- Why Make Homemade Yogurt?
- How Much Time Does It Take to Make Homemade Yogurt?
- How Complicated Is It?
- How to Make Homemade Yogurt, the Easy Way
- What Does It Look Like?
- The Easy Clean Up
- Serving Suggestions
- A Note on Skim vs. Whole Milk
- A Note on Organic Milk
- Safety Notes
- Yogurt Troubleshooting
- Who Should Make Their Own Yogurt?
- Yogurt Excuses
- Need More Baby Steps?
It might sound scary, but making homemade yogurt is quite simple! I’ll give you step-by-step instructions and a yogurt troubleshooting guide to make sure you have yogurt success!
It’s a Choose Your Own Adventure Monday Mission today…Find your yogurt profile below, and take one (maybe two?) step forward.
- I don’t eat yogurt…Your challenge is to try to find some way to eat yogurt that you like! I found that starting with a plain vanilla worked for me. Put your favorite breakfast cereal on top if you have to – the yogurt is even healthier than the milk you’d usually use. Check out the serving suggestions below the recipe for other ways to incorporate yogurt into your meal planning.
- I eat run-of-the-mill sweetened yogurt cups…Try buying a 32 oz. tub of yogurt…you’ll save money and have less packaging waste to recycle.
- I buy big tubs of vanilla yogurt…Move on to plain yogurt, and use fresh or frozen fruit and your own sweetener. You’ll find that you can probably use less total sugar than the presweetened storebought brands. You might even try honey or real maple syrup to avoid refined sugar.
- I use plain yogurt and add fresh fruit…You’re ready to make your own, baby! Move on to the directions…
Yogurt is a foundational Kitchen Stewardship® recipe because it saves SO much money, improves your nutrition SO much and really is quite easy. (Broth is the first.) I think everyone should make homemade yogurt! You can even make Instant Pot yogurt.
NOTE: Yogurt recipe ideas and 30 other Healthy Snacks to Go recipes now available as an eBook!
If taking real food on the go is a challenge for you, you’re not alone.
Join thousands of other happy owners of Healthy Snacks to Go, an eBook that is helping real foodies everywhere keep their families nourished (and kids happy) even when they need to pack a snack — without resorting to processed junk food or expensive health food store treats.
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Why Make Homemade Yogurt?
I’ll bet a lot of people are apprehensive about making homemade yogurt for a variety of reasons:
- too much time
- too complicated
- afraid it won’t work out
- growing bacteria just sounds scary and dangerous
My job is to dispel all your fears and teach the no dishes, no fuss way to make homemade yogurt. Here’s your motivation:
- At current prices of $2-6/gallon for milk and $2-4 per 32 oz. tub of plain yogurt, I save $6-14 every time I make a gallon of yogurt, which I do almost every week. That’s over $700 a year off my food budget just by making homemade yogurt, about 1.5 gallons per week. (Yes, we eat it that often.) More if organic! Click HERE for the breakdown and more budget tips.
- Nutritionally, I can be totally in charge of the ingredients. No high fructose corn syrup or fake foods for my family. Just the health benefits of yogurt, thank you!
- Environmentally, I save about 200 32 oz. plastic tubs from going into landfills or being recycled every year.
- If you compare to the little plastic presweetened cups, the savings are immeasurably greater in every category.
For example, the last time I read the nutrition facts on a 6 oz. yogurt cup, it contained about 45 grams of sugar. One teaspoon of sugar has 4 grams, and an 8 oz cup of milk has 12. I don’t think I could add enough fruit to make 45, so I guarantee you can cut your sugar intake…significantly…by using plain yogurt!
How Much Time Does It Take to Make Homemade Yogurt?
Grand Total: 15 minutes active work, an hour and a half that you’ll need to be at home.
- 5 minutes to pour milk into jars
- a few minutes over the next 20 minutes to check on the temperature
- a few minutes to move the jars to cool them
- wait an hour and a half or more
- 5 minutes to stir in the starter and put them to incubate
- a few minutes to get the jars in the freezer and then the fridge
How Complicated Is It?
The basic steps:
- Heat to sterilize the milk. (185 degrees)
- Cool milk to proper incubation temperature. (90-110 degrees)
- Add starter yogurt.
- Incubate at warm temperature 4-24 hours.
**If you have raw milk and want to make raw yogurt, click HERE.
Let’s get started. There are a bunch of ways to do this, but here’s the easiest method, in my opinion. I realize this post looks very long, but it’s just because I want to hold your hand through every step to take the fear out of the process, which is really simple once you read through this and try it once.
Supplies necessary:
- Glass jars (quart wide mouth canning jars or empty mayo or spaghetti sauce jars work great)
- Milk (any, from skim to whole)
- Candy thermometer, but I can show you how to do it without one too
- Pot large enough to hold your glass jars
- 2 Tbs of plain yogurt per quart of milk (Buy the freshest yogurt possible at a store and make sure it has “live and active cultures”. I prefer Dannon. I know it has the three top cultures that I’m looking for to help the gut. The little cups are often on sale for 40-50 cents.)
