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Re: Kefir Cream?

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"I am looking for a way to make "yogurt" for my 2 year old that is thicker than your typical home-made yogurt or kefir. "

Have you tried adding pectin to it? I haven't tried it, but I think it would work.

-Olif

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You can also drain the whey with cheesecloth out of the kefir after

it;s made and this will thicken it up.

On Jul 27, 2004, at 1:11 PM, RawDairy wrote:

> Message: 21

> Date: Tue, 27 Jul 2004 11:27:38 -0500

>

> Subject: Re: Kefir Cream?

>

> " I am looking for a way to make " yogurt " for my 2 year old that is

> thicker than your typical home-made yogurt or kefir. "

>

> Have you tried adding pectin to it? I haven't tried it, but I think it

> would work.

>

> -Olif

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Our milk has such a high cream content (Dutch Belted cows) and

cultures so quickly that the cream separates out, and that's the

layer the grains are usually in. It's quite thick. I just use it in

smoothies and have been including the whey, but I want to try that

pel'mani recipe in the WAPF journal, so I've separated it out the

last few days.

We do the smoothies for breakfast daily. It is usually so thick that

my 5 y.o. dd eats hers with a spoon. I use a blend of various

berries and fruits (all organic); enough kefir to nearly cover them

in the blender, and blend that. Then I add two bananas and some

coconut oil and blend that; and finally two eggs (free range organic)

and lightly blend them in. If it is so thick it's the consistency of

ice cream, I add some raw milk to thin it down, or some kombucha. It

fills my kids up and if I wasn't pregnant, it would probably stick

with me longer. But then nothing sticks very long... ;-)

Smiles,

Tracey

Change a life today--read with a child!

Many convenient locations near you--couch, fireside, rocking chair

and lap!

www.UsborneBooksUS.com

> Has anyone tried making kefir with cream? Sometimes the cream I

get

> is rather pourable, other times it is so thick it is hard to spoon

> out.

>

> But if I get the pourable version, would I be able to make kefir

> with it?

>

> I am looking for a way to make " yogurt " for my 2 year old that is

> thicker than your typical home-made yogurt or kefir. If it isn't

> thick enough to stick to the spoon somewhat, she makes a tremendous

> mess.

>

> Any ideas?

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Tracey, my girl! Whereabouts are you? I ask, because I drink Belted milk too! In the spring, the milk was so terrific, I kept looking in there to see if my kids had pulled a fast one on me by putting a stick of butter in it! ;-) The farmer even skims all the milk, as protocol, and I do not miss the milk..the milk I get is still very creamy! If I leave it standing long enough, the cream layer will become distinctive and it's a very impressive 3 to 4 inch layer (though the bottle does have a somewhat narrow neck). I have asked and searched, but I was not able to find much info on the Dutch Belted....other than it apparently is a heritage breed. Can you tell me all you know about the Dutch Belted? I'd certainly like to know what the average fat/cream content of Belted is in comparison to Jersey/Guernsey & Holstein. TIA!

Sara

MinnesotaTracey Rollison wrote:

Our milk has such a high cream content (Dutch Belted cows) and cultures so quickly that the cream separates out, and that's the layer the grains are usually in. It's quite thick. I just use it in smoothies and have been including the whey, but I want to try that pel'mani recipe in the WAPF journal, so I've separated it out the last few days.

Sara Rheault Owner Remembering Our Angels www.rememberingourangels.com sara@...

"Come check it out!"__________________________________________________

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