A cow is a cow. Milk is milk. Quantity and butterfat content will vary with each breed. Black angus is a breed. Drink Up!
Sure. It's just like any other cow's milk.
An Angus cow only produces around 20 to 30 lb of milk per day.
Yes, but Angus cattle are beef cattle, not dairy cattle, and are primarily used for raising beef calves, not giving milk to humans like Holsteins are. However, when necessary, an Angus cow can be milked out just like any "regular" cow.
In America, yes.
A cow that produces milk for the human population to drink.
No, not at all. A cow really couldn't care less if you drink her milk or not.
Yes.
What Angus cow? There are many different cows from different ranches, all with different reg. #'s. Please be more specific! Check out the American Angus Association website for the Angus cow you are looking for.
They can drink, but seldom. So, they not selling cow milk in cafe.
No. Cows don't need to drink milk: they drink water, not milk.
Angus is not any part of a cow. Angus is a BREED of "cow" or bovine, specified by the colouration and genetics that determine whether an Angus cow is purebred or not. Angus cattle are always all black, unlike other breeds that have followed the black trend like Simmental, Gelbvieh, Maine Anjou, Charolais, Limousin and Salers who, traditionally are not black. Please see the related links below for more info.
A healthy, fully mature Angus cow can weigh anywhere from 1200-1600 lbs.
No.