- picnic cooler
- bath/beach towel
- timer
Prep:
- Run jars and lids through the dishwasher to sterilize. They should be totally dry before capping. I let them air dry completely on top of my toaster oven. If you’re a real baby stepper, just put this step on your to-do list for this week, along with “print and read yogurt directions”. Then NEXT week you can tackle “make yogurt” on a day of your choosing! {As long as your jars have been thoroughly cleaned, absolutely completely dried out, and then capped, I wouldn’t worry too much about the bacteria…but don’t take my word on it.}
- Get out picnic cooler and clean bath towel.
How to Make Homemade Yogurt, the Easy Way
The very first time you make yogurt will take a little more attention because you’ll have to check temperatures to figure out the timing. After that, it’s a piece of cake!
- Put your sink washcloth in the bottom of the pot. This will prevent the jars from breaking if they start shaking when the water boils (especially if you forget about them). Added bonus: You know how sometimes even after washing your dishrag, it still smells sour? This will knock the stink right out!
- Pour milk into your jars to about an inch from the top.
- Place jars into the pot and fill the pot with tap water around the jars.
- Put a candy thermometer on the edge of the pot. Heat on high until boiling (now your thermometer is sterilized). Sometimes I put a spoon in there too so I know it’s sterile for stirring the yogurt starter in.
- Move the thermometer into one of the jars; turn heat to medium-low or so, just enough to keep the water boiling.
- When the milk is at about 185 (you can’t burn it with this method, so if you forget it for a while, it’s OK!) turn off the heat and put lids on the jars.
The no-thermometer method: When a “skin” appears on the top, you’re at temp. Just scoop the skin off and throw it in the sink. - Remove the jars of milk to cool in the refrigerator on the counter. {I used to cool jars in the fridge, but I realized that it was raising the temp of my fridge, and that’s not good for the rest of my food!} Optional: Take starter yogurt out and let it sit on the counter. This ensures that it’s not too cold when you mix it into the warm milk. You can also cool the milk in a sinkful of cold water with ice or ice packs if you’re in a hurry. It works in about 20-30 minutes with water just halfway up the sides of the jars at my house. {In the winter, I put the jars in my cold garage.}
- Put a lid on your pot of boiling water and arrange the towel in the cooler so you can put the pot in there without melting anything, then close the lid, towel, and all.
- Your goal is to get the milk down to about 100 degrees. Incubation happens between 90-120 degrees, so you have decent wiggle room, but 100-112 is optimal. At my house, it takes at least 90 minutes on the counter, 50 minutes in the fridge, 20 in the sink. The first few times you make yogurt, you’ll figure out what your fridge can do. Keep your thermometer sterile and check after about 45 minutes, or leave the thermometer in the jar for the first time only and check at intervals, keeping in mind that opening the fridge will change the temperature in there just a bit, so adjust next time when you simply set the timer. I’ve found that I prefer the thickness of the yogurt better at ~100 degrees.
No-thermometer method: You can learn what the jars feel like from the outside. I’ve found that I can’t hold onto the jars with bare hands for more than a few seconds, it’s still too hot. Give it 5-10 more minutes and check again. 118 degrees is the temp at which enzymes and yogurt bacteria die. It’s also the temp at which humans say “ouch!” God built in a way for us to know when our food is too hot for our health! Another way to check the temp of the milk is to use a clean spoon and drip a bit onto your wrist. You want it to feel warm, but not painful. Remember that your body temperature is about 98, and your goal is approximately 10 degrees higher. If you do have a thermometer, I would recommend the first few times to use it and your wrist so that you know what 110 feels like for future reference.*If you miss and it gets too cold, just heat it up again in the pot on the stove. It’s just milk at this point, so you’re not out anything! - Stir in ~2 Tbs. plain yogurt for each quart of milk. Stir gently; remember that you’re dealing with living organisms and you don’t want to knock them senseless! More is not better; too much starter can make bad yogurt. Again, these living organisms need room to reproduce. If you ask too many to live together, it’s like making tenements, and living conditions aren’t as nice for your friendly bacteria!
- Get those lids on again and nestle your jars in the cooler next to the pot of hot water. Keep them wrapped in one-half of the towel and take the lid off the pot to let the heat out, then close the lid of the cooler to keep the heat in. Keep the cooler still, more or less. Jiggling will affect the consistency of the yogurt. Don’t let the kiddos “cooler-race” in the kitchen! If you have no room in your kitchen, put the cooler in another room and leave yourself a note to remind you when to take the yogurt out.
- You have to make a call on whether you check your yogurt temp every hour or so (you can add more boiling water to the pot if the temp is getting too low) or just let it go and see what happens. Keep in mind that again, when you open your cooler, you’re affecting the temperature. I would recommend leaving it alone, and as long as your cooler is tough enough to keep the heat in the first time, you will never have to babysit your yogurt. This is NOT rocket science!
- Incubate 4-24 hours. Shorter incubation makes sweeter yogurt, longer is more tart. Also, lower incubation temperature makes sweeter yogurt and higher makes it more tart. I’ve had good success between 4 and 8. I forgot it once when my goal was 4 hours and found I liked it better at 6. I forgot it once at 6 hours and found that 8 is fine, but I liked 6 better. More recently I read that after incubating a full 24 hours, almost all the lactose is eaten by the bacteria, making the yogurt extremely digestible. I tried leaving one jar for 24 hours, and it wasn’t too bad. I started shooting for about 16 hours for a while, but now since exploring a gluten sensitivity and Crohn’s related issues, all our yogurt incubates for 24 hours. Experiment to see what you prefer!
