not UHT)
Low Fat 2%
Low Fat 1%
Skimmed 0.35% (not a fan of it)
Several brands - usually also get entirely organic options.
Super milk / fortified milk - added vitamins.
Also various chocolate milks, strawberry, raspberry etc etc from the local dairies made with the same fresh milk. A lot of them do their own yogurts & increasingly Kifer etc.
Also you’d have widely available fresh cream. Usually as double cream, pouring cream, light cream and fresh whipped cream and Buttermilk (used in a lot of Irish breads and cakes but it’s also just a drink too).
As for cheese. There’s a vast array of cheeses here from the usual boring but nice commercial cheddars to loads of farmhouse and specialist cheese similar to anywhere else I guess.
Modern day milkman : https://www.mymilkman.ie/
You’d a milk crate (basket with segments for each bottle) which had a dial on the side which you set for how many of each type of milk you wanted & you got a milk bill each week or month.
The extra products were often ordered on a slip of paper you just inserted into the basket with your empties.
The milk bottles had coloured foil caps for different types and the birds knew how to recognise the bottles that were non homogenised (cream at the top) by the colour of the foil and would peck the gold or red (depended on the area) bottles!
That service disappeared in most places, but is making a comeback and milk is normally in tetrapak or plastic jugs. I prefer tertrapak as it’s better at keeping the milk from reacting with light.
Schools also have always provided fresh milk - either in little tiny milk bottles with foil caps (about 1/3 imperial pint) or small tetra bricks.
You’d definitely drink milk cold, fresh & pasteurised.
Normal here you’ve:
Full fat - homogenised & pasteurised (not UHT)
Low Fat 2%
Low Fat 1%
Skimmed 0.35% (not a fan of it)
Several brands - usually also get entirely organic options.
Super milk / fortified milk - added vitamins.
Also various chocolate milks, strawberry, raspberry etc etc from the local dairies made with the same fresh milk. A lot of them do their own yogurts & increasingly Kifer etc.
Also you’d have widely available fresh cream. Usually as double cream, pouring cream, light cream and fresh whipped cream and Buttermilk (used in a lot of Irish breads and cakes but it’s also just a drink too).
As for cheese. There’s a vast array of cheeses here from the usual boring but nice commercial cheddars to loads of farmhouse and specialist cheese similar to anywhere else I guess.
Modern day milkman : https://www.mymilkman.ie/