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Except that oat have not milk.
"oat juice" would not seems to bad as an alternative, for example. And the same applies to others vegan substitute of the milk.
It's not juice because juice needs to be 100% fruit extract without additives, not even water, so that certainly isn't juice. The question is, how would you call something that looks like milk, tastes like milk (there is no universal milk taste anyways as it tastes different or mammal and their feed) and is used in the same circumstances for the same things as milk?
If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, is it really helpful to go "ehm actually this isn't a duck"? What is the point of such a distinction?
Not sure, I think that there must be a minimum quantity of fruit, but I am not sure about the fact that you cannot add water, else you could not have a variety of fruit juices, like apricot, peach and similar.
"Oat extract" comes to mind, for example, if we want to keep it short, but I am sure that a marketing team can come up with better ideas.
The point is that it is not milk, it still is a vegetable extract. But I don't really think that oat (or any other plant based) milk taste like real milk, I've tasted all of them (family problems) and I can assure you that you cannot trick anybody to drink oat milk thinking it is real milk.
Then ok, these vegetable "milks" have their uses and for people who cannot drink real milk they can be a good option.
Except that it is a vegetable.