Note: If you incubate longer than 8 hours, I would recommend setting a teapot to boil and pouring the contents into your pot. For 24-hour-yogurt, I add boiling water before I go to bed and when I wake up in the morning. I’ve never “checked” on the temp of my yogurt – I prefer to leave it alone – and I’ve had no problems. - When the time is up, put the jars into the freezer for about an hour. This improves the texture. No room in the freezer? (I did have a broken jar once when I put it directly into the ice.) Just go right in the fridge. If you forget the yogurt in the freezer, it’s fine. Yogurt can freeze! Just thaw in your fridge.
Note: Don’t get too interested in what it looks like until the yogurt is cold. I have a feeling stirring, and definitely shaking, the jars at this point hurts the process. - That’s it! You have created yogurt!
If this post overwhelms you, be sure to check out the Cliff’s notes picture tutorial HERE.
What Does It Look Like?
Most of the time, the finished product will have a yellowish “whey” around the thicker yogurt. This is normal! You can pour it off (into your soup, preferably – there’s protein in that whey!) or stir it in, depending on what consistency you want.
The Easy Clean Up
Lay out your towel to dry and use it for your showers. Air dry your pot and cooler and put them away. Your only “dishes” include a spoon and a thermometer (maybe). Nice!
When your yogurt is cooled and ready to eat, take out a few Tablespoons for a starter for your next batch. Store it in a clean container and date it (I use a glass baby food jar that has been through the dishwasher). Best practice is to take your starter out first so that it’s the least contaminated by folks dipping out yogurt throughout the week.
I’ve found that I can make a batch every one to two weeks or so and the starter is still plenty strong. I might buy a new starter at the store every two months. If my yogurt starts getting runny, especially twice in a row, I can solve it by buying a new starter.
Serving Suggestions
Breakfast, Lunch and Snacks…We like the plain yogurt at our house with a bit of sugar (about a tsp per serving) or honey and frozen fruit. Yum-O! When I sweeten a whole quart, I use about ¼ c. sugar and 1 tsp. vanilla. Remember to stir gently – if you whip up your yogurt too hard, it will remain runny. Here are some ways I enjoy plain yogurt without any sweeteners.
Sour Cream Sub…Plain Yogurt can substitute in any recipe that calls for sour cream.
Smoothies…Add milk, fresh or frozen fruit, maybe a few ice cubes, and blend. A snack or a dessert! Green smoothies are all the rage right now. I use half yogurt and half milk with the fruit, and my boys think a frozen banana really makes it great!
Bake with it…you can use yogurt instead of milk in biscuits, cornbread, and pancakes. I also just read that you can replace some of the butter or oil in muffin or brownie recipes and all of the fat in cake mixes.
Dips and dressings…Add chopped cucumber and dill weed to plain yogurt and eat as a salad or with grilled meat. I’ll share some more recipes later in the week.
Yogurt definitely keeps well for two weeks, probably longer, but it does get more tart with age.
A Note on Skim vs. Whole Milk
For the first 3 years of my yogurt making, I used skim milk and added powdered dry milk to thicken it up. After doing more research on dairy, I’m pretty convinced that skim milk, which has powdered milk added to it anyway, is pretty bad for you. (Here’s the explanation of that: oxidized cholesterol). However, if you’re a dyed-in-the-wool low-fat/no-fat kind of person and are going to use skim milk, add this step:
At 110 degrees, pour about ¼ cup (just dump some in) nonfat dry milk into each jar. This has 3 purposes: added protein, added calcium, and it can thicken the finished product a bit.
Added bonus: if you do choose skim or reduced fat milk for the adults in your family but have a child under two who requires whole milk, you can make different versions at the same time. Just label the top of your jars.
A Note on Organic Milk
Organic yogurt is a great step toward health for your family. Pesticides, chemical fertilizers, hormones, etc. are found in higher concentrations in animal products because the animals eat lots of grains or plant products to produce that one gallon of milk or one pound of meat. When making your own yogurt, however, it’s not recommended to use “ultra-high-temperature” pasteurized milk (UHT), which applies to most organic milk, definitely that sold in cardboard cartons. Here is an explanation of why. If you have the money to buy organic milk, I’d highly recommend looking into getting it from a local farm. See www.realmilk.com for more.
Safety Notes
- Remember that you’re dealing with bacteria here and asking it to multiply on purpose. Be aware of introducing naughty bacteria into your milk/yogurt.
- While the milk is being sterilized, try to keep the inside of the lids out of the air (bacteria-city). I just put them facing each other on the counter.
- If your stirring spoon can come right out of the hot dishwasher, kudos to you. Some people put a spoon into a clean plastic bag when they take it out of the dishwasher if they know they’re making yogurt soon. Or, you can put it in the pot of boiling water and use tongs to get it out.
- Wash your hands well at every step!
- Think about where you set your candy thermometer while the milk is cooling if you need to use it to check for the 110 degrees.
Note: I have loosened up a lot over the years on my bacteria-consciousness. I still wash my hands before doing each step, but you ought to do that whenever you’re cooking anyway. Just keep things clean and don’t worry. This isn’t rocket science! You’ll know by the smell if the bacteria is wrong in the finished product.
