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How to Make Yogurt (Easy Homemade Recipe)

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Wellness Mama » Blog » Recipes » How to Make Yogurt (Easy Homemade Recipe)

Update: Since the original writing of this post, I acquired an Instant Pot with a yogurt making function. It makes yogurt-making a breeze and I can do a whole gallon at a time. For the most part, the process is the same as what’s listed below. In step three I leave the warmed milk in the Instant Pot instead of dividing it into smaller jars and in step five I put the bowl back into the Instant Pot for the incubation period.

When I started experimenting with the GAPS diet I noticed right away that eating yogurt was a big part of the diet and the process of regaining gut health.

I was super intimidated by making my own yogurt but after some initial research, I decided that it didn’t seem too hard and that I should just jump in and give it a try. I’m so glad that I did because the process was so easy and the results were wonderful.

During my research, I found that like most things, there are a million different ways to make homemade yogurt. You can order a starter or use a commercial yogurt as your starter. You can use a dehydrator, heating pad, crockpot, yogurt maker, or oven to act as your incubator.

I opted for the oven because I didn’t own a dehydrator and why get the Crock-Pot dirty when I can just throw the jars in the oven (I’m all about whatever gives me fewer dishes to wash)? I found that when I was doing the GAPS diet I was using canning jars quite a bit to store things in the fridge (bone broth, soup, sauerkraut, kimchi, etc.) so I decided that since I would more than likely be using canning jars to store my yogurt, I might as well just make it in the jars (again, less washing).

How to Make Yogurt: the Basic Process

Making your own yogurt at home is relatively easy as long as you follow these steps:

Step 1: Choosing Your Milk

First, choose your milk. This can be any kind of milk, but the more healthy your milk is the more healthy your yogurt will be. Raw milk is best, especially if following the GAPS protocol, but I didn’t have access to raw milk at the time I started making this. Instead, I used milk locally produced using a low pasteurization process that is non-homogenized, which means that I had that yummy layer of cream on top. You can also use goat’s milk.

Whatever milk you decide to use, make sure it is not ultra-pasteurized (the label of the milk will say whether it is ultra-pasteurized or homogenized). In order to get the most nutrition, I also opted for whole milk.

I typically begin by using a ½ gallon of milk. I don’t quite fill the jars all the way, so I end up using 2-quart jars and 1-pint jar.

Step 2: Heating the Milk

Put your milk in a stainless steel pan on the stove and heat over medium heat until it reaches 180°F. The first time I made my yogurt I only had a basic candy thermometer, so I had to really stay with it to watch the temperature.

More recently, I’ve purchased a digital quick read thermometer. This makes the whole process so much easier because you can set the temperature alert to 180°F and the alarm will go off when it reaches that temperature. This is also helpful later, during the incubation period.

Step 3: Cooling the milk

Once the milk reaches 180°F, pour it into the canning jars. Using a stainless steel wide-mouthed funnel made this easy to do, but just pouring from the pan or using a glass measuring cup works too.

The milk then needs to cool to 115°F. You can do this by either putting the milk in a cool water bath or just letting it sit on the counter, keeping a really good eye on it. I place the lids loosely on top of the jars to keep dirt out.

With my first batch, I used the cool water bath technique and it cooled down much sooner than I thought it would. At the time, I didn’t have a thermometer with an alarm to warn me that it had reached 115°F. Before I knew it, the yogurt was at 110°F and dropping and I flew into panic mode.

The yogurt still worked out, which just shows that it’s really hard to mess this process up and it doesn’t all have to be exact. The other thing you have to be careful of with the cool water bath is that if it’s too cool then you risk cracking the jars.

The second time I made a batch I was more patient and let it cool on its own on the countertop. It took longer but I wasn’t so stressed out from the quick temperature drop of the cool water bath.

Step 4: Adding the Culture

Once the milk has reached 115°F, you will add 2 tablespoons of pre-made yogurt to each quart of milk. The yogurt can come from either a previous batch (if you’ve already made some) or from store-bought yogurt. You can also use a store-bought yogurt culture, but using pre-made yogurt is easier and less expensive.

Personally, I use organic plain Greek yogurt for my starter. Stir lightly, just to incorporate the yogurt into the warm milk. Then, put the lids on the jars.

Step 5: Incubating the Yogurt

Once the culture has been added, it is ready to go into the oven to incubate (with the lids on). You want a fairly consistent temperature.

The first couple of times I made my yogurt I just used the 40-watt appliance light bulb that was in the oven. I found that the temperature was dropping lower than I wanted it to, so I would have to turn the oven on to heat it back up every couple of hours. I incubated it overnight and didn’t wake up to check the temperature or turn the oven on, but when I woke up in the morning the temperature was reading 100°F which is less than optimal incubation temperature (115°F would have been better).

Interestingly, it didn’t ruin my yogurt and it still came out really well. Again, it just goes to show that this method is hard to mess up (even with all of the mishaps during my first experiment). I have since (ok, my husband has) replaced our 40-watt bulb with a 60-watt bulb and it now holds the temperature closer to the optimal 115.

If the temperature goes above 115°F you run the risk of killing your culture. You may need to do some testing with your oven light to see what temperature it holds at when the light is on for a period of time and try 40-watt and 60-watt bulbs. The optimal incubation range is 95-115°F.

