Raw Milk Near Sapporo
1 local raw milk source available
Updated 3 weeks ago
Search the database to find raw milk
Trusted by farms, local businesses, and startups nationwide.
Free, no paywalls, no private equity.
Keep this project going and growing.
Support GetRawMilk.com
Connect people with raw milk sources.
Every tip keeps real food accessible.
Select a tip amount
✓ You're supporting a free community resource. This is a tip/donation, not a purchase of milk or products.
Raw Milk Availability in Sapporo
Within 400 miles of Sapporo, we found 1 farm offering direct raw milk sales.
Available Products
1 place to find cow milk.
Raw Milk Farms, Retailers & Pickup Locations Near Sapporo
Raw Milk Sources in Sapporo
Find raw milk by species
Find other raw milk products
Other ways to find raw milk
Swipe right on some shirts
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
Latest Blog Posts
-
Pastured Cows Make More Vitamin D, But That’s Not Where Yours Comes From
Unfortified milk contains too little vitamin D to matter nutritionally, and fortification, not pasteurization, supplies almost all of what is on the label.
-
Beyond Fat: What Heat Does to MFGM Proteins
The milk fat globule membrane’s own proteins respond to heat unevenly: some resist modification, one shows stabilization, and processing can add proteins in.
-
GGT: A Third Heat-Sensitivity Marker Enzyme in Milk
Between alkaline phosphatase and lactoperoxidase sits GGT, a milk enzyme whose heat sensitivity distinguishes specific pasteurization intensities.
-
How High-Pressure Processing Differs From Pasteurization
HPP denatures a different set of whey proteins than heat, preserves human milk miRNA far better, but isn’t automatically gentler overall.
-
Plasmin: The Heat-Stable Milk Enzyme That Survives Pasteurization
Milk’s main native protein-cutting enzyme survives standard pasteurization largely intact and even retains activity after UHT, unlike most milk enzymes.
-
Milk Oligosaccharides: The Compound That Survives Pasteurization
Unlike most milk components, oligosaccharides show up consistently unaffected by standard pasteurization across more than a decade of independent research.