Guest guest Posted September 16, 2003 Report Share Posted September 16, 2003 I've never made whey from milk, but I have made whey from commercial yogurt and it works fine for lactofermented veggies and soaking grains, etc. Buy the best quality yogurt at the store (Brown Cow plain organic, e.g.), take a large jar or bowl and cover it with a few layers of cheesecloth secured with a rubber band. Pour some yogurt on top of the cheesecloth and the whey will drip into the jar after a few hours. Voila! easy as pie whey for all your fermenting needs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2003 Report Share Posted September 16, 2003 I have been making whey from raw milk and have some questions. This is the 3rd time I have made it. Each time I have less than a teaspoon of cream cheese and after about a month or so in the fridge the whey just smalls awful and a little longer in the fridge it will separate. What is going on? It is supposed to keep for 6 months. I end up pouring it out. , how does your whey smell and taste after a month or 2? Do you get much cream cheese? Maybe I should just do it with the commercial yoghurt. I make my own yoghurt from raw milk, maybe I should try that? I would like to find out what the problem is with the raw milk, though. Thanks, ~Del > I've never made whey from milk, but I have made whey from commercial yogurt and it works fine for lactofermented veggies and soaking grains, etc. Buy the best quality yogurt at the store (Brown Cow plain organic, e.g.), take a large jar or bowl and cover it with a few layers of cheesecloth secured with a rubber band. Pour some yogurt on top of the cheesecloth and the whey will drip into the jar after a few hours. Voila! easy as pie whey for all your fermenting needs. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2003 Report Share Posted September 16, 2003 >Hello > >I just wondered if someone could tell me if whey made from >pasteurized milk can be used for fermenting or doesnt it work >because the milk has been heat treated? > >Thanks > >Louise Actually GEM cultures recommends using pastuerized, or heating your own milk before starting. This is controversial etc. etc. but the idea is that you innoculant won't have to " fight " so many competing bacteria. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2003 Report Share Posted September 17, 2003 it will definitely work for fermenting. the whey comes from growing bacteria. as long as you grow enough bacteria in the milk it will work fine for fermenting. it doesn't matter at all whether it was heated before you grow the bacteria. of course, if you heat the whey after making it, then you might kill off too much bacteria and then it might not work. and as heidi pointed out, pasteurizing it beforehand might even help grow bacteria in some cases, although it's obviously not necessary at all. of course there might be various advantages to the whey from raw milk, and i've personally taken a vow never to consume pasteurized (or homogenized, or fortified) milk ever again, partly for socio-political/ideological reasons, so i would urge using raw milk if possible, but of course there are always practial considerations for individuals. my tip for obtaining whey is to find a raw milk source that separates the milk for cream and butter, and has lots of skim milk leftover. even if they're using it for pigs or something, i'm sure you can get as much (probably free)skim milk as you'd ever need for the purposes of making whey. i always have a few gallons of whey on hand because this is such an easy and plentiful source. i drink it often. mike parker > Hello > > I just wondered if someone could tell me if whey made from > pasteurized milk can be used for fermenting or doesnt it work > because the milk has been heat treated? > > Thanks > > Louise Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2003 Report Share Posted September 17, 2003 Even raw milk itself lasts for months with no bad smell. I've found that if it sours at room temperature it smells like yogurt or sometimes with a tinge of a " doughy " smell, and when it sours for several months in the fridge it smells like a sharp cheese. Pasteurized milk that long would probably tend to smell putrid. NT says whey lasts for five or six months. I don't think it every goes bad (if it does it probably takes at *least* a year), but it does seem to get weaker over time. Chris > Del, > > When I used to make whey from yogurt, I only made it in small batches as needed (to make sauerkraut, etc.) I usually didn't keep it for months on end. However, now I buy whey from a farmer and that lasts FOREVER (well, a few months anyway) in the fridge with no bad smell. I don't know for sure, but I think his whey is from cheesemaking (it is a byproduct, after all) and therefore would have been heated a bit. My guess would be that people of the past didn't go out of their way to make whey (hee hee), but rather discovered uses for it after the fact (a la our discussion about meringue invention). So there might be something to heating milk in order to make good whey (see Mike and Heidi's posts with this subject line). > > HTH, > > > Re: whey from pasteurized milk > > > I have been making whey from raw milk and have some questions. This > is the 3rd time I have made it. Each time I have less than a teaspoon > of cream cheese and after about a month or so in the fridge the whey > just smalls awful and a little longer in the fridge it will separate. > What is going on? It is supposed to keep for 6 months. I end up > pouring it out. , how does your whey smell and taste after a > month or 2? Do you get much cream cheese? Maybe I should just do it > with the commercial yoghurt. I make my own yoghurt from raw milk, > maybe I should try that? I would like to find out what the problem is > with the raw milk, though. > > Thanks, > > ~Del > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2003 Report Share Posted September 17, 2003 I don't understand. I am using my raw milk for making whey. I used 2 quarts as per the recipe in NT. After 3-4 days I had about 1/4 inch or less on the top that had separated from the whey. When I poured it into the strainer, I had less than a teaspoon of cream cheese! All the rest went immediately through the strainer which was lined with a thin white cotton tee towel. I was expecting SOME cream cheese. I also was expecting to tie it up and let it drain for a few hours. Also after a month it really smells awful. It separates and looks like a clear liquid on top of milk. I end up throwing it out. Whats going on? What am I doing wrong? I am ready to use it for fermenting. ~Del > > Hello > > > > I just wondered if someone could tell me if whey made from > > pasteurized milk can be used for fermenting or doesnt it work > > because the milk has been heat treated? > > > > Thanks > > > > Louise Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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