

π₯ Unlock creamy magic anytime, anywhere with Judeeβs gluten-free milk powder!
Judee's Gluten Free Powdered Milk is a 24 oz pack of pure whole milk powder made in the USA, designed for versatile culinary use. Itβs gluten-free, nut-free, and shelf-stable in a resealable pouch, making it ideal for baking, cooking, and travel. This nutrient-rich powder offers a convenient, long-lasting alternative to liquid milk, perfect for health-conscious professionals seeking quality and reliability in their kitchen staples.








| ASIN | B013P7XS62 |
| Additives | Whole Milk Powder |
| Allergen Information | Gluten Free |
| Brand | Judee's Gluten Free |
| Caffeine Content | Trace amounts |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (1,295) |
| Date First Available | 26 July 2019 |
| Format | Powder |
| Manufacturer | Gluten Free You and Me |
| Package Information | Pouch |
| Product Dimensions | 27.94 x 17.78 x 2.54 cm; 680.39 g |
| Special Feature | allergy-conscious, nut-free, gluten-free |
| Units | 24.0 Grams |
L**C
Just tried it in my tea, EXCELLENT!! Creamy and delicious. Melted quickly into the tea and tasted just like I added milk. So happy that I tried this.
D**E
Very handy for recipes for breads. Also, you can mix up whole milk whenever you want a glass of milk or a bowl of cereal without having to buy milk when you rarely drink milk.
A**R
Filled to the very top. Dissolves very easy, water doesn't even need to be hot, just warm. I'll also try using cold water next π. This is my first time trying powdered milk π₯ I'm glad I bought this brand. Yalll it taste soooo good π, taste better than regular liquid milk . I made barley & poured milk. Absolutely NO clumping π
K**Y
Although this milk powder tasted okay (fairly creamy and fresh) when mixed with cool water and shaken up in a capped bottle then refrigerated, or when mixed directly into espresso or coffee, it does not blend in cool water merely by stirring with a fork. The instructions say mix with warm water, but I usually don't want to use warm water from the tap, and I don't want to heat some water in a kettle or microwave, mix it, and then wait some while for it to cool. I should have gone back to the shaking method this morning when I wanted some for cereal, but instead I just put water and the powder in a bowl, nuked it, and added the cereal after stirring upon removing it from the microwave. I guess I set the microwave for too long or something, but it came out with a very clumpy texture with lots of undissolved bits (see photo). I've never had fresh milk produce lumps like that when I cooked just milk, so I'm curious how it happened -- that kind of thing happens when you boil milk with some acid in the mix like vinegar or lemon juice, that's how you start to make cream cheese. Except these lumps didn't look like cream cheese, or indeed butter-fatty at all; they were more like piles of (white) straw, which I guess were "curdles", denatured milk proteins. Heat, acids, some salts, or enzymes (like rennet) can do this to proteins, but I added none of those, just water. Unless my tap water is more acidic or salty than I realized -- and I think I'd notice that in the taste, plus I read the water quality reports from the city utility every year and they don't seem to be abnormal -- it must have been the heat of 3 minutes in the microwave that curdled it, or there is something other than just whole milk powder in the package I got. But what's more, the larger clumps tasted a little like scrambled eggs, though they were still white. Even when I've curdled fresh milk I've never tasted that. Since Judee's is packed in a facility that also processes powdered eggs, I wonder if a little bit of egg white powder got into my bag by mistake, possibly some from the end of a run of egg powder on a machine that then got switched over to whole milk. I haven't gotten it tested for egg white albumin, and if there is any it must be just a trace amount because the taste is so light, and it's not noticeable when I just mix it up with water and then refrigerate. But I'm not allergic to eggs; some people are and have to be very careful to avoid the slightest contact with them. I'm basing my statement about the possibility of eggy content purely on my taste buds, which are pretty sensitive, but I detected no eggy odor when I sniffed. Until a testing laboratory could determine if any egg protein is present - not really my bailiwick and not within *my* budget at this time -- I will be sure not to serve this milk to anyone who does have egg allergies, and I would suggest caution with this product to anyone who does have such allergies. The NestlΓ© whole milk powder I got before, NIDO, dissolved better than this even in cold water, but I read the label and that has some additives which probably make it so, and some people may want to avoid those additives. The price on NIDO went up recently too, which is why I decided to try Judee's. I've also tried another brand several years ago, I think it was Hoosier Valley or something; Judee's tastes less "cooked" and more creamy than that did, and the Hoosier brand was pretty bad at dissolving too, so maybe there just isn't really a way to make whole milk powder that blends well without using a vigorous procedure/tool like shaking or a motorized blender. Anyway, since I didn't have an allergic reaction to anything here, I may order it again, but I would like to know for sure, just so I can feel confident about who I can safely serve milk this to.
K**E
Taste great. Delivery was fast definitely order again.
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