Thursday, March 31, 2011

Homemade Greek Yogurt

This recipe comes from my new Food & Wine Annual Cookbook, 2011. It's attributed to Michael Psilakis, who wrote a cookbook I've been coveting for a while now: How to Roast a Lamb: New Greek Classic Cooking. (And what do you know, my birthday month is coming right up!)

I was excited to try this, and I finally remembered to buy both whole milk (I got organic cow milk) AND good live yogurt at the same time.

The method is surprisingly easy. I mean, it really takes less than 15 minutes total of active, working time. Way less actually. It's mostly waiting time.

I used my Le Creuset pot, mainly because it doesn't have a non-stick finish the way my saucepans do. I don't know if it was a legitimate concern, but it was mine. Boiled the milk, let it cool a bit, followed the steps, then stuck it in our oven. The hard part for me was figuring out when I needed to start the yogurt so I would have power for the oven light for the whole amount of time. (We run a generator for power and turn it off at night). So I had to start my yogurt around 6am. I ended up taking it out of the oven an hour or two ahead of time because I wanted to go to bed, but it still turned out great! I skimmed it (more like scraped the skin off) and ladled it into a strainer. I left the strainer over a bowl in the fridge overnight, instead of just for four hours, because it was my bedtime. I ended up with a nice thick, bowl of actual yogurt! Amazing.

I suppose it was actually on its way to becoming yogurt cheese with the extra straining time, but no matter, it turned out creamy and delicious! I was wondering what to do with all the whey that had drained out...but that will have to wait until next time, because while I was gone, my husband dumped it out! I will report back with all the uses for whey...

The only thing you need to know: this recipe doesn't make very much yogurt.

Another good thing to know: you can use 2 tablespoons from this batch of yogurt to make your next batch of yogurt! You'll never need to buy yogurt again!!

I can't wait to try this with goat or sheep milk, if I can ever find any!

*will add more pictures after the next batch!


Homemade Greek Yogurt

Homemade yogurt requires surprisingly little prep and keeps in the fridge for a month.

Start with 1 quart whole goat's, sheep's or cow's milk, transfer 2 tablespoons into a bowl and stir in 2 tablespoons plain whole-milk yogurt (with live active cultures).

In a saucepan, bring the remaining milk to a boil. Let stand off the heat, without stirring, until it registers 100 degrees F on an instant-read thermometer, about 15 minutes; a skin will form on the surface.

Make a small opening in the skin with a table knife and carefully pour the yogurt mixture into the milk in the saucepan. Cover the pot with a kitchen towel; transfer to an oven. Turn the light on and close the oven door. Let stand for 16 hours.

Using a skimmer or slotted spoon, lift off the skin and discard it. Carefully ladle the yogurt into a sieve lined with a double layer of cheesecloth and refrigerate until much of the whey is drained and the yogurt is thick, at least 4 hours. Transfer the yogurt to a bowl and serve.

3 comments:

  1. Looks terrific, and so easy! Who knew? Thanks for the recipe - definitely going to give this a try.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I make a gallon a week or more of yogurt for my wife and I - yes, we eat a lot of yogurt. Thankfully, we bought a yogurt maker (Waring Pro Yogurt Maker) on sale for under $30 at Tuesday Morning... what a steal... glad we did because I have tried making yogurt without a yogurt maker. All it takes is one disaster with a gallon of milk and you'll understand why I use a yogurt maker. And we have never had a problem - in over 50 gallons of yogurt made thus far.

    If you are interested, we have a website: http://mryogurt.info/

    And an ehow: http://www.wikihow.com/Make-Yogurt-By-Machine

    ReplyDelete
  3. Louanne, can't wait to hear how yours turns out!

    Bill, yikes, I couldn't eat that much yogurt! I'm not in the market for a yogurt maker or another electric "gadget"...This method seems foolproof and was quite simple.

    Thanks for your comments!

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for commenting on this post! We at the Bad Girl's Kitchen enjoy sharing recipes, ideas, questions and thoughts about food.

Spam, whether marketing, religious or personal, WILL be promptly deleted. DO NOT WASTE YOUR TIME OR MINE.