Yogurt Troubleshooting
Why is my Homemade Yogurt Watery?
- Yogurt got too cool while incubating (bacteria inactive) I’m pretty sure this is not a big deal as long as the yogurt is at the proper temp for at least the first four hours.
- Milk too hot when starter stirred in (bacteria dies) This one is a deal breaker!
- Stirred too hard when introducing starter
- Weak starter – buy new yogurt at the store
- What to do with failure? There’s nothing wrong with runny yogurt. Stir in some unflavored gelatin (use the coupon KS10 for 10% off!) and use it anyway or be creative with runny half-milk, half-yogurt. Smoothies, anyone? Use it in baking like you would milk, or make cream of vegetable soup. If your yogurt incubated WAY too hot, it’s pretty much just milk. Make hot chocolate and try again tomorrow!
Why is my Homemade Yogurt Grainy?
- This is my most common problem. I really believe the freezer step helps guarantee a creamier consistency. I also think the precise temperature when you stir in the starter may make a difference here, but I haven’t pinpointed exactly how to make perfect yogurt every time. Also make sure you’re not overdoing the amount of starter. Just 2 Tbs! Sometimes just stirring gently will help out with this problem.
Why is my Homemade Yogurt Sour?
- Too much starter
- Incubated too hot or for too long for your taste
Why is my Homemade Yogurt Stinky?
- Introduced bad bacteria into yogurt, then let it multiply. Throw away this batch and be more careful next time!
Why do I Have Slimy Yogurt?
- This can also be from bad bacteria in the yogurt. Throw it away.
Need more help yogurt troubleshooting?
- Remember that there’s an online forum to “ask the teacher” in the Cultured Dairy & Cheese eCourse.
- Complete troubleshooting guide HERE.
Who Should Make Their Own Yogurt?
Best of luck to all of you! I’m convinced that everyone should make homemade yogurt, if you eat it at all. I used to think you had to be an at-home-mom or have time on the weekends, but now that I’ve successfully cultured 24-hour-yogurt, I really think anyone could do it, even if you work all day long. Just start the yogurt while you’re making dinner, add boiling water before bed and in the morning during breakfast, and remove the yogurt after work the next day. You could also just incubate overnight and put in the freezer in the morning. I have accidentally left yogurt in the freezer overnight with no negative repercussions. You can do this! It’s NOT rocket science, it’s just a little food science that anyone who can make chocolate chip cookies (and I barely can do that!) can handle.
You can also make it even easier, incubating on the countertop if you try a Cultures for Health starter.
Yogurt Excuses
I really, truly believe that everyone can and should make their own homemade yogurt. Even if I was really rich and didn’t care a whit about my food budget, I’d probably still make this item homemade, because I can do it better than the factories (nutrition-wise, at the least).
Lots of people are afraid of this one. Here are some common excuses and my straight-up responses:
- I work all day, and even though yogurt doesn’t take that long to make, the steps are all spread out. I can’t fit it in!
My response: You have two options to make homemade yogurt fit with your schedule. First, there’s always the weekend. I realize that’s not always possible, because sometimes weekends get awfully full, too. Second, if you start the process when you get home from work – let’s consider you a workaholic and it’s already 7 p.m. – you can put your jars into the cooler by 8:30 if you use the speedy cooling method and 10 p.m. at the latest if you let the milk cool on the counter. Incubate overnight, or even until you get home from work the next day (I prefer 16-20 hours, myself), and stick the jars in the fridge. Ta da! You’re done. Full-time work is no excuse. - I’m single/a student/no one in my house eats yogurt except me. I can’t make huge batches and just let it go to waste!
My response: This method is adaptable to any amount of yogurt that you can fit in a pot. I happen to make 4 jars (just less than a gallon) at a time, but my mom has just started making homemade yogurt using my method (way to go, Mom!) and makes just one jar at a time. You could make two cups if you wanted to. You decide the size and number of your jars. Anyone can make homemade yogurt! - I don’t have a picnic cooler, so I can’t use your nifty method to incubate.
My response: Lots of people also think they need a yogurt maker to make yogurt, but I think that investment is not worth your money or space in your house. You can incubate yogurt in any place that will stay at about 100 degrees F for 6-24 hours. Many people can use an oven with the light on (check your temperature – mine is probably not warm enough, but others say theirs gets up to 140-150F!). You could also try wrapping the jars in towels with a hot water bottle(s) or even an electric heating pad. Some have had great luck with a slow cooker filled with water and kept on low with the lid off, and a friend of mine simply leaves the jars in her pot of water on the stove. You’ll have to check the temp the first few times you make yogurt, but once you understand the science of growing bacteria you can handle about any situation. Once I incubated yogurt all day in the sun on my back porch, then overnight in a warm car. It made the creamiest raw milk yogurt ever! You do not need fancy equipment to make homemade yogurt. - I don’t know where to buy yogurt starter/cultures.
