Yes it can be frozen. It can be frozen when it is out side the cow but not when it inside one because of body tempture but i guess it depends on weather the cow is alive or dead
Yes, goats' milk can be frozen; when thawed the problems preceived with cows' milk do not generally occur. Both fat and protein molecules are smaller and the freeze-thawing does not create the taste difference between fresh and thawed frozen. If you got access to extra colestrum, you should freeze it; you will probabaly need it with a future kidding. Which is the reason you do serious culling with does, to avoid needing frozen colestrum.
Angus cows are beef cows, not dairy cows. Holsteins are dairy cows, not beef cows, which is where we get the majority of our milk from.
COWS COWS COWS they eat cows.
Cows cows cows.
cows cows cows
"Moo cows" are, essentially, cows that moo.
Twelve cows can be called a flink, a dozen head or a herd of cows.
Hamburgers = beef beef = cows Steak is from cows. So yes, cows are eaten.
Cows that are milked are referred to as dairy cows. These cows are milked in a barn or a milk house.
The collective nouns for a group of cows are:a herd of cowsa mob of cowsa drove of cowsa drift of cows
Beef cows = beef cows, so yes, obviously.