My question is about making yogurt at home. I made yogurt at home but there is some problem which causes the yogurt to taste sour. I tried lots of methods to prevent the sourness because I don't like the sourness in yogurt. But unfortunately, I have failed to achieved the expected results. What should i do to make a perfect yogurt at home?
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3Hi, can you explain in detail the method you're following now? temperature, incubation time...– Andrea ShaitanOct 23, 2018 at 7:02
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Related: cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/13527/…– CindyOct 23, 2018 at 12:37
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Hi, this is a nice cooking question. We are a strictly cooking site, and any discussion of health effects of food are off topic. Other people started commenting on your mentioning of health, so I had to remove it from your question text. You can see more about what is on topic in cooking.stackexchange.com/help/on-topic– rumtscho ♦Oct 23, 2018 at 16:45
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The acids are water soluble, so more straining can help.– Wayfaring StrangerOct 25, 2018 at 3:12
3 Answers
If you want less sour yogurt, you have to pick the right culture and right process.
- First, choose a streptococcus culture, or maybe bifida. Lactobacilicus bulgaricus gives you more sour yogurt.
- Second, go as low as your culture allows you. The manufacturer will have given you the range at which your culture can be incubated, choose something at the lower end. But of course make sure that whatever setup you are using can really hold the temperature in range - for example, if you have a culture that can go from 40 to 46 Celsius, but your apparatus has temperature swings of 1.5 degrees Celsius, don't set it to 40, set it to 42.
- Third, time. Here, you have to see what is the shortest time you can incubate and have the yogurt set. It is a matter of trial and error with a given temperature and culture. Moscafj's answer suggests 5 hours as a starting point for experimentation.
- Fourth, storage time. Your yogurt can keep going slightly more sour in the fridge. So don't make more than one week's worth ahead.
- Fifth, make sure that your starting temperature is also correct. I have a relative who is too impatient to wait for the yogurt cool down properly before innoculating, and never uses a thermometer, she just adds the culture to the too hot milk. Her yogurt always reeks of acetic acid to levels I can't tolerate.
If you get your variables right as described above, your yogurt can be pretty mild.
Sourness in homemade yogurt is a function of incubation time. The longer you incubate, the more sour the yogurt. Sourness in yogurt is not unhealthy. However, if you prefer a less sour yogurt, just incubate for a shorter period of time. Try 5 hours at 43C (109F).
The sourness is also affected by what bacteria are in your starter. If you are using commercial yogurt as your starter, than choose a yogurt that has a mild taste. I find that Fage brand yogurt produces a less sour yogurt even when I incubate as long as 14 hours. Siggy's on the other hand makes a very sour yogurt. If you are using a commercial yogurt starter, choose a product that advertises that it has a mild flavor.