My response: Trust me, any grocery store has some sort of plain yogurt for sale. Any plain yogurt will do, as long as it lists “live and active cultures” on the side (and I have yet to find one that didn’t). I’ve used Meijer brand, Dannon, and Fage Greek yogurt. If you can only find vanilla, give it a shot! Only fat-free? You’re using whole milk anyway (right???), so the fat free portion of the finished yogurt is so small it’s insignificant. You do not need fancy starters to make homemade yogurt. - I use coupons, so I don’t need to make homemade yogurt to save money.
My response: There are still two other reasons to make your own, and I bet in the long run it will still save you money. First, your family’s nutrition. Incubating your yogurt longer than 4 hours will decrease the milk sugars and increase the probiotics in the final product, which you can’t say about store yogurt. You also will avoid all sweeteners and other junk that might be added to the yogurt cups that are on sale with a coupon. Lastly, your family will eat more yogurt when you have it available in bulk, I guarantee it. More yogurt consumed = a healthier family. The second reason to make your own is to avoid wasting all those little (or big) plastic yogurt tubs. Making homemade achieves that in a big way. You save a lot more than money when you make your own. - Will you come to my house and show me how? I think if I see if done just once, I will believe I can do it myself!
Sure, I can do that…sort of. If you’re a really visual person (or a really nervous one), I will be presenting my method and all my thoughts on and love for homemade yogurt as part of the GNOWFGLINS eCourse on cultured dairy and basic cheesemaking, starting in February. My guest lecture is in March (note to self: tape yogurt making!), and you can access it at any time with any level of membership once it’s posted. You can check out the cultured dairy schedule HERE by scrolling down to the course description and clicking through for more info. As a side note, the “thank you video” for this month features my kids and I making Farmer’s Cheese, an unbelievably simple recipe and very cool science experiment. My kids are hilarious, and Paul had a great time explaining some of the process (trust me, you’ll laugh at his antics).
For more great ideas for the kitchen and balancing your nutrition, budget and earth, see these links:
- Throw Away Less Food
- Connected Meal Planning
- How to Make Homemade Chicken Stock
- Intro to Super Foods Series
- How to Use More Beans
Need More Baby Steps?
Here at Kitchen Stewardship, we’ve always been all about the baby steps. But if you’re just starting your real food and natural living journey, sifting through all that we’ve shared here over the years can be totally overwhelming.
That’s why we took the best 10 rookie “Monday Missions” that used to post once a week and got them all spruced up to send to your inbox – once a week on Mondays, so you can learn to be a kitchen steward one baby step at a time, in a doable sequence.
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Just made yogurt for the first time. My husband liked it so much he brought it out for his friend to try. (kind of funny because they were tasting homebrew beer at the time). Thank you so much for taking the time to explain your methods. I love the “no mess” method.
I had no problems except that I let it cool too long and had to reheat it. It still turned out fine.
I added maple syrup to one jar and vanilla and brown sugar to the other jars, they all turned out great.
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I am making a batch of crock pot yogurt as we speak since I was just given 6 (YES 6 !!) gallons of milk that expire this week. I have full photo directions to my simple crock pot method. I homeschool and have 4 little kids with one on the way and I still find this method doable. I am too busy for most things but this method really is easy! http://apronsandapples.blogspot.com/2012/05/homemade-thick-and-creamy-crockpot.html
Just tried this method today since I have only made one quart at a time on the stove top before. Super excited to get 3-4 quarts at a time! Just wanted to add that for incubation, I use my empty microwave. We have a built-in micro in the kitchen that I rarely use. This is the perfect spot for my yogurt. I tried putting the pot of hot water in there today so we’ll see how that goes, but normally I heat up those homemade rice/bean heat bags (gifted to me by crafty friends) for 5 min in the micro. Then I wrap my yogurt containers in the warm bean/rice bags and place in the micro to incubate. (I do NOT micro the yogurt, just to clarify!) I always start my yogurt before or around lunch time and leave it all afternoon and overnight and in the morning it is perfect thick yogurt! I have found the best starter is brown cow’s maple yogurt (cream top). I have no idea why. But my yogurt is now perfect every time. I hope I can make the same yogurt in multiple jars at a time with this method! Such a GREAT tutorial! Thank you.
A long but very informative post! Thanks for the ideas! I love yogurt and it is very healthy to our body. I’m gonna try to make this at home.
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Jennifer Papalia Compton – http://www.kitchenstewardship.com/2010/02/04/recipe-connection-homemade-mayo-vlog/
Hi,
My adult son is on a modified ketogenic diet to help control his epilepsy. We recently moved to an area that has no sugar-free yogurt available in any of the local stores. Can I make yogurt using heavy cream instead of milk? Cream has no carbs in it, and I use liquid or granular artificial sweeteners for his diet. He is restricted to 22 carb grams/day.
Thanks for you info…love your website.
Kathy C in
IL
Kathy,
I’ve never tried it, but i don’t see why not – the milk I use is unhomogenized, and the cream that separates to the top turns into yogurt just as well as the rest of the milk. Also, I wonder if anywhere would ship Green Valley lactose-free yogurt to you?
Furthermore, you can use milk and incubate for 24 hours, which is supposed to remove 100% (or probably “close to 100%” since homemade stuff is always a bit inconsistent) of the lactose. 24-hour incubation takes a few more steps, just adding some hot water every 8 hours to the cooler, but it’s really very doable, and we’ve still enjoyed the yogurt (not too tart or anything) that way.
