Guest guest Posted August 2, 2007 Report Share Posted August 2, 2007 But I have a question. . . . . . . . . . We live in the currently HOT state of Montana (over 100F for the better part of all of July). I learned of kefir both from a friend of mine who's been raising dairy goats for some thirty years or so as well as in the book, _The Maker's Diet_. This friend gave me some starter to begin our home exploration into the world of kefir with some of her goat milk. Absolutely wonderful! Since I don't always have access to the fresh milk she provides, I decided to try this with some organic cow's milk from our local health food store-milk which is also non-homogenized, so has the cream floating at the top. I shook it up and combined it, with some of the starter, in a glass jar. The kefir turned out just fine. (I'm learning as I'm going, mind you-it appears I don't need to worry about whether the milk is homogenized or not??? Please let me know on this!) But since then the " problem " has arisen. There was a little milk left in the container, so I combined this with some new non-homogenized milk into another glass container to make some more. When I checked it the next day, it looked like a relatively large chunk of butter was on the top. I skimmed that off and strained the kefir. Then I strained the kefir again, because I wasn't happy with how it looked. And there were still some yellow spots among the kefir globules. I have this in a separate glass container in the fridge. This kefir tastes fine, but is a little grainy yet. I put some more starter into another glass jar to try yet again-this time with a mixture of the non-homogenized milk and homogenized/pasteurized (still organic) milk. Before the end of the day, there were already a couple relatively large butter-looking lumps in this. I took those out this morning, but there are still more lumps. What are these? Are they some sort of butter? (If so, can it be eaten as such? I assume it could be. . . . . .) Is this affecting the kefir starter itself? Should I just put this back into the kefir? Thanks in advance for your input. I'm looking forward to learning even more! - Lemmon Mom of 3 List Owner, LDSspecialones and LDSspecial_hs (http:// <BLOCKED::blocked::BLOCKED::http://> ) " The most important instruction our children will ever receive will be that which parents give to them in their own home, if parents diligently teach their children the way our Father in Heaven would like them to follow. " - Elder L. Tom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 2, 2007 Report Share Posted August 2, 2007 re: separation of butterfat in cows milk Just stir everything together well before straining. If it tastes good, it is good. The only questionable milk is ultra pasteurized milk. All other grocery milk is fine. Marilyn On 8/2/07, Lemmon <cathy@...> wrote: > > But I have a question. . . . . . . . . . > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 2, 2007 Report Share Posted August 2, 2007 Sounds good-- I'll do it. But I'm going to not mix back in the larger chunks of " butter " . I'm going to try eating them-- spread it on toast or melt it onto popcorn or something. Have you or anyone else done this? I guess I'm not seeing how it could be " bad " to use. I'm wondering if this is just something to expect to happen when I use the non-homogenized cow's milk, then. Goat's milk doesn't have nearly as much cream, so this hasn't been an issue at all with the goat's milk kefir I've made. (And that's good to know about the ultra-pasteurized milk. I'm trying to keep our family away from pasteurized milk altogether-- but that's really not very easy. Not until we get our own milk goats, I suppose. . . . . . .) - > > re: separation of butterfat in cows milk > > Just stir everything together well before straining. If it tastes good, it > is good. > > The only questionable milk is ultra pasteurized milk. All other grocery milk > is fine. > > Marilyn > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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