2 Super Easy Ways to Make Homemade Yogurt

(Psst: The FTC wants me to remind you that this website contains affiliate links. That means if you make a purchase from a link you click on, I might receive a small commission. This does not increase the price you’ll pay for that item nor does it decrease the awesomeness of the item. ~ Daisy)

 

Yogurt is full of good bacteria, and it’s delicious too!  But those little six-packs touting “active cultures” are also filled with other ingredients that you probably don’t want to add to your diet if the purpose of eating yogurt is good health.

Storebought yogurt has a lot of extra stuff in it that isn’t too healthy.

Here are the ingredients in Yoplait’s plain yogurt:

Cultured Pasteurized Grade A Nonfat Milk. Contains Less Than 2% of: Corn Starch, Kosher Gelatin, Pectin. Made With Active Yogurt Cultures Including L. Acidophilus.

Corn starch and pectin are nearly always made from GMOs, so if you are trying to avoid genetically modified food, you probably don’t want to eat this yogurt. Yoplait does not promote the fact that they use rBGH-free milk, so it’s a good bet the milk is loaded with hormones. Since there are no requirements to tell us about GMOs and hormones on the labels, we have to go with the most likely scenarios.

Flavored yogurt is even worse. Here are the ingredients in Activia yogurt:

 Cultured Grade A Non Fat Milk, Strawberries, Water,Modified Food Starch, Contains Less than 1% of Inulin, Acacia Gum,Modified Corn Starch, Kosher Gelatin, Pectin, Natural Flavor, Carmine(for Color), Sodium Citrate, Malic Acid, Sucralose, Calcium Lactate,Xanthan Gum, Acesulfame Potassium.

This particular flavored yogurt contains probable GMOs, chemical additives,  probable rBGH-tainted milk, and artificial sweeteners.

Homemade yogurt is super frugal.

It gets even better. Not only is homemade yogurt healthier than store-bought, it’s much less expensive, particularly if you prefer to give your family organic or raw dairy products.

Here’s the math:

A gallon of milk makes approximately 2 quarts of yogurt.

  • 1 gallon of organic milk is $6.99 from our local Safeway.
  • 1 quart of organic yogurt is $4.99.
  • By making our own yogurt, using a little of a previous batch to start the new batch, the cost per quart is only $3.50.

It’s very easy to make.

It’s easy to make yogurt at home.  The only issue for some folks is that it is time-consuming.  While it does take time, it isn’t all hands-on time. You have to be near the stove to watch the temperature of the milk. Because of this, I usually start my milk as we’re finishing up dinner, then finish the process as I’m cleaning up the kitchen for the day. Since I’m going to be in the kitchen for an hour then anyway, it doesn’t seem like I’m spending a huge amount of time making yogurt.

There are cool little yogurt making machines that you can buy for a very reasonable price – less than $30. But you don’t have to have a machine to make yogurt. I’m going to tell you about two very simple methods for making yogurt. You can go off-grid and make it in a thermos, or for larger batches, you can use your dehydrator.

The first steps are the same for both methods. (Actually, the first steps are the same if you have a yogurt-making machine too.)

How to Make Homemade Yogurt

Definitely DO try this at home.

Here’s what you need:

That’s it…

Directions:

In a large saucepan, gently bring the milk up to 165 degrees Fahrenheit.  Some people, when using raw milk, raise the temperature only to 120 so that they don’t pasteurize the milk. (However, when you turn the milk into yogurt, you’ll be adding in healthy bacteria, so this is entirely optional.)

When your milk reaches the desired temperature, remove it from the heat and allow it to cool.  Be sure to remove it from the element if you have an electric stove or it will continue to get hotter. If you go over 185 degrees, your yogurt may not turn out well.

Allow your milk to cool to anywhere between 108 degrees and 112 degrees. If it is any hotter than that when you mix it with the culture, you’ll kill the bacteria that turn the milk into yogurt. If it is cooler, then it won’t be warm enough for the culturing process to occur. (This specificity is why I recommend a digital instant-read thermometer.)

When the milk drops to the desired temperature, ladle out about a cup of it to mix in another bowl with your culture. (This can be yogurt from the store, yogurt from a previous batch, or freeze-dried starter.)  Whisk it gently to combine it thoroughly. Gently. You’re not making whipped cream or meringue.

Pour the mixture back into the pot with the rest of the milk and whisk gently that to combine it well.

This is where the paths of yogurt-making part, but read all the way to the end, because the paths merge again.

The Thermos Method

This is an off-grid way to make yogurt. It’s useful because adds to the lifespan of your milk if the power goes out. I generally use this method because it uses no power and I like to be thrifty.  Use a good quality, large thermos for this. Don’t use one of those little-kid, plastic lunch box thermoses. A thermos is a good thing to have around for the Cheap Life, so you’ll find this to be a multipurpose item.

While you’re prepping your yogurt, fill your thermos with hot water so that the temperature inside it is nice and warm when you pour in the mixture. If the mixture cools down too quickly from meeting the chilled walls of the thermos, your yogurt will not turn out.

Empty the thermos, reserving the water for some other use.

Pour or ladle the mixture from the pot into the thermos.  Use a funnel to help guide the milk into the thermos. (Scroll down to the end of the article if you want a giggle about this.)

Put the lid on the thermos immediately.

Leave the thermos in the warmest place in the house overnight. For us, this is the laundry room at our current home. At another home, we tucked the thermos behind the woodstove.

Allow your yogurt to culture in the thermos for 10-14 hours. The longer you leave it, the more tart it will be.