I’m hoping when you say artificial sweeteners that you don’t mean chemical stuff…if you need a carb-free sweetener for yogurt, I highly recommend stevia drops, which are derived naturally and have very few questions about safety, whereas artificial sweeteners are the one thing i will not allow my children to consume under any circumstances, ever. If I may recommend reading more:
On stevia – http://www.kitchenstewardship.com/2011/09/22/a-sweet-sweet-summer-what-are-the-facts-on-stevia/
On artificial sweeteners – http://www.kitchenstewardship.com/2012/02/08/the-dangers-of-artificial-sweetenersare-they-safe-for-kids/
Hope this helps; pardon my delay in answering!
🙂 Katie
Jennifer, I’ve made homemade mayo, but it’s a totally different process from yogurt since it isn’t cultured or anything. It’s so quick and easy that I was shocked the first time I made it. The only issue is that it contains raw eggs, so make sure that you trust your source.
Anyone ever make homemade mayonnaise?
Thanks!
Jennifer Papalia Compton Yes! http://www.kitchenstewardship.com/2012/05/30/how-to-make-perfect-thick-creamy-raw-milk-yogurt-plus-how-to-fail-miserably-and-laugh-at-yourself/
Jennifer Papalia Compton Yes! http://www.kitchenstewardship.com/2012/05/30/how-to-make-perfect-thick-creamy-raw-milk-yogurt-plus-how-to-fail-miserably-and-laugh-at-yourself/
Rebekah Havanas Cade and Jenn Bernat – add a bit more water, but here’s the key – use white whole wheat flour. Red whole wheat is no good for torts! My electric press makes them very thick, but rolling by hand I can get them ridiculously thin. Someday I’ll get around to doing the videos of 3 different methods!
Can you make yogurt from raw milk? Is it safe?
My tortillas are always thick, and with a 3 month old in the house they take a lot of stove time. Maybe next year. But I did make yogurt yesterday!
I do alot of these, would love to start making sourdough regulary enough to keep my starter happy. Also, still looking for the “perfect” sourdough sandwich bread for our family… maybe one day. Not today as i am expecting a baby in one week, probably not a good time to revive the starter! Another homemade staple: whole grain “bisquick” mix, also multi-grain pancake “mix”. Would also love to start making my own buttermilk.
My tortillas never come out thin enough…
On my list this summer is making ketchup from scratch.
Can you use the whey from coconut milk yogurt? If I can what can I use it for? Fermenting anything? Thank you! Love the get cultured videos learning lots thanks Jenny
Hi! I appreciate your recipe for making yogurt but there is an easier way with far less instructions and hassle.
I learned how to do this overseas.
Bring milk to slow boil,
pour into jars – don’t put lid on,
wait for the milk to cool which will be to the point you can handle the jar or as warm as baby’s milk,
then drizzle 2 t. of room temp yogurt over the top, don’t stir,
cap with lid,
wrap in heavy towel for 8 hours.
Works every time 🙂
First of all, I love love your blog and all the helpfulness, especially from a Christian perspective and seeing how living simply is a way to glorify God. So thanks 🙂
Also, I realize this post is way old but that doesn’t make it any less helpful 🙂 I make my own yogurt all the time, from milk from my husband’s family’s dairy farm. I just noticed how you heat the milk in the jars instead of pouring into jars after heating–super excited about fewer dishes, so I tried it this morning. It was great…until I was finishing it up and taking the jars out of the ice water to go in the cooler. As I picked up the second jar and set it on the counter, the bottom fell out. Crap. Milk alllll over my counter, the floor, the rug I just washed yesterday…I needed to clean behind my canisters anyway. 🙂 I just wondered if you’ve ever had a problem with that? Was it a fluke, or was the temp change from boiling water to ice water too hard on the glass? If so, have you ever had jars crack when you put them in the freezer after incubating (I have yet to try this)?
Thanks!
Amanda,
Thanks for your grace on this comment! 🙂 I always feel so terrible when people lose jars; I just did this week, too, and it stinks. 🙁
The ice water is definitely a risk for jar breakage…as long as you aren’t in a hurry, I highly recommend just putting the jars on the counter and waiting the 1.5-2 hours. I’ve had a few jars crack in the freezer, but only when I forget them and they froze all the way OR I put it directly into the ice, which I think was just too cold, too fast. My freezer is a drawer now, so I can’t do that method anymore..and the yogurt turns out more or less fine. Hope it goes better next time without having to clean everything just to save a few dishes, arg…
🙂 Katie
Encouraged by your praise of the product and the enterprise, I just attempted to make my first-ever batch of homemade yogurt. I was very nervous. I used a large glass jar and poured the entire half-gallon of milk into it (all but about 1/2 cup). Was that my mistake? Is there a reason for using smaller jars? I thought this would be more expedient, especially since I really wanted the yogurt for tomorrow and didn’t have time to run several jars through the dishwasher. Anyway, my 7-year-old kept asking me why did I have glass on the stove, it is going to break because it’s too hot. I had the dish rag inside the pot. I don’t own a thermometer so I waited to see the skin form. I put the lid on the jar and picked up the jar to remove it from the water. The jar came out – without its bottom – and the milk spread into the water!!! I am so sad! My 7-year-old can’t stop saying “I TOLD you it was going to break!!!” What did I do wrong???
