About a year ago I wrote a post chronicling the early stages of my foray into yogurt making. Although there have been a few bumps along the way, I am happy to report that I am still making yogurt and that the yogurt I am making now is better than ever. I can't imagine going back to store bought. Since my original post was about the things I was just beginning to learn about the process, now seemed like a good time to share some of the things I have learned over the past year. If you have never made your own yogurt...or if you missed my previous post...you might want to go back and give it a quick read to familiarize yourself with the basics before reading today's post.
After I had been making
yogurt successfully for a couple of months, I had a sudden dip in the quality
of my yogurt. It started with a batch
that took way too long to set.
Successive batches were thinner and had an odd rope-y kind of
texture. I began to ask around to see if
I could discover what was going on. What
I found was that it seemed to be common knowledge among my yogurt-making
friends that yogurt culture at some point just begins to diminish in
strength. The generally accepted way of
dealing with this is to simply start over with a fresh culture.
Well, this seemed like a
very unsatisfactory solution to me.
Yogurt is an ancient food.
Cultures have been kept alive for centuries (how would we have them
today if this were not the case?) Surely
there was something I was missing. And
as it turns out, there was. While
looking around on line, I ran across a company that sells heirloom yogurt cultures.
Their cultures are touted as being indefinitely reusable (some of the
comments praising their products were from people who had been making yogurt
from the same culture for over a year). In
reading over their site, as well as an NPR discussion of "eternal starters" (that linked me to their site), I discovered that keeping these heirloom
cultures viable involved using them to make yogurt every five to seven
days. This sounded promising. I thought about ordering one of the heirloom
cultures so I could give it a try, but it was the middle of the summer and the
risk of the culture dying from the heat in transit made me hesitate. Furthermore, I had just restarted my yogurt
making with some Dannon plain, so I thought I would first give the every five
to seven days thing a shot with the culture I already had. This was in August, and I am still using the
same culture...with no indication of failure thus far.
The main reason I wanted to
write this post was to share this little bit of information about having to make
yogurt every five to seven days. I read
many blog posts and on-line magazine articles about making yogurt when I first
started and found no mention of it. I
occasionally found an honest soul who admitted they had had a failure and then had
to start over with a fresh culture, but by and large the issue seems to be unaddressed
(perhaps I have just been looking in the wrong places...). I'm guessing that this is because many people
who make yogurt have naturally fallen into a yogurt making schedule that is
more frequent than once a week. For
these people, they will have automatically avoided the problem I ran into. In my house we consume about a quart of
yogurt a week. I had been making a half
gallon of yogurt every two weeks or so. Since
reading about all of this, I have simply adjusted my schedule to making a quart
every seven days. It is an easy thing to
adjust your schedule—along with the quantity that you make—so that you can
maintain the viability of your culture.
You might wonder why it was
so important to me to be able to find a way to perpetuate my own yogurt
culture. Why, one might ask, not just accept the fact that you will have to
occasionally start over? Well, the
answer is that the yogurt I make seems to get better and better with each
successive batch (this is probably one of the great advantages of an heirloom
culture). The first few generations of
yogurt when I start from a commercial yogurt are always a bit milder than I
would like. I really like tangy yogurt
and having to always start over would give me a continuous supply of mild
yogurt, which is not what I want. The
yogurt I make also seems to get thicker with each successive generation. Right about the time that the yogurt I was
making had become thick, creamy and tangy was when I had my first failure. I had no desire to go back to the mild,
thinner yogurt of those first few batches.
One final note: I have no idea how rigid one has to be about
consistently following an every five to seven day schedule. It is probable that the yogurt you purchase
to start your first batch will be more than five to seven days old. And, I know from experience that the culture
will remain viable for a few generations even if it is being made as infrequently
as every two weeks. To be honest, in
August when I happened across the "every five to seven days" bit of
wisdom, I was making yogurt from a store bought culture I had purchased in July
and with which I had been following my haphazard—about every two weeks—schedule. (If I were to guess, I would say that I was
probably at about my third generation with that particular culture). Instead of starting over yet again, I simply
began making my yogurt every five days to see if I could reinvigorate my
culture. It was about two months ago
when I transitioned into making it consistently every seven days. I assume if I have to deviate from this
schedule a bit in the future that my culture has become strong enough to be
somewhat forgiving (I'm sure I'll find out).
