Wednesday, January 15, 2020

DIY Yogurt

This is the first post in our series on Doing It From Scratch.

Even before we moved to our off grid location I was making my own yogurt. I first tried it back in the '80s using an appliance that I had bought from Consumer's Distributing (Any well aged Canadians that remember that place?) It was a plastic box that you plugged in to heat and it had 9 small glass jars that the yogurt went into. I don't recall how long it had to be plugged in before you had yogurt but at that time in my life I really wasn't ready and only used it a handful of times. Fast forward some 20 years and we had moved to buying plain yogurt and adding our own jam/fruit and now I was ready to once again try a DIY.

By that time we had the INTERNET and I could look up the many different how-tos that were available. Of course there were the ones that suggested some source of heat and even ones that suggested leaving it in your oven with the incandescent light on as a heat source. The one that really stood out was one that did not require using additional heat to process the yogurt. Although we were still on the grid I was working on keeping our hydro use as low as possible. Shouldn't we all be doing that?

The no heat method uses a large wide mouthed thermos to keep the yogurt at temperature during the process. I had one of those handy and so it began.

Thermos Method Yogurt Making

1 bag of Milk* (my preference is whole or homogenized milk)
3/4 C of Instant Dry Milk
Scant 1/4 C of plain yogurt (room temperature)
* In Ontario Canada our milk comes in 3 bags that total 4 liters. That means I use 1 1/3 liters to make my yogurt. You can adjust to the amount that works for you.

1. Scald the milk. Heat milk, while stirring often, to 180-200 F.
 2. Cool the milk. Remove from heat, stir in the powdered milk (I often do this before I heat the milk), let cool to about 120-125 F.  It is important that the milk not be too hot as it could kill the active components of the yogurt.



3. Add the starter. Place the plain yogurt in a small bowl and stir until creamy. Slowly add warm milk to your starter to bring the yogurt closer to the milk temperature. Remember it is important that the milk not be too hot as it could kill the active components of the yogurt. After adding in a cup or so of milk stir the starter mixture into the remaining milk. Mix well.

                        

4. Incubate the yogurt. Pour the yogurt into the thermos and cover. Keep the thermos undisturbed for 4-6 hours (6 works for me) Additionally I wrap the thermos and place it into a box to help keep it undisturbed and at temperature.

 


5. Refrigerate. Remove lid and place in fridge. You can pour into containers before or after it has cooled  It will thicken slightly when completely cooled

6. Stir well and enjoy.



Eat plain or enjoy with some vanilla extract and honey or your fav fruit. We place frozen fruit in the bottom top with yogurt and enjoy at lunch once the fruit has thawed.

This means of making yogurt continues today on a biweekly basis for us and is terrific with being off grid but you can do it too.

We would love for you to share some of your favourite  'From Scratch' ideas. Help inspire us all.

Comments are what keeps a blogger motivated so even an 'Oh this is boring' comment is productive.  Besides Tricia gets lonely with just Ed and the dogs day after day... ;-)

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Tuesday, January 7, 2020

Magical 2020

New Year New Decade

The first full week of 2020! Incredible to write that year for someone born in the 1950s. There is something magical about 2020 and we are excited to see what the year brings. From the climate crisis, to multiple governments who clearly do not care about their people, everything seems in need of a reset and we are no exception.

Although there has been much happening around the homestead blogging felt like it needed to be something profound and so it just didn't happen. More recording of what is happening whether it turns into something profound or remains small will start now. That was the way Facebook worked, as record keeping, for the past 12 years. Who doesn't love looking back at the memories? But now that Tricia has been steering away from Facebook (and she is really is our recorder) not much has been posted.

To that end we are sharing a recent roof video...




This winter has been quite different from those of the past. Although there was a decent accumulation of snow before the new year, the last week of December was quite mild and as we had noticed a significant ice build up under the snow, we took advantage of it to clear off the roofs of the trailers. The view from our roof is lovely and we really don't go up there as often as we should. Well this reset year will have that happen with regularity.

Here's to a magical year for us all.

Comments are what keeps a blogger motivated so even an "oh this is boring" comment is productive. Besides Tricia gets lonely with just Ed and the dogs day after day...

Looking for more on Northern Dirtbags? You can find us on Facebook, YouTube and Instagram