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The surprising number of American adults who think chocolate milk comes from brown cows

Caitlin Dewey

Cows tend to produce one colour of milk - that is white.
Cows tend to produce one colour of milk - that is white. Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/AP

Seven percent of all American adults believe that chocolate milk comes from brown cows, according to a nationally representative online survey.

If you do the math, that works out to 16.4 million misinformed, milk-drinking people. The equivalent of the population of Pennsylvania (and then some!) does not know that chocolate milk is milk, cocoa and sugar.

But while the survey has attracted snorts and jeers from some corners - "Um, guys, [milk] comes from cows - and not just the brown kind," snarked Food & Wine - the most surprising thing about this figure may actually be that it isn't higher.

A double chocolate and peanut butter shake made from white milk
A double chocolate and peanut butter shake made from white milkEdwina Pickles
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For decades, observers in agriculture, nutrition and education have griped that many Americans are basically agriculturally illiterate. They don't know where food is grown, how it gets to stores - or even, in the case of chocolate milk, what's in it.

One Department of Agriculture study, commissioned in the early '90s, found that nearly one in five adults did not know that hamburgers are made from beef. Many more lacked familiarity with basic farming facts, like how big US farms typically are and what food animals eat.

Experts in education of agriculture aren't convinced that much has changed in the intervening decades.

"At the end of the day, it's an exposure issue," said Cecily Upton, co-founder of the nonprofit FoodCorps, which brings agricultural and nutrition education into elementary schools. "Right now, we're conditioned to think that if you need food, you go to the store. Nothing in our educational framework teaches kids where food comes from before that point."

Ms Upton and other educators are quick to caution that these conclusions don't apply across the board. Studies have shown that people who live in agricultural communities tend to know a bit more about where their food comes from, as do people with higher education levels and household incomes.

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But in some populations, confusion about basic food facts can skew pretty high. When one team of researchers interviewed fourth, fifth and sixth-graders at an urban California high school, they found that more than half of them didn't know pickles were cucumbers, or that onions and lettuce were plants. Four in 10 didn't know that hamburgers came from cows. And three in 10 didn't know that cheese is made from milk.

"All informants recalled the names of common foods in raw form and most knew foods were grown on farms or in gardens," the researchers concluded. "They did not, however, possess schema necessary to articulate an understanding of post-production activities nor the agricultural crop origin of common foods."

In some ways, this ignorance is perfectly logical. The writer and historian Ann Vileisis has argued that it developed in lockstep with the industrial food system.

As more Americans moved into cities in the mid-1800s, she writes in the book Kitchen Literacy, fewer were involved in food production or processing. That trend was exacerbated by innovations in transportation and manufacturing that made it possible to ship foods in different forms, and over great distances.

By the time uniformity, hygiene and brand loyalty became modern ideals - the latter frequently encouraged by emerging food companies in well-funded ad campaigns - many Americans couldn't imagine the origins of the boxed cereals or shrink-wrapped hot dogs in their kitchens.

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Today, many Americans only experience food as an industrial product that doesn't look much like the original animal or plant: The USDA says orange juice is the most popular "fruit" in America, and processed potatoes - in the form of french fries and chips - rank among the top vegetables.

"Indifference about the origins and production of foods became a norm of urban culture, laying the groundwork for a modern food sensibility that would spread all across America in the decades that followed," Vileisis wrote, of the 20th century. "Within a relatively brief period, the average distance from farm to kitchen had grown from a short walk down the garden path to a convoluted, 1500-mile energy-guzzling journey by rail and truck."

The past 20 years have seen the birth of a movement to reverse this gap, with agriculture and nutrition groups working to get education in agriculture back into classrooms.

Ms Upton, of FoodCorps, said everyone could benefit from a better understanding of agriculture.

"We still get kids who are surprised that a french fry comes from a potato, or that a pickle is a cucumber," she said. "... Knowledge is power. Without it, we can't make informed decisions."

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