Not yet a member Already a member ? Forgotten password ?
PETITCHEF
Add your blog-site | Add your recipes | Receive daily menu | Contact us


{Guest Post} Homemade Yogurt in a Jar


By How To: Simplify (Visit website)



March is guest post month on How To: Simplify and I'm very excited to share with you this guest post written by Julia, a food blogger who covers a wide variety of healthy and indulging recipes on Fat Girl Trapped In A Skinny Body. I've been friends with her on Twitter (@JuliaMestas) and I love following all of the recipes and photos she posts!


In my quest to become more environmentally friendly, I thought we could start to make our own yogurt. I had no idea what this entailed though.



Would it take tons of time, money or effort? None of which I really had any interest in putting into yogurt.



I read that you can make yogurt without a yogurt maker. I did not have a desire to do that though, I won't deny it. So I researched yogurt makers and yogurt recipes. The only type of yogurt recipes I found involved two ingredients: milk and yogurt (or a yogurt starter). Seriously, that's it? Occasionally I came across a recipe that added honey, agave, maple or vanilla. But in general just two ingredients. Alright, that seems easy enough. So I bought the yogurt maker (I found one at Sur La Table for $50). I'm committed, I'm doing it.



I started my first batch of yogurt on a Sunday evening at 4:00 p.m.



Ingredients:

4-5 cups milk
3/4 cup plain yogurt, with live active cultures
Directions:

Warm the milk in a saucepan over medium-high heat. Warm the milk until it is almost boiling, but not quite (which took about 5-7 minutes).
Take it off the heat and let it cool to about 80 degrees, give or take a few degrees (I just stuck my finger in the pot and if it felt a little cooler than a jacuzzi I knew it was good to go). This will take 45(ish) minutes to cool. This is non-working prep time so you can go for a run, watch a recorded hour-long show, clean the house, take the dog for a walk, go to the grocery store, etc.
Once it has cooled, add 3/4 cup of plain yogurt to the milk and stir in until it is completely mixed in. Fill each glass jar with the yogurt/milk mixture. Fill it just until the neck.
Screw on the lids. Put the jars in the yogurt maker and put the plastic covering/lid on the machine.
Set the timer for 11 hours (that is the amount of time I have found works great for 1% milk).
By that time it was 5:15 p.m.



The next morning I woke up at 5:00 a.m., so excited to see my yogurt. Did it turn out? I was sort of nervous too. What if this is all a scam? What if the only way to get decent yogurt is from the store?



I took off the plastic covering and unscrewed the jar of yogurt. Stiff, firm, solid. Whatever you want to call it, it was yogurt, and not the running kind, but a good, firm, smooth texture. Man was I excited.



After the 11 hour "cooking" time you just put the jars in the fridge to chill. They can stay in the fridge for up to 10 days.



Conclusion:

15 minutes of actual work to make 7 jars of yogurt.
The yogurt is delicious.
The two questions people keep asking me:

Can you use non-fat milk? Yes.
Can you use fruit to flavor it? Yes. Make a puree and add that to the top after the yogurt has "cooked." So instead of "fruit on the bottom" you have "fruit on the top."

If you eat a 1-6 ounce container of yogurt a day, let's say six days a week, that is $6 per week. If you make one batch of yogurt per week, that is $1.20 (even cheaper if you don't use organic milk). That is a savings of almost $5 per week and almost $20 per month! That is huge. You will be saving money by the third month. That is what I call a deal.
After reading Julia's guest post, be sure to stop by her blog, Fat Girl Trapped In A Skinny Body, for more delicious ideas, recipes and photos!


related searches :



Rate this recipe : Not good   so so   Good   Very good   Excellent !!!  




Imprimer cette page

Send this recipe to a friend

ask a question about this article

share on Facebook


Related recipes

  • Recipe Homemade ding dongs
    Homemade ding dongs (1 vote)
    Dessert Easy
    45 Minute(s) 20 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :1 package (18.25 oz.) Devil's Food cake mix + water, vegetable oil and eggs as needed to make cake 1 (8 oz.) tub frozen whipped topping, thawed 1 po...
  • Recipe Tuna melt with greek yogurt
    Tuna melt with greek yogurt (1 vote)
    Starter Very Easy
    10 Minute(s) 5 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :6 oz can of tuna 2 heaping Tbsp of Greek yogurt 1 heaping Tbsp of chunky salsa 1 tsp of grated parmesan cheese 1 ½ Tbsp of sundried tomatoes chopp...
  • Recipe Homemade yogurt
    Homemade yogurt
    other Easy
    10 Minute(s) 6 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :1L Fresh milk 1/4 cup plain yogurt (read the label, make sure it has "with Live Microorganisms") ...
  • Recipe Jumbo size yogurt marble cupcakes
    Jumbo size yogurt marble cupcakes (1 vote)
    Dessert Very Easy
    15 Minute(s) 30 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :180g Butter 85g Sugar 1/2 tsp Salt 100ml Whipping cream 2 tsp Vanilla extract 4 Eggs 280g Plain flour (sift together with baking powder and baki...