Homemade Yogurt in 3 Easy Steps!

Heat. Cool. Incubate.

Those are the three steps it takes to make yogurt at home. That’s it! You don’t need a fancy yogurt maker, a dehydrator or mail order starter cultures. All you need is a pint of REAL yogurt, a gallon of milk and some jars. And a heating pad or oven or crock pot. I use a heating pad and will give directions using that tool, but you can use whatever method you like to incubate your yogurt. More about that later. To start with, wouldn’t you like to eat THIS for breakfast, knowing that you made the yogurt and picked the berries yourself?

We’re lucky here in the Willamette Valley to have such good quality, and inexpensive yogurt available at the grocery store. Nancy’s yogurt is “real” yogurt, with no added sugar or thickening agent, and plenty of probiotic critters. The same cannot be said for most yogurt found in the grocery store. If you’ve read a yogurt label recently, you’ll know what i mean. Eating and feeding our loved ones ‘real’ food, full of nourishment and lacking unhealthful ingredients is important, and making/serving homemade yogurt is a great way to do just that. And it’s really easy. And frugal. And waste reducing. Here’s how to do it!

To start with, here are the tools you will need:

  1. A large pot. Your soup pot will do just fine. It must be large enough to hold a gallon of milk with at least an inch of headspace.
  2. A meat thermometer.
  3. A heating pad (or crock pot, or oven, or dehydrator, or yogurt maker. I prefer a heating pad.)
  4. Some clean towels.
  5. Clean jars, pints or quarts.
  6. A canning funnel.
  7. A ladle is helpful.
  8. An immersion blender is a luxury.

Other than those basic tools, you will need 1 pint of starter yogurt and 1 gallon of milk. My starter was a pint of Nancy’s plain non-fat yogurt, and my milk is local Junction City dairy, Lochmead Dairy’s 1% milk. A fuller fat yogurt starter will make for a thicker, creamier homemade batch. Use your favorite.

Homemade Yogurt

  1. Pour the milk in the pot and slowly heat to about 180 degrees. Keep the burner at medium high or below. (I’m still playing with this high number to get the best yogurt, but this has been my starting point since i started making yogurt. Try heating to a lower temp, but never allow the milk to actually boil. Different high temps will make slightly different yogurt. Experiment!) You can tell it’s at about the right temperature because the milk will get ‘foamy’ on the top.
  2. Cool the milk back down to 110 degrees. I like to immerse the pot in the sink with ice and water.
  3. Once cooled, add the pint of yogurt and stir really well. This is where that immersion blender would come in handy.
  4. Pour the inoculated milk into your jars. I usually start with the ladle and then pour right from the pot. Stir occasionally and top off each jar with the ‘dregs’ from the pot to evenly mix the starter.
  5. Place the jars on a towel on a heating pad set to medium, unlidded and wrap snuggy with several towels.
  6. After 1 hour, turn heating pad down to low and go about your day.
  7. After 7-9 hours, unwrap the jars and behold the magic: YOGURT! Lid and stick in the fridge to enjoy for the next several weeks.

 

    

Ta Da! Don’t be worried if it seems like the whey and the yogurt seem overly separated. You can drain off the whey if you like and feed it to the chickens or hogs, drink it, use it for baking or fermenting, or pour it on your plants. I like to keep it and stir it in when i eat the yogurt, though it does make a tasty sipping drink as well.

I have read that you can incubate your yogurt in a slow oven, a crock pot, or a dehydrator – but i have a heating pad, so i use what i have on hand. Don’t be intimidated by making yogurt, but DO save a pint from every batch to make the next. Soon, you’ll find yourself eating yogurt that you started years ago and using it in all your favorite recipes. Wouldn’t that be great?

How about you, do you make yogurt at home?

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Filed under Breakfast, Cooking, Eat Real Food, Eating, probiotic

No Knead Wheat Bread

Remember that decadent olive bread i posted about a while back? I’m still working my way through Jim Lahey’s book, but have stuck on one recipe for several batches: Whole Wheat Bread.