(You’re not quite done. Be sure to skip down to the “Last Steps” section.)

The Dehydrator Method

This method can be used if you have one of those nice large dehydrators with removable trays like the Excalibur.  It must have removable trays and temperature settings for this to work.  If you are going out and buying a dehydrator specifically for the purpose of making yogurt, it would be much better to get the yogurt-making machine instead. And by better I mean $200 cheaper. However, if you already have an Excalibur or similar dehydrator, this is just one more use for it.

Heat up enough Mason jars to hold all of the milk you’re preparing by filling them with hot water and setting the lids on top of them.

Remove the shelves from your dehydrator and begin preheating it to 105 degrees.

When your milk has been mixed with the culture, empty the water from the jars.

Using a canning funnel, fill the jars with the yogurt-to-be, leaving an inch of headspace.

Place the lid on the jars. (I use old lids that have previously been canned with for this, since I don’t need a seal.)

Place the jars in your dehydrator and close it. Leave the temperature at 105 degrees and allow the jars to stay in for 10-12 hours.  (Some instructions say 8 hours, but my yogurt was watery when I did that.) The longer the yogurt stays in the warmth, the more tart it will be.

You’re not quite done…read on.

Last Steps

When you make homemade yogurt, it isn’t immediately going to have the super-thick texture that you get with store-bought yogurt.

Some people stir in a thickener like unflavored gelatin.  When you do this, you have the goodness of the whey and you don’t have to take the extra steps of draining it.

However, I prefer to drain my yogurt and use the whey for other purposes.

 

Place a large colander in a larger bowl.

Line the colander with a lint-free, clean dish towel.

Pour the yogurt into your draining set up. It will be very liquidy but don’t despair!

Drain the yogurt for at least two hours. The longer you drain it, of course, the thicker the yogurt will be. I like to pull mine when it is the texture of sour cream, but if you leave it overnight, it will be the delicious thick consistency of cream cheese.

You’ll have lots of whey left over from this process. This can be used for lacto-fermentation, in place of water or milk in baking, in smoothies, or to make ricotta cheese. (Stay tuned for a ricotta recipe!) If you have livestock, they also love whey.

Just so you know…

You know how websites always make things look easy and flawless?  That is the magic of Bloggerland and I think sometimes it can be discouraging for those who are trying new things.

Well, just so you know that all is not actually perfect in Bloggerland, I poured from the pot to the thermos this time and used a funnel with a narrow neck. I overflowed the thermos and milk went everywhere, to the point that I had to pull out the stove and clean the floor beside, under, and behind it. I just wanted you to know that we all try experiments that don’t work or make enormous messes from time to time. 🙂

How do you make yogurt?

If you are an experienced yogurt maker, do you use one of these methods? Do you use an altogether different method? Share your yogurt making advice in the comments section.

2 Super Easy Ways to Make Homemade Yogurt
Picture of Daisy Luther

Daisy Luther

Daisy Luther is an author and blogger. She's the single mom of two daughters and credits extreme frugality and a good sense of humor for her debt-free lifestyle. She is the author of numerous books, the editor of TheOrganicPrepper.com, and is the founder of a small digital publishing company in the emergency preparedness niche.

6 thoughts on “2 Super Easy Ways to Make Homemade Yogurt”

  1. Patricia E Price

    I looked up freeze dried yogurt starter on Amazon and there were several different kinds. Is there one that you recommend? Also, in looking ahead to shtf situations, could you make yogurt using re hydrated milk? Thanks. Trish

  2. A simpler process should give you one liter of yogurt per liter of milk, it doesn’t concentrate or evaporate and you don’t need to remove the whey which by the way means breaking the gelly consistency of the yogurt by stirring it. You put your initial bought yogurt of about 20 cl (a little glass) with a liter of milk in a salad bowl, and mix it a little bit with a fork. Both the milk and the yogurt can come out directly from the fridge, initial temperature doesn’t matter. You cover the bowl with a plate and place it outside in the sunlight for the whole day, for example on any metallic surface that will take and diffuse the gentle warmth. If there is no sun in your area you can put it on top of your fridge towards the wall where there is always some ascending lukewarm air (in this case the bowl can be plastic, less cold than glass since warm air doesn’t heat as well as sunlight), or if it is in winter you can put it close to a stove or a heater. If it didn’t take (thicken) by the end of the day you can put it out in the sun again the next day, of leave it overnight if it is on an inside source of heat. And that’s it, no thermometer is necessary. When taken, you put your salad bowl in the fridge, serve everybody in individual bowls or glasses, keeping one glass (20 cl) for the next batch. There is no specific proportion of virgin milk and yogurt culture to respect, the only difference between 20% yogurt to 80% milk and 10% yogurt to 90% milk (or other proportions) will be the time it takes for the yogurt bacteria to colonise the whole bowl of lukewarm milk. And congratulations, Daisy, for this useful blog.

  3. I make my yogurt in a crockpot. It’s very easy. I forgot that my dehydrator is supposed to make it, will have to check that out later & my instant pot has a yogurt setting. Guess I’ll have to try them out & see which works best for me.

  4. I’m coming in kind of late here, but I wanted to leave this note – it turns out you can use Nido, a full fat powdered milk powder that is fortified with vitamins, to make yogurt in a thermos. I just tried it and it worked fine. It’s much lower in cost than the other powdered milks I can access and comes in big cans that are shelf stable. It’s also available for purchase online. Anyway, I couldn’t find any info on the net about it so here it is!

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