They do not eat it, simply.
No.
No it is an animal product as it comes FROM an animal :o)
Cows do not make cheese themselves. Cheese is made from milk, which can be obtained from cows or other animals. The process of making cheese involves culturing and coagulating the milk to separate the curds from the whey, which is then aged to create different types of cheese.
60
Umm, Hamsters are not even meant to eat cheese cause it's VERY very bad for them. But they can eat anything leafy and tomatoes
Usually, none. Cows spend the majority of the year out on the fields where, unless somebody has dropped some, no cheese will be found. The main thing which cows will eat whilst out on the fields is grass and perhaps wild flowers. However cows do produce milk, which goes towards the production of cheese, which is what I think the asker of this question is getting confused with.
Unless you are lactose intolerant, yes.
To eat ice cream and string cheese
Cows don't chew cheese. They're herbivores, they chew grass and hay and such, and chew, when they're sitting around and relaxed, partly digested forage matter that they regurgitated from their reticulo-rumen tract called cud. Milk is produced from cows (normally for their calves, but in the case of dairy cows, for human consumption), and the fatty content of milk is made into cheese and other creamy dairy products like ice cream, yogurt, and butter.
A food chain for cheddar cheese begins with grass, which cows eat. These cows are then milked to produce milk, a key ingredient in making cheddar cheese. The milk is processed and fermented with bacteria and rennet to create the cheese. Finally, humans consume the cheddar cheese, completing the food chain.
cows.
Since when do vegetarians eat food from cows.