A friend of mine, knowing that he could with relative ease drink an entire gallon (imperial I assume) of water in one hour, bet me $100.00 that he could perform the same feat with a gallon of milk. In short, he bet that he could drink a gallon of whole milk at any temperature he chose within an hour.
Having seen some considerable digestive apparatuses try and fail at that very feat, I eagerly took the bet. However, in deference to his mild lactose-intolerance, I agreed to allow him to take the test with a gallon of whole Lactase.
Why is milk hard to drink? Is it simply a matter of digesting the lactose? Am I giving up my $100.00 foolishly my giving him pre-digested milk?
How much fat is in the milk? Didn’t you say whole milk? I would assume that the dairy fat would start to slow you down and make you feel full.
Even if it is Lactase, I think your stomach is going to hurt and you would be looking at spending a lot of time in the john afterwards.
When drinking water, the body really doesn’t have to do anything. But when drinking milk, it has to break down and process those nutrients, which requires more time to consume it.
It has nothing to do with the lactose, or milk sugar, but the fat content. Technically milk is not a liquid like water, it’s what’s called an emulsion, i.e. globules of a solid (fat) suspended in a liquid (water). So if your friend uses skim (fat-free) milk he could probably do it.
I for one welcome our new insect overlords… - K. Brockman
Sometimes milk allergy is misdiagnosed as lactose intolerance. (Although I hope that it is getting better, you still hear about it). You could be putting your friend in some danger by taking this bet. I hope not.
Milk is harder to drink than water? Since when? I regularly drink a quart of day of milk, sometimes 2. I’ve drunk 5 quarts in a day a few times, but not lately. Water? Never touch the stuff. It’s bad for you, you know.
Work is the curse of the drinking classes. (Oscar Wilde)
it is the amount of glucose in your blood that tells the brain when you are full, that is both why it takes you 20 min or so to become “full” and why drinking milk is harder than drinking water(because there is more sugar in milk).
bj0rn - nutrition student
(You know, I find it helps to copy it to WordPad and then fix all the punctuation errors, etc., so they’re not so distracting. Then I usually light some incense, sacrifice a chicken to the spirit of Kate Turabian, and get really drunk. Then it actually starts to make sense.) - notthemama
A gallon of water or milk in an hour is hardly a feat for a grown man unless his stomach is stapled. You gave him $ 100. for this! Make him do it in 10 minutes…but stand back!! Mr. Creosote in action.
Bake me a fresh batch of chocolate chip cookies and I’ll drink 2 gallons of milk in an hour.
Actually, I don’t know about a full gallon, but I really have drank three quarts of milk in just 15 minutes (with fbccc [see above]). Gallon/hr is too easy.
if a gallon of whole milk has about 80 grams of fat, 200 g of carbohydrates and 80 g of protein (and about a gallon of water) my guess is that drinking a gallon of milk is equivalent to eating 80gr of fat, 200 of ch and 80 of protein and drinking a gallon of water.
I am guessing but the gallon of water might make you uncomfortable. the rest of the stuff would be feasible, especially if you cut down on the fat by using low fat or skim milk
I’m not sure about a gallon in the States but over here (Scotland) a gallon is eight pints. When I go to the pub and drink eight pints I’d have to spend about 35 mins in the whizz house. That would leave about 25 mins to drink the beer which really would be a tall order.
I think I read somewhere that drinking too much water can poison you. Or am I just imagining it?
Yeah, it’s some godawful number like eight gallons in an hour for several hours in a row to go comatose from electrolyte imbalance from drinking way too damn much water.
The problem with drinking too much water would probably be that it washes all the electrolytes out of your system. Not just electrolytes, but the sugars and stuff. Basically, it kills you by eliminating a few of the things you need to function.