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Hi ,

Already they need more milk than you are giving them. Try doubling the milk.

If it separates before 24 hours, give them even more milk for the next

batch.

Marilyn

On Thu, Jul 31, 2008 at 9:20 AM, redrosalady <redrosalady@...> wrote:

> I just got my kefir grains Monday. I put them in some milk and let it

> sit 24 hours. It had curds on top. I poured that out because it said

> the first few batches wouldn't be o.k. since they had traveled in the

> mail. The 2nd batch separated in about 12 hours into curds and whey. I

> tasted it and it tasted like buttermilk. Is that right? Should I stir

> the curds and whey together and taste it that way? I want to catch it

> before it separates . Also, it smells like Elmer's Glue. If the

> normal taste is like buttermilk I will definetly have to add something

> to it! Somebody get me on track please! I am befuddled lol.....

>

>

>

> ------------------------------------

>

>

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  • 10 months later...
Guest guest

Okay, I am having some problems. I keep reading and re-reading Marilyn's

instructions but something is not right....

I use pasturized whole milk and my kefir is completely separating in about 12-14

hours. My kitchen temp runs about 78-80 depending on if I have to cook inside

it occassionally get warmer. I have already separated my grains twice and have

only had them since the end of May. Occassionally I have used half reconstitued

powdered milk with my whole since I did not have time to drive to town for more

milk. My kefir is also pretty thin and has to be shaken or blended to throughly

mix the curds and whey. Could someone enlighten me and help me to figure out my

problem.

Thanks,

Tonnia from Texas

--------------------------------------

Page 1 #7 is the instruction you are having trouble with. How do I know? Because

you don't say how it tastes. But I'll tell you. It is too sour. That's the very

reason it is separating. Milk that becomes too acidic (read: sour) separates.

That's also why it is thin. I'd get rid of half the kefir grains and try again.

When you can get it to taste right, the consistency will be good.

Marilyn

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Guest guest

>

> Okay, I am having some problems. I keep reading and re-reading Marilyn's

instructions but something is not right....

> I use pasturized whole milk and my kefir is completely separating in about

12-14 hours. My kitchen temp runs about 78-80 depending on if I have to cook

inside it occassionally get warmer. I have already separated my grains twice

and have only had them since the end of May. Occassionally I have used half

reconstitued powdered milk with my whole since I did not have time to drive to

town for more milk. My kefir is also pretty thin and has to be shaken or

blended to throughly mix the curds and whey. Could someone enlighten me and

help me to figure out my problem.

> Thanks,

> Tonnia from Texas

>

>

> --------------------------------------

>

> Page 1 #7 is the instruction you are having trouble with. How do I know?

Because you don't say how it tastes. But I'll tell you. It is too sour. That's

the very reason it is separating. Milk that becomes too acidic (read: sour)

separates. That's also why it is thin. I'd get rid of half the kefir grains and

try again. When you can get it to taste right, the consistency will be good.

>

> Marilyn

>

Yes Marilyn it tastes too sour. I just gave some grains to a friend yesterday.

So now I am starting over. This batch only stood about 12 hours and the kefir

had a very mild taste. I think I would have drank it fermented longer but I

pulled it too early. I will try it longer today. My kitchen gets pretty warm

during the day so I may have to pull grains frequently. I have given grains to

two friends so far so maybe I will be able to start sharing more as the word

gets around. Thanks for your reply.

Thank, Tonnia

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  • 7 months later...

,

Kefir grains are amazingly resilient. A few rinses in tap water might throw

them off a little, but they will recover quickly.

Bill

Re: New To Kefir

Dear Marilyn and Bill

Thank you for your kind welcome and reply. I'm afraid I have one more

question. I have briefly rinsed my grains about five times under chlorinated

tap water, will that have been enough to kill them? When I put fresh milk

with them it still gets thicker and more acidic so I assumed they were still

alive.

Thank you in advance.

-------------------------------------

They are still alive. If there was anything lost, it will grow back, too.

Marilyn

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Thank you, I will look after them like family from now on. No nasty tap water

or dirty jars!!

From: bdickhaus@...

Date: Tue, 26 Jan 2010 21:19:25 -0500

Subject: New To Kefir

,

Kefir grains are amazingly resilient. A few rinses in tap water might throw

them off a little, but they will recover quickly.

Bill

-------------------------------------

They are still alive. If there was anything lost, it will grow back, too.

Marilyn

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