Guest guest Posted January 10, 2011 Report Share Posted January 10, 2011 Hi . I get curds and whey if my grains are kefiring too quickly. For me the best way to prevent curds and whey is to be certain the ratio is about 1 TBS grains to 1 cup milk. When I have too many grains and have more kefir than I can consume, I set out 1 cup of milk with 1 TBS grains on the counter to kefir at room temperature and have a second batch slowly kefering in the fridge, using a ratio of approximately 1 TBS grains to 1/2 cup of milk. It takes a couple of days for the refrigerated kefir to get to the right ferment. You can also pick out the grains from the curds and whey, and then separate the curds from the whey by straining through a coffee filter to get a cheese-like product. I made a really good chip-dip by adding in onion powder and some dried minced onion. I have not been able to sell my grains but have had good results giving them away by posting an ad on Craigslist. Ronna On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 3:20 AM, <jumpin.jehosephat@...>wrote: > > > Hello, > > I read over your FAQ on the kefirlady.com site but did not see an answer > to my question. > > Am I suppose to have curds and whey? Is it ok not to? and when I get the > whey do I strain it off and only drink the curds? > > I have been just mixing it all in together and making smoothies. Seems fine > to me. > > I know that was a lot of questions. Sorry. > > Thank you for your time, > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2011 Report Share Posted January 10, 2011 , The reason your kefir is turning to curds and whey could be that you have too many grains for the amount of milk, or you are fermenting too long. You may drink your kefir however you'd like, there is absolutely no right or wrong way. Mixing it all back together is the best, IMO. If you'd like a thicker kefir that doesn't separate, try increasing your milk, decreasing your grains, or shortening the fermenting time. It's a science experiment with many factors involved and different for each house, so play around with it until you get it the way you like it. On Jan 10, 2011, at 3:20 AM, wrote: > Hello, > > I read over your FAQ on the kefirlady.com site but did not see an answer to my question. > > Am I suppose to have curds and whey? Is it ok not to? and when I get the whey do I strain it off and only drink the curds? > > I have been just mixing it all in together and making smoothies. Seems fine to me. > > I know that was a lot of questions. Sorry. > > Thank you for your time, > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2011 Report Share Posted January 10, 2011 Ronna, Wow! Thanks a bunch for your answer. I am definitely still learning. This is some great information. I am going to give some kefir away to friends. I hope they don't kill it...lol Thanks again for your help and great info! ¸.·´* .·´*¨¨)) -:¦:-¸.·´* -:¦:- ((¸¸.·´*~.·´*¨¨ )) -:¦:- ·· ((¸¸.·´* .·´*((¸¸.·.·´ *-:¦:- ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2011 Report Share Posted January 10, 2011 Thank you for your help and information on this question. I am probably fermenting too long. I thought it was mandatory for 24 hours to go by before replacing the milk. I will do some experimenting..thanks again! �.��* .��*��)) -:�:-�.��* -:�:- ((��.��*~.��*�� )) -:�:- �� ((��.��* .��*((��.�.�� *-:�:- ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2011 Report Share Posted January 13, 2011 Hi . I, too, get curds and whey to various degrees. Initially, I had far too many grains for the amount of milk since my eyeballed estimate had been way off. Since I reduced the ratio to 1 T grains/cup milk, it has improved, but I've never gotten the milk to thicken uniformly. I pretty much go from milk, to milk and some nicely thickened parts around the kefir grains, stir gently after 8 hours or more to spread the wealth, and then sometime between 24 and 36 hours, I get either curds and whey, or curds and watery milk/whey. My milk never thickens throughout, and I do check periodically. Any time it looks like it's thickening, it turns out it's just at the top/bottom, and I still have all that watery stuff in between, or it has what Dom refers to as that gritty-mouth feel (because it's basically small bits of curd, not smooth and creamy). So far, my happy solution is to pour it all in the blender and drink it as is (smoothie optional). Or strain out the whey and use that for other purposes (see Dom's websites for loads of recommendations on things to do with the kefir whey), while I eat up the yummy curds. I've wondered how much of this is due to the milk I use and the temperature in the house. I can't afford raw milk where I am, so I'm compromising with unhomogenized pasteurized milk. Since I never manage to get the cream blended into the milk, it ends up being nonfat, pasteurized milk that actually gets used. I'm still happily playing around with it, though. --andra Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2011 Report Share Posted January 13, 2011 Hi , I'm pretty new at this too, but I think I've finally found the ratio that works for me. I add two tablespoons of grains to three cups of milk. It doesn't separate, and it's thick and creamy. Hopefully, this helps. Nina > > Hello, > > I read over your FAQ on the kefirlady.com site but did not see an answer to my question. > > Am I suppose to have curds and whey? Is it ok not to? and when I get the whey do I strain it off and only drink the curds? > > I have been just mixing it all in together and making smoothies. Seems fine to me. > > I know that was a lot of questions. Sorry. > > Thank you for your time, > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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