Raw Milk in Baltimore, Maryland
6 raw milk sources found in Baltimore, Maryland, the United States
Free, no paywalls, no private equity.
Keep this project going and growing.
Select a tip amount
Please enter a valid email address to generate a secure payment form.
✓ You're supporting a free community resource. This is a tip/donation, not a purchase of milk or products.
Trusted by farms, local businesses, and startups nationwide.
Raw Milk Sources in Baltimore
Each listing below shows a raw milk source in Baltimore. Click any listing to view products, pickup methods, and contact information.
Showing 6 sources
-
Prigel Family Creamery
800 South Broadway
Baltimore, MD
USCreamy 100% grassfed Jersey milk on organic fields. Sold by the half gallon as pet milk as per MD regulations. We welcome questions. This is our Fells Point Farmers Market location.View Prigel Family Creamery's location, social media, contact info, and all other info added to the map in Baltimore, MD.
Prigel Family Creamery -
Prigel Family Creamery
529 East Belvedere Avenue
Baltimore, MD
USCreamy 100% grassfed Jersey milk grazed on organic fields sold by the half gallon as pet milk as per MD regulations. We have a variety of raw milk cheeses available and many other farm fresh products. We welcome questions. This is our Belvedere Square location.View Prigel Family Creamery's location, social media, contact info, and all other info added to the map in Baltimore, MD.
Prigel Family Creamery -
Buttercup Farm (Roland Park Drop)
Contact for details
Baltimore, MD
USThis is a drop off location. For more info, contact Buttercup Farm using their website or the phone number listed.View Buttercup Farm (Roland Park Drop)'s location, social media, contact info, and all other info added to the map in Baltimore, MD.
Buttercup Farm (Roland Park Drop) -
Buttercup Farm (Federal Hill Drop)
108 East West Street
Baltimore, MD
USThis is a drop off location. For more info, contact Buttercup Farm using their website or the phone number listed.View Buttercup Farm (Federal Hill Drop)'s location, social media, contact info, and all other info added to the map in Baltimore, MD.
Buttercup Farm (Federal Hill Drop) -
Buffalo Valley Pastures - Baltimore Drop
2801 Guilford Avenue
Baltimore, MD
USThis is a drop off location. For more info and to order raw milk, visit their website or use the phone number listed.View Buffalo Valley Pastures - Baltimore Drop's location, social media, contact info, and all other info added to the map in Baltimore, MD.
Buffalo Valley Pastures - Baltimore Drop -
Udder Milk Farm - Home Delivery Baltimore
Contact for details
Baltimore, MD
USView Udder Milk Farm - Home Delivery Baltimore's location, social media, contact info, and all other info added to the map in Baltimore, MD.
Udder Milk Farm - Home Delivery Baltimore
Find raw milk by species
Find other raw milk products
Other ways to find raw milk
Contribute
Your support covers hosting, development, and growth. Help keep raw milk accessible.
-
Submit a new listing +Add a farm to the database
-
SponsorshipsOngoing support with visibility
-
Buy me a milk 🥛Leave a one-time tip
Swipe right on some shirts
Latest Blog Posts
-
Australia’s “Useless” Land Is Full of Camels and a Working Dairy
A 1946 map labeled Australia’s outback useless. Today it holds over a million feral camels and a growing camel milk dairy industry.
-
Who Named Pasteurization? The Coinage and Spread of a Scientific Eponym
Pasteur never used the word “pasteurization.” Others coined it as an honorific, first in French, then in English in 1881, applied to wine. The path to milk took another decade.
-
Louis Pasteur: Chemist and Pasteurizer of Beer and Wine
Every conventional milk carton bears his name, but Pasteur never pasteurized milk. His study of fermentation developed a heat-treatment for wine in 1865 and beer in 1871.
-
“Raw Milk Can Kill You”: The 1945 Coronet Article That Shaped American Pasteurization Policy
Harold J. Harris’s 1945 Coronet article “Raw Milk Can Kill You” shaped American pasteurization law on a fictional epidemic and survey data the author knew was misleading.
-
Pure Milk Is Better Than Purified Milk: The Milk Question, 1912
Milton J. Rosenau’s 1912 public health synthesis covered milk composition, disease transmission, certified milk, pasteurization standards, and infant mortality across 309 pages and six editions.
-
Franz von Soxhlet: Agricultural Chemist and Inventor of Milk Pasteurization
Before pasteurization reached milk, it was applied to wine and beer. The chemist who first proposed heat-treating milk was Franz von Soxhlet, in Munich in 1886.