Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Re: homemade raw yogurt

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Anyone have any suggestions on what someone with an _electric_ stove could

do? I don't have a pilot light. When I've tried dehydrating things,

sometimes I can get it a little under 100 degrees in there, if I fiddle with

it and monitor it with an oven thermometer. What would be the best temp to

keep it at? 90, if I can get it there?

Chris

____

" What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a

heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and

animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of

them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense

compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to

bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature.

Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the

truth, and for those who do them wrong. "

--Saint Isaac the Syrian

Link to comment
Share on other sites

>>>>Anyone have any suggestions on what someone with an _electric_ stove

could

do? I don't have a pilot light. When I've tried dehydrating things,

sometimes I can get it a little under 100 degrees in there, if I fiddle with

it and monitor it with an oven thermometer. What would be the best temp to

keep it at? 90, if I can get it there?

----->chris, when i was a kid, we used to put it on the heater - i think it

was baseboard, but don't recall exactly. i think it just takes longer if you

don't keep it warm. the batch on my mantel was fermenting, but just taking

longer. or, if you have a heating pad like someone else suggested, that

would work too. or just put it in the warmest area of your home.

while writing this i received a call from seven star farms...the other

cultures in their yogurt are:

Streptococcus thermophilus

L. bulgaricus

L. delbrueckii

(in addition to l. acidophilus and bifidus)

Suze Fisher

Lapdog Design, Inc.

Web Design & Development

http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg/

mailto:s.fisher22@...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you are making yoghurt the temperature should be close to 110 F. I make my

yogurt using an ice chest. I just put in about 3 gallons of hot water

(probably about 120 F when I put it in) and then I put the yogurt in quart

glass jars . The amount of water depends on the size of your ice chest. The

yogurt always comes out fine. If you want you could check the temperature

halfway thru the process but I never do because I am usually doing something

else.

danny

----- Original Message -----

From: ChrisMasterjohn@...

Sent: Friday, January 17, 2003 11:00 AM

Subject: Re: homemade raw yogurt

Anyone have any suggestions on what someone with an _electric_ stove could

do? I don't have a pilot light. When I've tried dehydrating things,

sometimes I can get it a little under 100 degrees in there, if I fiddle with

it and monitor it with an oven thermometer. What would be the best temp to

keep it at? 90, if I can get it there?

Chris

____

" What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a

heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and

animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of

them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense

compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to

bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature.

Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the

truth, and for those who do them wrong. "

--Saint Isaac the Syrian

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Danny,

DO your glass jars have glass lids? Is it okay for

the yogurt to touch metal? What about rubber? All my

mason jars are either sealed with a rubber ring or tin

lid.

Blessings,

Katrina

--- CreekBend Dairy Farm <cbdfarm@...>

wrote:

>

> If you are making yoghurt the temperature should be

> close to 110 F. I make my yogurt using an ice

> chest. I just put in about 3 gallons of hot water

> (probably about 120 F when I put it in) and then I

> put the yogurt in quart glass jars . The amount

> of water depends on the size of your ice chest. The

> yogurt always comes out fine. If you want you could

> check the temperature halfway thru the process but I

> never do because I am usually doing something else.

> danny

>

> ----- Original Message -----

> From: ChrisMasterjohn@...

>

> Sent: Friday, January 17, 2003 11:00 AM

> Subject: Re: homemade raw

> yogurt

>

>

> Anyone have any suggestions on what someone with

> an _electric_ stove could

> do? I don't have a pilot light. When I've

> tried dehydrating things,

> sometimes I can get it a little under 100 degrees

> in there, if I fiddle with

> it and monitor it with an oven thermometer. What

> would be the best temp to

> keep it at? 90, if I can get it there?

>

> Chris

>

> ____

>

> " What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled

> with compassion? It is a

> heart which burns with love for every creature:

> for human beings, birds, and

> animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought

> of them and the sight of

> them make the tears of the saint flow. And this

> immense and intense

> compassion, which flows from the heart of the

> saints, makes them unable to

> bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant

> wound in any creature.

> Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for

> animals, for enemies of the

> truth, and for those who do them wrong. "

>

> --Saint Isaac the Syrian

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Katrina,

No they don't have glass lids. I usually don't fill them full so the yogurt

doesn't touch the lids. I don't know if the yogurt touching metal would be a

problem or not. Actually my jars aren't canning jars, but are just quart jars

from something such as apple butter or mayonnaise. So I just use the lids they

came with. Works fine for me.

Hope this helps,

danny

----- Original Message -----

From: Katrina Rose

Sent: Friday, January 17, 2003 5:50 PM

Subject: Re: homemade raw yogurt

Danny,

DO your glass jars have glass lids? Is it okay for

the yogurt to touch metal? What about rubber? All my

mason jars are either sealed with a rubber ring or tin

lid.

Blessings,

Katrina

Link to comment
Share on other sites

---The cow keeps the milk at 103 or 104F so that is " ok " yogurt temp.

Stainless is " ok " for yogurt mfg'r. Leave milk an inch or so from the

lid if you use lid. Lid is only needed to keep " stuff " outside of

milk and jar. Chris:90F will be " ok " .Dennis

In , Katrina Rose <wllng2fght@y...>

wrote:

> > > it and monitor it with an oven thermometer. What

> > would be the best temp to

> > keep it at? 90, if I can get it there?

> >

> > Chris

> >

> > ____

> >

> >

Link to comment
Share on other sites

--- Are those cultures in any particular ratio? I wonder if some of

those are fastidious at 70F pH 6.5 or at pH 5.5 while others grow

(duplicate) " faster " at 110F at pH 6.5 or are even " faster " yet at

110F at pH 5.5? When do they hit lag and when do they hit log phase?

You might get an entirely different flavor profile and consistency

making yogurt at 110F using L.bulgaricus than you would using L.

bulgaricus at 70F. Nevermind me I'm starting the shift a little

bored tonight.

In , " Suze Fisher " <> while writing

this i received a call from seven star farms...the other

> cultures in their yogurt are:

>

> Streptococcus thermophilus

> L. bulgaricus

> L. delbrueckii

>

> (in addition to l. acidophilus and bifidus)

>

> Suze Fisher

> Lapdog Design, Inc.

> Web Design & Development

> http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg/

> mailto:s.fisher22@v...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

--- I wonder why the milk doesn't turn into yogurt inside the udder.

Milk is not sterile directly from the cow is it? Too much Letterman

this week!?!?!? Is this anything? Maybe Letterman will know. He's

quite the food expert. Dennis

In , " dkemnitz2000

<dkemnitz2000@y...> " <dkemnitz2000@y...> wrote:

> ---The cow keeps the milk at 103 or 104F so that is " ok " yogurt

temp.

> Stainless is " ok " for yogurt mfg'r. Leave milk an inch or so from

the

> lid if you use lid. Lid is only needed to keep " stuff " outside of

> milk and jar. Chris:90F will be " ok " .Dennis

>

>

>

>

> In , Katrina Rose <wllng2fght@y...>

> wrote:

> > > > it and monitor it with an oven thermometer. What

> > > would be the best temp to

> > > keep it at? 90, if I can get it there?

> > >

> > > Chris

> > >

> > > ____

> > >

> > >

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 8 years later...
Guest guest

Yes you can make yogurt without heating it up to180 degrees. I make it on a

regularly. It will be thin, not thick. I warm a quart of milk up to 105-107

degrees, dissolve a packet of Yogourmet (yogurt starter from the Coop) in a cup

of the warmed milk put it back in the quart of milk mix and put in glass jars.

I have a yogurt maker that keeps it warm as it incubates temp does rise over 100

degrees and in 8 to 10 hours I have my raw yogurt!. Now I know you can use X

amount of yogurt instead of the packet, but I never seem to remember to save

some from the raw batch so I've been using the store bought. Hope this helps.

> I would love to make homemade raw yogurt. All the recipes I find say to heat

the milk to 180 degrees. Can you make raw milk yougurt without heating it up so?

> Recipes appreciated!

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...