Autumn,
First, so sorry for the delay – your comment got a little buried on me. Second, so sorry for your milk! I hate when that happens! I just lost a 3-cup jar this week and I got so cranky about it. 🙁
I don’t know exactly what makes a jar break sometimes and not others. You didn’t do anything wrong. I think certain jar qualities/ages can be more likely to break. You definitely need to use heat-safe glass, canning jars are probably the safest, although I’ve broken at least one of those, too. I assure you, it doesn’t happen every time! so sorry you got nailed on your first try! 🙁
Katie
I never heat the bottles by boiling on the stove… I heat the milk in a slow cooker until it gets to 180F or more and then pour it into the jars. That sterilizes the jars. Doing that also cools the milk and while that is cooling I remove the liner part of my slow cooker (it’s metal) and put that in a dishpan of cold water. Then I pour whatever remains of the milk in the liner when it is cool into my blender with the culture and blend for a couple of seconds.
Then all that hot milk in the jars goes into the cold liner in the dishpan. When it gets to 120F (or you can hold the metal for 15 seconds while stirring the cooling milk) you are ready to go. I fill whatever room is left in the blender with the cooled milk and blend for 10 seconds and pour it back into the liner. Stir well for 10 seconds or more and the strain into a large pitcher – until the pitcher is almost full and then pour into the jars. Depending on the amount of milk in the liner, you may have to strain that milk also to fill the rest of the jars.
Then I put the jars into my yogurt maker machine and set it for 8 hours and forget it. It always comes out perfectly as long as I do not put too much starter culture in the blender – tends to cause the yogurt to separate because of the acidity.
Sure, there are more dishes to clean but that is a small price to pay, IMHO, to get perfect yogurt every time with no broken jars. And when you are making a gallon of yogurt each time, you do not want any problems, believe me!
I hope that helps.
Bill
Hi,
I just saw found your post through Frugally Sustainable, and I started looking through your posted recipes. I am currently making my very first batch of homemade yogurt in the crock pot right now, so I hope it works out! I just had to comment that I cannot believe your estimated price of milk to be $1.99 a gallon. On Prince Edward Island, we pay $6.99 a gallon!! And that is not for organic milk (in Canada the requirements are so rigorous for conventional milk that it doesn’t make a difference, really–there are no traces of antibiotics or hormones in conventionally produced milk). Anyway, I am looking forward to trying some of your other recipes, especially the tortillas and granola. I currently have a granola recipe I use, but am hoping to try out some others.
Thanks for posting these! 🙂
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Hello…I know there are EASIER, FASTER methods of making yogurt…why should I not take the faster, simpler method? OK, so one method uses evaporated milk–is this bad?
Kirstin,
For my purposes, which are both to save money and be healthier, yes, evaporated milk would be bad – it’s way more expensive than milk and also is super processed/dead food.
I don’t know if there are easier or faster ways without owning a yogurt maker – this takes me 15 minutes. ??? You might like the slow cooker method, but I don’t think it’s any faster.
Good luck! 🙂 Katie
Another (much easier, in my opinion) method is do everything the same except turn your oven on to the lowest setting until the light goes out, then turn the oven OFF and the oven light ON, put in the yogurt-to-be, and leave it overnight. Yogurt in the morning!
Another (much easier, in my opinion) method is to use your oven to incubate the milk. Everything the same, except you turn your oven on the lowest setting until the light goes out, then turn the oven light on, put your yogurt-to-be in and leave it overnight. Yogurt in the morning!
I’m on SCD and make yogurt that incubates for 24 hours in a little 5-cup Salton yogurt maker that someone gave me. I found another one on craigslist so I get 10 approx. one-cup servings from a half gallon. Now I prefer the tart taste and sweeten with fruit. I’ve found a way that works for me. It’s always interesting to learn other ways as well. Thanks for the info.
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My jars have been breaking at the bottom. ( A really nice smooth break). It started happening at about the third time I made yogurt and I don’t know what I am doing differently. And it is not all the jars but may be one.
However, in-spite of my jars breaking, I am really happy that thanks to you we have good yogurt once a week.
Thank you.
I do put a rug under the jars. I don’t know what to do differently
Sorry! I meant rag, haha
Catalina,
You know, sometimes that just happens no matter what, but it’s usually when I let it boil too long/high or maybe have too big of a temp change (cold milk, hot water, or similar). Maybe I’ve just been lucky that it is only once in a while – sounds like yours is way too often. Try a slower/lower heat and don’t let it boil all the way? I hope your problem goes away! 🙂 Katie
Thank you for your yogurt recipe! I have made yogurt a number of times but had some trouble with my latest batch. It had yellowish liquid (or golden) which I wasn’t used to seeing so much of. I figured out that the recipe I followed had too much starter in it. I used your recipe to trouble shoot. Since it doesn’t smell bad I know it’s safe to eat. I like the idea of putting the milk in the jars to inoculate the milk it makes good sense! I used a heating pad and wrapped it all in a towel, which worked really well. I was making a smaller batch though with flat containers so it would be closer to the heat. I think I could have turned it to a lower setting. It was very gelled over night. Thank you for your good advice! It saved my batch of yogurt! Sarah
I am just new to making yogurt. I am a big greek yogurt fan so I strained my yogurt for an hour. It is perfect and I love it. My question is what to do with the whey? I know you can add it to your bread but I was wondering if there was anything else. I really love your website. It is so full of wonderful tips and recipes. Thanks!