In any case, I am extremely happy with the yogurt I am making now. And you can be sure that as I learn and
experience new things in my yogurt-making journey, I'll keep you posted (here,
or on my Facebook page).
Here is the
way I make yogurt now:
(I haven't changed my method too much over the past year—you can look at my first post for pictures)
(I haven't changed my method too much over the past year—you can look at my first post for pictures)
Before you begin, gather the
following:
a quart of whole milk (I use
local, organic)
a tablespoon (15 grams) of
yogurt (a commercial brand with live and active cultures or your own from a
previous batch—no older than five to seven days)
a 3-quart saucepan
a candy thermometer and/or
an instant read thermometer
a heat-proof rubber spatula
a ladle
a clean 1-quart jar (or 2
pint jars)
a clean insulated cooler.
Fill the cooler with warm
water (115° to 120°), cover and set aside.
Place the glass jar in a 215° oven (after 10 minutes, I shut the oven
off and open the door slightly so that the jar will cool down before I fill
it—it's nice if it's still warm, but if it's too hot, it can kill the yogurt
culture). Place the tablespoon of yogurt
in a small bowl and set aside.
Pour the milk into the
saucepan, clamp the candy thermometer on the side of the pan and set the pan
over medium-high to high heat. Heat,
stirring occasionally, until the temperature reaches 180° F. Turn off the heat and let cool to 110° F
(stirring occasionally). I should
mention that I have an electric stove. Consequently,
when I turn the heat off, the temperature of the milk continues to rise as the
burner cools—often reaching a temperature of 200°F. I actually think this is a good thing. I remember reading somewhere (I don't happen
to remember where) that holding the milk at (or slightly over) 180° F for a few
moments will help firm up the milk proteins, which will in turn help produce a
thicker yogurt. I have no idea if this
is true or not, but allowing the milk to heat to 200°F (over the cooling
burner) and then cool down more slowly than it would if I actually removed it
from the burner has worked well for me—my yogurt is nice and thick.
When the milk has cooled
down to 110° F, ladle a small amount into the bowl with the tablespoon of
yogurt and stir with the rubber spatula until completely smooth. Add more milk until the yogurt is of a
pourable consistency. Pour this mixture back
into the warm milk (scraping with the spatula to get all of it) and stir well. (I have learned since my last post that this
is called inoculating the milk.) Pour
the inoculated milk into the prepared jar and seal the jar (screw on the lid or
put on the rubber ring and clamp the jar shut).
Place the jar in the cooler filled with warm water, adding or removing
water so that the level of the water is even with the level of the inoculated
milk in the jar. (I actually always pour
the water out that has been keeping the cooler warm and start with fresh warm
water...simply because my cooler doesn't do a great job of keeping the water
warm enough and I want to start the yogurt culturing process no lower than 115°
to 120°--I use my instant read thermometer to check the temperature.)
Close the
cooler and let the yogurt sit undisturbed for at least five hours. At the five
hour point you should have yogurt. It will be obviously set (tilt the jar slightly
to check—but don't jostle it too much). The longer you allow it to stay in the
warm water, the sharper the yogurt will taste. I prefer mine at about six hours, but you can let it go even longer.
Remove the jar from the cooler. Dry the outside of the jar with a towel, open the jars and wipe the condensation off the inside of the lid. Place the yogurt in the refrigerator and let it cool with the lid off. When thoroughly chilled, close/cover the jar.
Update, Summer 2018:
In mid-June, out of the blue, my almost five year old culture died. I was very sad about this. There was something very satisfying about having learned how to sustain a culture...and having done it for so long. Furthermore, the yogurt I was making had just gotten better over the years. It was tangy (store bought yogurt--even Dannon, the source of my original culture-- tasted bland by comparison), thick and creamy...every time. It was a source of a daily "I can't believe I get to eat something so delicious for breakfast!" thought.
I wish I knew why it died. I can only assume that I got the water in my cooler too hot. There was a final batch that was able to reproduce one generation of yogurt...but no matter how many times I went back to this batch to make a jar, the jar I produced wouldn't set another batch of milk. Someone with more knowledge of these things could probably tell me what happened. I admit that my schedule had been a bit wobbly due to lots of travel for family graduations...but I was never more than a day outside of my 7 day window. The only other thing that happened, is that I left the the last viable batch (that was able to reproduce), uncovered in the fridge for almost 24 hours by accident (I have always been very good about closing it after just a few hours once it was cool). Perhaps this had an effect.
