Jobs & Education0 min ago
Probiotic drinks
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Is there any reason that I can't add one of those probiotic drinks to a glass of milk to make it more palatable?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I have a Flora probiotic drink every day to help with too much cholesterol and find it quite palatable. But there is no accounting for tastes and what one person likes another will find disgusting. As an instance I am supposed to eat some natural yoghurt every day but find it very difficult. I mix it with cranberry juice and drink it and that way I can get it down. I hate milk too China Doll. Only keep it in the house for visitors.
Not at all welshlibranr, the docs I work for were recommending it to one of the patients whose gut had got a bit sluggish; after a bug I picked up I ended up not being 'regular' so to speak so started drinking these and I'm back to normal and notice a difference when i miss one. Even if it's a placebo it's working for me, so no, not a fad.
Thanks for the answers everyone. I only bought them because they were on offer, I have been advised to take some sort of probiotic by my doctor, I have some tablets on order but thought i'd try these while I wait for delivery. I will try it with a small glass of milk tomorrow. I'm not usually a milk drinker, I don't dislike it, I just prefer coffee or tea :)
Hi Daffy, I realise that, but there was talk on this thread about it also reducing cholesterol. There are little bottles like Benecol that are made especially for this, but they aren't probiotic. Well at least I didn't think they were.
I had three Actimels yesterday!! I love them and this thread was responsible for me going and drinking the third one!! x
I had three Actimels yesterday!! I love them and this thread was responsible for me going and drinking the third one!! x
Milk is 'seen' as food and triggers digestion in the stomach which releases acid to break down food. If you add milk, the probiotic bacteria start getting 'zapped' by the stomach acid. Probiotic bacteria are tiny microorganisms and very sensitive to their environment such as extreme pH conditions and temperatures.
Adding your probiotic to a glass of milk causes problems for the probiotic as soon as it enters the stomach so suggest you avoid doing this.
Adding your probiotic to a glass of milk causes problems for the probiotic as soon as it enters the stomach so suggest you avoid doing this.
Milk is 'seen' as food by the stomach and triggers digestion. Digestion releases stomach acids to break down food. Probiotic bacteria are sensitive microorganisms which are affected by environmental conditions such as pH extremes (eg acid) or temperatures for example.
Adding a glass of milk to probiotics will trigger digestion and the senstive bacteria will get 'zapped' by the stomach acids causing many of them to deteriorate and some will get destroyed. Not a good start for these 'friendly' bugs!
Adding a glass of milk to probiotics will trigger digestion and the senstive bacteria will get 'zapped' by the stomach acids causing many of them to deteriorate and some will get destroyed. Not a good start for these 'friendly' bugs!
Its all an advertising ploy backed by pseudo scientific crap woofgang, the poster only joined to post the video. I Googled the product and it is just short of £20.00 for a bottle that lasts a week.
I tried the probiotic drink I bought in milk this morning and it was not very nice so I'm just going to wait for my tablets to arrive now.
Its a shame that Activia yoghurts are so high calorie (around 150 per pot) because I like them.
I tried the probiotic drink I bought in milk this morning and it was not very nice so I'm just going to wait for my tablets to arrive now.
Its a shame that Activia yoghurts are so high calorie (around 150 per pot) because I like them.