I looked it up the other night.  Regular pasteurization is just under 200 
degrees, and ultra pasteurization is about under 300.

At 500 degrees, I'm sure the stuff would just burn up.

I have only looked at the notmilk.com site so far.  There is some good info 
there, although they are a bit extreme perhaps, inferring that milks causes 
almost every malady known.

I will keep looking up info.

-Ken Bagwell

sol <[email protected]> wrote: 
http://www.foodsci.uoguelph.ca/dairyedu/pasteurization.html#htst
I don't see any mention of 500 degrees F. Have you got a reference for 
your statement?
sol

Terry Chamberlin wrote:

> Pasteurization is not simply heating milk, it is
> heating milk to a very high temperature (500 degrees)
> under pressure (to keep it from boiling or curdling).
> This unnaturally high temperature rearranges the milk
> constituents into something not good for our bodies.


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