Spyke
dohpaz42reply
lemmy.world

No. In fact, I hope the manufacturers store it in testicle-shaped bottles.

36
hitmyspotreply
aussie.zone

No, we should call it pea mammry fluid from a different species.

3
lemm.ee

I tried pea milk for the first time a couple of weeks back, albeit it was chocolate flavored. It was pretty good and is a good alternative to water-hungry almond milk.

26
lemm.ee

pea milk is the only cow milk alternative i am willing to drink. all the other immitations are unbearable..oat, almond etc... yuck

4
lemm.ee

yes. not my favorite. not the worst. pea barista milk at my edeka...loving it.

also a quick question: growing and harvesting macadamia to make milk...whats the co2 footprint compared to pea or oatmilk?

3

Decades later I still have to say this, in an Orson Welles voice, any time I'm cooking with peas.

2
kbin.earth

Does it have qualities that would make it useful replacement in cooking and baking, or is it a drink alternative? The archive link isn't working for me, so sorry if this is in the article. I'm really curious.

17

Well of course. Peas are a lot smaller than cows and will eat and fart a lot less.

8
lemmy.ca

Yeah if people want this to catch on you can't call it pea milk.

Peas are a type of pulse. So let's call it pulse milk that sounds a lot more appetizing :>

7

Ahh yes give me your finest cup of pea.

Tea sir, what kind may I ask?

Heather, scum. I said pea... Do you not understand?

2

The colour of it makes me feel a bit noxious. Maybe I shouldn't have eaten that candy snake I found in my jacket pocket just before jumping into bed.

6

Yes. I was relying on autocorrect to help me out and after not finding the correct spelling after half a dozen attempts I gave up in favour of whatever that word I used is. I am on my side, half asleep.

12
FundMECFSreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

This is one of those things that everyone understands. Like "nauseous" may not be accepted as English by some upper class conservatives in charge of writing dictionaries, but to the rest of us it's understood and frequently used.

A language is a tool to communicate, not a bunch of rules.

It's this same grammar nazi logic that leads to dialects spoken by middle class and rich white people to be the "correct" one while those spoken by black people and lower class white people are seen as "incorrect".

4
dxdydzreply
slrpnk.net

I think everyone understood that the original commenter meant nauseous/nauseated instead of noxious. The corrector was being an annoying pedant, so I was pointing that out by correcting their “incorrect” word.

4
slrpnk.net

I've had pea milk, doesn't seem too rare in the UK. It was nice enough, maybe slightly watery compared to oat (my go to) but that could just have been the brand.

The comparisions are interesting, but also kind of demonstrate the futility of debating between plant based milks. There's a clear worst candidate here, and it isn't plant based. If your thinking of switching, choose your favourite, soy might be the second worst but it's significantly less than half the emmisions of cow milk.

4
Jumireply
lemmy.world

I want to use oat milk but I'm having a hard time getting used to the difference in taste to cow milk

1
slrpnk.net

My tip would be, give one of them a go for a set time period, like a month!

It's so interesting how the brain gets used to stuff, I did have the same thing when I swapped, but now cow milk tastes kind of funky when I do have it. You might find that after a week or so, you end up preferring it (you might also find you hate it, but at least you can say you gave it a go when you swap back, haha!)

3

Yeah, I'll probably have to force my way through it. For now I just stopped drinking milk in general.

1

Whoa I haven't seen chewable Soylent. I wanna try one of those. See if it actually fills my stomach unlike the drinks. Couldn't actually use the drinks as a meal replacement, since it did nothing to not make me feel hungry.

3

The bars are mid and overpriced, not bad but notably less filling than the drinks.

Soylent green was pretty cool, though. It was Spirulina flavored.

3
lemm.ee

I had some pea chocolate milk and it was pretty okay. Think almond and oat taste better but it's not the worse (that's soy).

2

Almond and Oat have that "nutty" taste that works well with chocolate.

i find oat curdles a little bit when used in hot drinks though. Personally, i'm a soy boy

3

Now I'm thinking about other options. Tomato milk. Grape milk. Orange milk. Lemon milk.

6

Gonna have to start calling stuff "peanut spread" and "hot assorted meat trimmings"

Also, we've been using the word milk to include plant milk since the year 1200

5

Not how language works... Like, there are no hard lines, its just whatever can communicate the idea you want to communicate. You really don't want to go down the road of demanding coherent and strict definitional categories for all words, and if you don't demand it for all words, then you're being a pedant for fully arbitrary reasons (the worst kind of pedantry).

1

This seems to show that coconut milk is better and uses barely any water. Also, it's coconut milk, which is lovely.

2

My fiance has food allergies, including dairy & tree nuts (like almonds). Once she discovered pea milk she started making mashed potatoes again. It turns out coconut milk doesn't make a great choice. I don't remember why she doesn't like soy milk.

1