Lori,
So sorry I took so long to reply; my comments got out of hand as I finished up the second edition of my snacks book! Whey is often used for soaking or lacto-fermenting:
soaking – http://www.kitchenstewardship.com/seriescarnivals/soaking-grains-an-exploration/
LF – https://rl102.infusionsoft.com/go/lfecourse/ks/
I also freeze it in ice cube trays to add to smoothies. MOre here: http://www.kitchenstewardship.com/2009/12/02/what-is-whey-where-can-i-get-it-how-to-make-yogurt-cheese/
🙂 Katie
Katie,
I’m happy to be among good company with my cottage cheese like consistency. Quoted from “Troubleshooting” above: “This is my most common problem.” My first batch of yogurt turned out great. This one – runny cottage cheese. Is is safe to eat?
You said,” I really believe the freezer step helps guarantee a creamier consistency. ” The curd like lumps tend to go away, and the whole thing becomes more creamy?
Thanks for your great info on SO many subjects!
Katie, the only time I have problem with consistency like cottage cheese is when I use too much culture, believe it or not! As you may know, I make a gallon of yogurt at a time and as long as I keep the amount of culture added to under 1/2 cup or so I am good to go. Remember, that 1/2 cup is in a blender to which I add a quart of the warm milk and then blend in the culture for at least 10 seconds. The liquid from the blender then goes into the pot with the rest of the 3 quarts of warm milk and is stirred well. Then I strain the cultured milk into the quart jars, put them in the yogurt maker for at least 2-3 hours and as long as 10 to firm up. I made my last batch yesterday and it turned out great – too 8* hours!
Bill
Bill
Andrea,
I think Bill is right, cottage cheese texture is probably a bit too much starter OR too high of a temperature. I freeze it right away (although I can’t anymore, sigh, our new fridge has a drawer freezer, yuck) and I think it thickens it up. That’s more of a defense against runny yogurt than cottage cheesy, though. If you have a lumpy texture, the freezer won’t be a magic bullet after the fact, sorry! 🙂 Katie
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I finally tried this for the first time and I made my best yogurt ever! It is so solid! I incubated it for about 9 hours. It had a bunch of bright yellow whey on top before I refrigerated it, but there wasn’t much left there today, I guess it mixed itself in. It is also my first time using organic milk. I think this is my new every week food activity to add to my breadmaking and making crispy nuts. Thanks for sharing and all your super information!
Once I add the yogurt culture, I just plop my jars in my oven and turn on the light. It keeps it at the perfect temp!
Still using your method and loving it more than ever. I find that longer/lower gets me that thick tangy taste I love. I actually called my mom today just to give her detailed directions…this should be a staple in every healthy house!!
PS: My midwife said I could go off my probiotic when she heard your recipe and that I’m eating it with granola (your delicious recipe) or in a smoothie daily. 😀
How cool is that!??!
🙂 Katie
I made crockpot yogurt today for the first time… It turned out a little on the grainy side. The taste is good and it will work in smoothies just fine – but I need to know what I did wrong….
Thanks!
Nancy,
Well, I don’t do crockpot yogurt, so I can only guess – if “grainy” means a bit like cottage cheese texture, a bit runny, then your temperature or the amount of yogurt you added wasn’t quite right. Some crockpots are too hot for this process. Try using a thermometer next time to shoot for 100-110F to incubate. Good luck! 🙂 Katie
I find that if I heat the yogurt to 185 for five minutes I get consistently lump free yogurt. The yogurt is no longer runny if I also add 2 t per quart of grass fed gelatin before heating, Great Lakes which you can buy from amazon is suppose to be grass fed and adds nutrition. We whisk inside the jar before serving because the cream has risen to the top. It is just like store bought, but of course better.
Hi there! Just stumbled across your website a few days ago while I was searching for help with my yogurt making. I had many unsuccessful attempts in the past, and the other day I tried your instructions, only I used my yogurt maker to incubate, and my family enjoyed the best, freshest, most natural yogurt we have ever tasted! Thank you so much for your help- my family is healthier for it 🙂
Heather – awesome! Way to go! 🙂 Katie
Quick question for you, Katie: I’ve been using your recipe & technique every other day now for weeks and my kids still can’t get enough of this yogurt! We’ve found we like the yogurt best at about 10 hrs incubation. Last night I forgot about the yogurt and went to bed! So it was left to cool down for about 5.5 hrs before it went into the fridge. It looks, smells & tastes fine, but I’m a bit hesitant to feed it to my kids. Do you think it could make them sick, or do you think we’re ok? I’d hate to throw away a whole batch, but I’d really hate to make the little ones sick!
Thanks 🙂
Heather,
If you mean it was in the cooler about 15.5 hours total, that’s exactly what I do every time, so that’s no problem. If you mean in the cooler 10 hours and then on the counter 5.5 hours…still probably fine – when i strain yogurt cheese, it’s all out an extra 4-8 hours with no problem. Your nose knows!
🙂 Katie
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