Source
Source: Raw notes label this recipe as America’s Test Kitchen (ATK).
Description
Family breakfast notes for Homemade Yogurt ATK.
Ingredients
- YIELD Makes 2 quarts
- TIME 40 minutes, plus 13 hours fermenting and chilling
- Why This Recipe Works
- Homemade Yogurt
- Gather Your Ingredients
- 7½ cups ultra-pasteurized whole, 2 percent low-fat, 1 percent low-fat, or skim milk
- ½ cup plain yogurt
- Before You Begin
- *
Instructions
- For tangy, creamy yogurt, we skipped the usual preliminary scalding and cooling steps by starting with ultra-pasteurized milk, which has already been rapidly heated and chilled.
- This lets bacterial cultures turn it into an especially thick and silky yogurt.
- We brought the milk to 115 degrees and stirred in store-bought yogurt with live cultures, strains of bacteria that digest the lactose in milk, producing lactic acid.
- This acid is what gives yogurt its flavor and causes the proteins in milk to gradually form a gel, turning liquid milk into creamy yogurt.
- To provide those bacteria with a cozy environment to do their work, we placed a covered pot of boiling water in the oven beside the pot of warm water holding the jars of milk.
- This setup helped the oven maintain a temperature of 100 to 115 degrees for hours.
- After that, it was just a matter of tasting for tartness and thickness to decide when to pop the jars into the fridge to let the yogurt set.
- This recipe will work only with ultra-pasteurized milk.
- Most organic milk is ultra-pasteurized; this will be noted on the label.
- Be sure to use freshly opened containers of milk.
- Any type of plain yogurt (whole-milk, low-fat, Greek, etc.) that contains live cultures can be used.
- You can halve this recipe, if preferred.
- Be sure to save ½ cup of yogurt to use as the starter for a subsequent batch.
- Bring milk to 115 degrees in saucepan over medium heat, 2 to 5 minutes.
- (If your milk gets hotter than 115 degrees, let it cool to 115 degrees before proceeding.
- Higher temperatures can kill some cultures.) Off heat, whisk yogurt into milk until very well combined.
- Divide mixture evenly between two 1-quart Mason jars (they will be very full; a funnel can be helpful for this step).
- Add lids, then screw on rings until just finger-tight.
- Adjust oven rack to lowest position and turn on oven light.
- Bring 5 quarts water to boil in large covered pot.
- Place jars in second large pot.
- Add water until jars are submerged to their necks.
- (If jars are taller than pot, add water to 1¼ inches from rim of pot.) Remove jars and bring water to 120 degrees over medium heat.
- Return jars to pot of 120-degree water.
- Transfer both pots to oven.
- Incubate yogurt, without opening oven door, for 5 hours.
- Remove 1 jar from water bath.
- Using clean spoon, taste yogurt for tartness and consistency.
- If tarter, thicker yogurt is desired, return jar to water bath and shut oven door.
- (Bear in mind that yogurt will thicken significantly as it cools but can be loosened up by stirring prior to serving.) Set oven to 350 degrees and heat for 3 minutes (start your timer as soon as you set the dial; oven will not reach 350 degrees).
- Turn off oven and let incubate for up to 10 more hours, repeating heating step each time oven door is opened.
- Remove jars from water bath and refrigerate until fully cooled and set, about 8 hours.
- (Yogurt can be refrigerated for up to 2 weeks.)
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