The Best Yogurt Recipe making any amount of Your Favorite Yogurt in 12 Hours | Homemade Yogurt | DIY

Описание к видео The Best Yogurt Recipe making any amount of Your Favorite Yogurt in 12 Hours | Homemade Yogurt | DIY

How to make Yogurt at Home. Here is the best Yogurt Recipe making any amount of Your Favorite Yogurt in 12 Hours DIY Do it yourself and Do It Right! How to make Homemade Yogurt? This is cheap vs expensive. One tablespoon of your favorite expensive yogurt converted to 2 gallons of it for the price of the milk! Here is the Recipe of any amount of your favorite Yogurt in 12 Hours. Do It yourself! There will be no need for any special yogurt starter or equipment. Ho to make your favorite yogurt? I am using just my favorite Yogourt from the market as a Yogurt Starter. In order to make couple of the gallons of high quality of the yogurt I am using only one or two table spoons of my favorite yoghurt. Whatever you like, greek yogurt, chobani yogurt or any yogurt, here is your chance to have it in any amount as inexpensive as milk itself.
If you suck at cooking this video is exactly for you.
#Yogurt, yoghurt, or yoghourt (/ˈjoʊɡərt/ or /ˈjɒɡət/; from Turkish: yoğurt; other spellings listed below) is a food produced by bacterial fermentation of milk.
The bacteria used to make yogurt are known as "yogurt cultures". Fermentation of lactose by these bacteria produces lactic acid, which acts on milk protein to give yogurt its texture and characteristic tart flavor. Cow's milk is commonly available worldwide, and, as such, is the milk most commonly used to make yogurt. Milk from water buffalo, goats, ewes, mares, camels, and yaks is also used to produce yogurt where available locally. Milk used may be homogenized or not (milk distributed in many parts of the world is homogenized); both types may be used, with substantially different results.
Yogurt is produced using a culture of Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus bacteria. In addition, other lactobacilli and bifidobacteria are also sometimes added during or after culturing yogurt. Some countries require yogurt to contain a certain amount of colony-forming units of bacteria; in China, for example, the requirement for the number of lactobacillus bacteria is at least 1 × 106 CFU per milliliter. To produce yogurt, milk is first heated, usually to about 85 °C (185 °F), to denature the milk proteins so that they set together rather than form curds. After heating, the milk is allowed to cool to about 45 °C (113 °F). The bacterial culture is mixed in, and a temperature of 45 °C (113 °F) is maintained for four to twelve hours to allow fermentation.
In a 100-gram amount providing 406 kilojoules (97 kcal) of dietary energy, yogurt (plain Greek yogurt from whole milk) is 81% water, 9% protein, 5% fat and 4% carbohydrates, including 4% sugars (table). As a proportion of the Daily Value (DV), a serving of yogurt is a rich source of vitamin B12 (31% DV) and riboflavin (23% DV), with moderate content of protein, phosphorus and selenium (14 to 19% DV; table).
Please use this recipe only for your family needs
Bon appetite
#DIY #DoItYourself #Homemade #ABVideoStories

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