One cup (approx 250 ml.) has 9.7 gms of protein in it..
a buffalo can produce a minimum of 10 litres a day. it will produce maximum milk in the morning time and it gets reduced by evening time..
The major casein fraction in goat milk has higher leucine concentrations than the major casein fraction in cow's milk. This would suggest that although the proportion of the five major proteins that make up goat milk vary from sample to sample, it would typically contain as least as much leucine as cow's milk and therefore be inappropriate for those with leucine sensitivity.
If you mean ALL the nutrients existing, then the answer is no. Milk only contains "protein (much of it is casein), fat, lactose and probably some inorganic salts." -
Yes predominantly casein. If you ever see curdled milk, the chunks are the protein. There is a lot of protein. If you want to test this take some milk and pour something acidic into it. It will curdle. Sieve out the solid and see how much liquid is left. Milk contains about 3% protein.
Because the milk contains proteins called casein. Milk is white because it contains calcium phosphate. Other substances such as lactose are also white, or casein, mostly because it is bound to calcium phosphate ions, but they are present in milk in much smaller quantity compared to calcium.
there is around 1100 mg of casein in 1 litre of cow's milk
It depends on the volume of milk. A drop of milk will have a different mass to a tankerful.
It depends on the breed of cow in question. A Holstein (dairy) cow will give more milk than a buffalo, but a Charolais (beef) cow will give less milk than a buffalo does. An Angus cow may give as much or slightly more milk than a buffalo cow will.
A protein called casein, present in milk, forms a coagulum in the presence of an acid. This may result from the splitting of some of the phosphate that had been esterified to the casein and also from some proteolysis of peptide bonds in the casein molecules.
100 grams of milk
Milk has a density of between 1027 kg/cubic meter and 1033 kg/cubic meter depending on type of cow, temperature, fat content, etc. (1 027 kg) / (cubic meter) = 242.976119 grams / US cup (1 033 kg) / (cubic meter) = 244.395648 grams / US cup
It depends upon the breed of Buffalo however the Indian buffalo gives about 20-40 liters a milk in a day.
Cows tend to produce much more milk per day than a human female can. Cow milk also contains lactose and casein, which human milk doesn't.