Oh well. Since there was nothing to do but start over, I did. I decided to try a few other starter cultures to see if I liked the result better than Dannon. I tried Strauss Family Whole Milk Plain. This was very good--thick and tangy. It had a slightly different flavor profile (almost like buttermilk) than the Dannon. I like the Dannon better. I also tried the Bulgarian Heirloom culture from Cultures for Health (mentioned above). I was not a fan. Their products are very popular...and they have a good reputation...so I'm assuming my issue was that I have just cultivated a taste for whatever cultures Dannon is using. So...I went back to Dannon....and am once again making thick, tangy and delicious homemade yogurt.
Over the five years I have been making yogurt I have made a few changes to my process. I'm going to go ahead and alter them in the text above...but I'll mention what they are here. I used to let my yogurt sit for about 5 1/2 hours in the warm water. It is usually done in 5, but more time produces a more pronounced tangy taste. I typically let it go for about 6 hours. Occasionally I'll make yogurt over night--in which case it often goes for seven hours.
I also no longer bother to check the temperature of the water in the cooler at the mid-way point. If I start it with a water temperature of 120°, it always stays warm enough to set the yogurt. In the winter time the water temperature might dip below 100° by the end of the culturing period, but this doesn't appear to affect the taste or the set in any way.
4 comments:
Paige,
I did it! I made yogurt last night; we had it for breakfast this morning, and it was very good. It was a little runnier than I would like ideally, but I am trusting that, just as you say, it will become thicker with each generation. I am trying to convince myself that I'll be perfectly happy using my own starter, but I am sorely tempted by some of the heirloom cultures.
I started making kefir last summer while I was in Washington, but I didn't bring the culture home with me. Since I am nearly going to be forced to buy kefir grains from the website you mentioned, it seems short-sighted not to also purchase an heirloom yogurt starter at the same time. I am, as you might imagine, nearly gifted at rationalizing.
Thank you for posting your yogurt update. It was informative and inspirational. I do, however, fully intend to blame you for all the money I am about to spend!
Karen
Yay! I'm so glad you made yogurt...and that the post was helpful. I have never made Kefir, so you're ahead of me there (I should probably admit I've never even tasted Kefir...).
A couple of thoughts:
I think purchasing a culture is a great idea. Honestly, I would have done it myself if I hadn't been worried about the weather (we were in the middle of a particularly hot spell). Also, I had already had my own culture going for a few generations and wanted to see what I could do with it.
As far as thickness goes...yes, it will get thicker. It will never be like Greek yogurt (you would have to strain it to get that...although I noticed that Cultures for Health had a "Greek Culture")...but mine is as thick now as any commercial plain I have ever had (even if I include some that are reinforced with gelatin). One thing I didn't mention in my post: Each batch of yogurt continues to firm up a bit when left undisturbed under refrigeration. I am always a week/jar ahead with my yogurt, so the stuff I'm eating has always been in the fridge for five or more days. I take my culture for the next batch off of the top of an undisturbed batch...so, for example: I made yogurt this morning. I had 1 1/2 jars in my refrigerator. The one I am eating from is two weeks old. Even though I'm not finished with it, I took the spoonful to culture this morning's batch off of the top of the undisturbed jar I made last week. I'll culture next week's batch from the top of the jar I made today. And so on. Hope this helps.
If you decide to buy and Heirloom culture, I want to hear all about it!
Well, I started over cuz I can't finish the yogurt in under 2 weeks with no house guests to help. And by accident, I let the milk boil. :-( The internet assures me that I can still make yogurt...we'll see if that's true. I really do enjoy the homemade you taught me. I'll let you know if it works this time. Meanwhile, I brought some to Matt & Bonnie and they now make it all the time. See how your good food influence creeps across the country?!
Yay! So glad you're still making yogurt (and yes, it should work even if you boil the milk...I think I boiled mine over once...). And I'm so excited that Bonnie & Matt are making it too!
If you want to maintain your own starter (that you use over and over again), instead of starting with store bought each time, just figure out how much yogurt you consume in a seven day period and make just that much. You could even make it in cute little half cup yogurt jars like the French do! (I think you can get some that size at Crate & Barrel....)
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