This week we have a guest post from a wonderful man, my husband, Scott! He is far more adventurous than I when it comes to making things like this from scratch. Though he has had a few things that…umm..maybe weren’t so great, the bulk of his attempts turn out fantastic. Yogurt is one of them!
“ My daughter loves Yop, the yoghourt drink. It’s pretty pricy for the minuscule bottle, so I checked the ingredients and found skim milk, sugar, vanilla, active bacteria and some other stuff. Since this sounded like skim milk yoghourt with sugar and vanilla I decided to make my own by mixing these ingredients with enough milk to make it look like a thin milkshake.
She didn’t seem to mind the changeup but I was still a little price sensitive and thought to make my own yoghourt and then I’m really just using my own raw ingredients. I described the plan to my wife and she took it the same way she does all my raw ingredient experiments: not saying much and I believe not expecting much.
Searching the web for recipes and techniques proved to be enlightening: yoghourt (or yogurt or yoghurt) is dead easy. You need any kind of milk, a large pot, thermometer, a small amount of yoghourt and sterilized containers.
I had a box of mason jars in the garage so I measured them up (1 gallon each) and boiled two in my large pot for ten minutes then left them to dry. I then poured two gallons of 3.25% fat milk (a little under two litres) into the pot and set it on medium high heat, checking for 195 degrees F. When it reached that I took it off the heat and watched until it dropped to 115 degrees F and then poured it into the two mason jars. Next I added a big tablespoon of yoghourt to each jar, stirred it up and sealed the jars.
From here the milk and yoghourt mixture needs to ferment so there were a few suggestions: put the jars in the oven with the light on or wrap in towels and put in a cooler. Either method recommended 8-12 hours of fermentation so I went with the oven since it seemed easier and we weren’t using it.
The next morning I took the jars out and had a nice consistently of home made yoghourt: not too thick or thin. For eating and sauces I would like a firmer yoghourt so I could add whole milk powder before the yoghourt or just strain out the yoghourt. For my daughter’s drinking pleasure I still need to add milk but it just feels great knowing I made that, all by myself (and twenty or so websites I read first).”
For more of his fabulous tips, check out his blog eBabble!
I have never tried this but have heard lots of people doing this. Looks great.
ReplyDeleteI've been seriously thinking of doing this. Glad to know it worked for you. :D
ReplyDeleteHi. I was just surfing around some blogs, and I came across yours. It's pretty nifty and I'm really enjoying my stay here. I've bookmarked your site for daily visits, and I hope you'll visit me. I'd love to have you. :) Have a great day and I'll see you around the blogosphere. :)
ReplyDeleteI'm impressed that you tried yogurt and succeeded! I never have figured out the whole "oven - pilot light" thing, but I have a post on homemade yogurt that would generate one less dish to wash! :) www.kitchenstewardship.com/2009/04/13/monday-mission-homemade-yogurt-the-easy-way/ Enjoy!
ReplyDeleteI have an easiyo yoghurt makgin system. You buy a powder and make it up with water. Still cheaper than store bought but not as cheap as yours.
ReplyDeleteI may have to try this. My kids love the yogurt drinks but they are outrageously priced!
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