Eww yet another reason I don’t drink milk
Yes, Hoover Dairy delivers within the Niagara County area. However if you live outside the area you can always go to their store on Ward Road in Wheatfield and pick some up. It’s great.
[QUOTE=Clean Baldy;1201571]Glass milk tastes more natural but I also find it goes bad quicker and is affected by light!
You do know the light in the fridge goes out when you close the door. Anyone remember the milk vending machines at the corner sold by the cardboard quart? Grandmother used to send me as a kid. I go through about 2-3 gallons per week, just myself. Love the moo juice.
First thing that came to mind. Horrible quality, I couldn’t find a good one.
Andddd I’m not hungry anymore.
Dash’s in Kenmore has booth white & chocolate milk in glass bottles
carton milk>>>plastic jug milk
+1
+2 they also have glass bottle orange juice!!
The Made in America store has the Byrne dairy bottles.
I didn’t read the first page but Hoovers diary in sanborn. They have awesome chocolate milk too
Hoovers is awesome, they deliver out a decent range from their place.
Byrne dairy milk tastes fucking horrible.
Do you like Beer out of a glass bottle, can or do you prefer the plastic bottles? Even though there probably isn’t a physical difference on what is put into each container, I feel that the median transfers some taste to the liquid. Pepsi or Coke in a glass bottle tastes the best to me as well.
Why Does Coke From a Glass Bottle Taste Different?
By Doug Cantor
The Usual Suspects Various container materials might impart slight changes to Coke’s flavor. Courtesy The Coca-Cola Company
It doesn’t. That’s what Coca-Cola’s spokespeople say, anyway. “The great taste of Coca-Cola is the same regardless of the package it comes in,” they insist. Rather, they say, “the particular way that people choose to enjoy their Coke can affect their perception of taste.” Sure, most people would agree that the cola is indeed delicious and refreshing, and pouring it into a glass or serving it over ice could influence the sensation of its flavor. But is it possible that the subtle variation in taste that some notice among aluminum cans, plastic bottles and glass bottles is more than just a psychological effect of their soda-consumption rituals?
Given that the formula is always the same, yes, according to Sara Risch, a food chemist and member of the Institute of Food Technologists. “While packaging and food companies work to prevent any interactions, they can occur,” she says. For example, the polymer that lines aluminum cans might absorb small amounts of soluble flavor from the soda. Conversely, acetaldehyde in plastic bottles might migrate into the soda. The FDA regulates this kind of potential chemical contact, but even minute, allowable amounts could alter flavor.
Your best bet for getting Coke’s pure, unaltered taste is to drink it from a glass bottle, the most inert material it’s served in. Even that’s not a sure bet, though. Coca-Cola maintains strict uniformity in processes in all of its worldwide bottling facilities, but it concedes that exposure to light and how long the product sits on store shelves may affect the taste. So yeah, the packaging might mess with Coke’s flavor, but we’ll still take it any day over New Coke.