Encouraged by the author to play with the proportions of whole wheat to bread flours, i upped the wheat to a full cup and added a tablespoon each of ground flax seed and hemp seeds. The resultant bread has a crisp crust, soft center, and makes for good sandwich bread and especially good toast. I miss the honeyed wheat bread recipe that used to be my ‘go to’ sandwich bread. I got that recipe out of an old fashioned bread and soup book i found at a thrift store. This artisan bread is gorgeous and delicious, but not QUITE as easy to eat as “regular” bread. Sure is easier to make though. I love the ‘no knead’ concept, and especially love that i can just whip up some ingredients together at 8 pm to finish up the next afternoon at my leisure. Pretty swell.

My “danish dough whisk” is pretty swell too, isn’t it? I just love that thing. Anyhoo, the flax and hemp add nutrition, but also some moistness to the bread, i think. They’re definitely good for the texture and add a nutty flavor to the bread. Speaking of the bread, isn’t it perty!?

Tastes great, too.

How about you? Do you prefer to knead manually, use a bread machine, or skip the kneading for a long rise?

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Filed under Baked, Cooking, Eating

Elk Steaks

I got my hands on some Elk sirloin steaks last week, and tried my hand at cooking them on the stove. I’m not an overly experienced meat cook, so i sent out a call for help on my Facebook page. I got some great info on how to tell when meat is cooked by using your palm, and some other ideas on marinades, etc. I ended up experimenting with the marinade, and used my meat thermometer to test doneness instead of the palm test (which was really, just too vague for me). The flavor was great, the doneness a perfect medium, and the spuds and broccoli were finished at the same time as the meat…

… I declare this meal a success!

I steamed the broccoli, made “oven fries” out of one red potato, and tossed in some sliced onions over the meat after i flipped it. For the meat, i marinated it in dijon mustard, soy sauce, cayenne powder, salt and pepper and garlic paste. I prefer to cook meat over open flame, but the weather is not always conducive for that here in Philomath. Instead, i cooked the meat in my large cast iron pan, partially lidded. Since i’m not very experienced cooking meat, i was intensely proud of the way this meal came together. I think it was enjoyed by all, though i’m sure Pocket would have liked to get her paws on some. 😉

What’s your favorite way to prepare steak?

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Filed under Cast Iron, Cooking, Dinner, Eating, Game

Fiber Friday: A Hat for the Husband

FINALLY!

I spun this yarn back when it was Winter with the intention of knitting it into a hat right away. Handspun yarn, however, does not come with a label as per its size and recommended gauge, so i had to figure that out. Figuring out gauge is not something i excel at. Knitting up squares of yarn to be “wasted” is not something i’m keen on. But, try try again, i knitted up a mini swatch and did the math about a thousand times until i came up with 159 stitches for a 23″ hat with k3/p3 ribbing around the cuff.

Note: i figured out the gauge once before and cast on some number of stitches, and immediately began second guessing myself, thinking the hat would end up too large. So i ripped it out. Started again. About 3 times.  NOW i am sticking with this hat, but i’m still majorly second guessing myself. Should i have done the swatch in stockinette? Did i do my math incorrectly? There was a fraction of  a stitch that i rounded off: did i round it in the right direction? My husband already has a hat that is too large. It is the first hat i ever knitted, so he likes it because of that. He’d prefer a second hat that fits.

Working with handspun yarn is extremely rewarding. I love the feel of the yarn in my hands. It is gratifying to use the yarn that i spent hours spinning to create a warm and beautiful garment. It is also extremely frustrating to work with, and i’m constantly wondering if i spun it with enough twist, cast on the right number of stitches, and if the yarn will last the test of time…. especially when i accidentally drop a stitch right away and end up with one little yarn by itself on the cast on edge….. darnit.

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This week’s featured Fiber Friend is a friendy and snaggle-toothed alpaca! This guy is one of our moth repelling/pincushion pals and is on his way to Eugene for the Black Sheep Gathering! If you want him, you’ll have to find him there, in the Stash LLC booth OR custom order your own from my Etsy page. I just love his little top knot, don’t you?

Do you knit with your handspun? Do you love working with it, or find it frustrating to ‘figure out’ the gauge every time you knit with it? Do you have any tips for me in alleviating my frustration??? this post can be found at the Simple Lives Thursday blog hop.

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Filed under Felting, Fibers, Knitting, Spinning