SLOW CULTURED YOGURT

About

Brenda Gantt

I am a self-taught cook. I started cooking around 18 years old. I stood in the kitchen and watched my mother, who was my biggest inspiration at the time, cook.

Yogurt teems with life. Beneficial bacteria thrive in milk, eating away milk’s natural sugars. That beautiful and ancient microbial process produces yogurt’s distinct tartness. Most thermophilic yogurts culture for
only 8 to 12 hours, but the longer you allow the bacteria to do their work, the more sour and complexly flavored your yogurt will become. I prefer a strongly sour yogurt and favor culturing milk over a longer
period of time—a full day. Over those 24 hours, milk transforms from liquid and sweet to thick and creamy with a striking lemony sourness. If you find that my process produces too strong a yogurt for your liking,
consider culturing your yogurt for a shorter period of time.

MAKES ABOUT 1 QUART

 

INGREDIENTS

  • cups milk
  • ¼ cup yogurt from a previous batch or store-bought yogurt with live active cultures

 

INSTRUCTIONS

  1. Pour the milk into a saucepan and bring it to a boil over medium heat.
  2. When bubbles first appear, immediately turn off the heat and allow the milk to cool to 108°F to 112°F.
  3. Thoroughly whisk the yogurt into the milk so that any clumps dissolve.
  4. Pour the milk into a quart-sized jar, cover it loosely, and place it somewhere in your kitchen that maintains a constant temperature of 108°F to 112°F. You might choose a yogurt maker, a food dehydrator, a well-insulated cooler filled with warm water, or even a gas oven with a pilot light.
  5. Allow the milk to culture undisturbed for at least 8 and up to 24 hours while the beneficial bacteria do their work. After 8 hours the yogurt will taste slightly sour, and after 24, the yogurt will taste strikingly sour and lemony.
  6. The milk will have coagulated and will pull away from the walls of the jar in a solid mass when you tip the jar gently.
  7. Cover and refrigerate the yogurt and use it within a month or so; remember to spoon about ¼ cup of the yogurt into a small jar to reserve for future batches.

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