The yogurt needs to incubate for at least 10-12 hours. The GAPS protocol calls for a 24 hour incubation period in order for the majority of lactose to be consumed by the bacteria (this article does a great job explaining all of that). The longer it incubates, the more tangy the finished yogurt will be.

Important note: Just make sure not to forget that you are incubating yogurt in the oven and accidentally turn the oven on. My new digital quick read thermometer makes this less likely to happen. The thermometer probe goes into the oven sitting in one of the jars, while the digital display portion of it sits on top of my stove so that I can easily monitor the temperature of the yogurt. Seeing the digital display sitting on my stovetop keeps me from forgetting about the yogurt incubating in the oven and accidentally turning it on.

Once the yogurt is done incubating, refrigerate it to set the yogurt and just pour off the extra whey. The whey can be saved to use for other recipes, especially if you are following the GAPS protocol.

If you want a thicker yogurt then you can always strain off the remaining whey using cheesecloth. Personally, I’ve never been a fan of super thick yogurt so I found that I really enjoyed it just the way it was once the whey was poured off after the yogurt was refrigerated and set.

My favorite way to eat the yogurt is with local raw honey drizzled over it. It’s also really good in smoothies or added to soups.

How to Make Yogurt (Easy Homemade Recipe with or without Instant Pot)

An easy method for making your own yogurt that only requires milk, starter yogurt, a thermometer, and a couple canning jars and lids!
Prep Time 15 minutes
Incubation Time 12 hours
Total Time 1 day 1 hour 15 minutes
Calories 76kcal
Author Katie Wells

Servings

16 servings

Equipment

Ingredients

  • 8 cups milk (preferably raw whole milk)
  • 4 TBSP yogurt starter

Instructions

Oven Light Method

  • Heat the milk in a stainless steel pan on the stove over medium heat until it reaches 180°F.
  • Pour heated milk into clean canning jars and cool, either by sitting on the counter or in a cool water bath until the temperature drops to 115°F.
  • Use a clean whisk to mix the yogurt starter into the cooled milk.
  • Place the jars into the oven with the light on for 12-24 hours. The light should provide a consistent heat of about 110°F.
  • Put jars into the refrigerator until the yogurt is cold and set.
  • Once the yogurt is set you can pour off the liquid whey from the top or strain the yogurt using a cheesecloth for a thicker consistency.

Instant Pot Method

  • To heat the milk in the Instant Pot, press the yogurt button until the display reads boil.
  • When it beeps, check that the temperature is at least 180°F.
  • Cool the heated milk by either letting it sit on the counter or in a cool water bath in the sink until the temperature drops to 115°F.
  • Use a clean whisk to mix the yogurt starter into the cooled milk.
  • Return the inner pot to the Instant Pot and press the yogurt button until the display reads a number of hours.
  • Press the "+" or "-" button until the display reads the desired length of time. I like to incubate mine for at least 12 hours. Incubating for 24 hours will yield the tangiest yogurt with the least amount of lactose left. Do not incubate for longer than 24 hours or the probiotics will start to die off from lack of food.
  • Once the time is up, put the pot of yogurt into the refrigerator until the yogurt is cold and set.
  • Once the yogurt is set you can pour off the liquid whey from the top or strain the yogurt using a cheesecloth for a thicker consistency.
  • Enjoy!

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
How to Make Yogurt (Easy Homemade Recipe with or without Instant Pot)
Amount Per Serving (0.5 cup)
Calories 76 Calories from Fat 36
% Daily Value*
Fat 4g6%
Saturated Fat 2g13%
Cholesterol 12mg4%
Sodium 54mg2%
Potassium 165mg5%
Carbohydrates 6g2%
Sugar 6g7%
Protein 4g8%
Vitamin A 198IU4%
Calcium 141mg14%
Iron 1mg6%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Notes

For the yogurt starter, just use any plain yogurt with live active cultures.
If you’d like to make a smaller batch just use a ratio of 2 TBSP starter for each quart of milk. 
If you’d like to make a larger batch (such as using the Instant Pot to make a gallon) just double the ingredients listed.

Like this recipe? Check out my new cookbook, or get all my recipes (over 500!) in a personalized weekly meal planner here!

Have you tried your hand at making your own yogurt? How did it turn out? What type of starter and milk did you use?

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

133 responses to “How to Make Yogurt (Easy Homemade Recipe)”

  1. Paul Avatar

    5 stars
    There is another way, even simpler. I buy a gallon of milk in a plastic bottle, put it in my sous-vide machine set at 185. Let it reach temperature and hold for 30 minutes, turning the gallon occasionally to disperse the the milk. Take it out. After it cools pour enough out so an individual live yogurt (starter) can be poured in. Rotate it a few files. Then I use a flat meat skewer with an end ring in a battery-powered drill. It doesn’t sit straight in the chuck. but this helps mix the yogurt and starter. I return it to the sous vide set at 115. I store it upside down in the fridge in the gallon. When I need some yoghurt I just spoon it out,
    I wish I had a digital thermometer that would go off when the temperature dropped to a certain value but I haven’t found one.

  2. Anya Avatar

    Hi, thank you for the recipe. In your post you mentioned 2 TBSP yoghurt but in the recipe it says 3 TVSP. Which is it?

  3. Cathie Avatar

    Why do all the recipes for making yogurt say to heat the milk to 180 degrees and then let it cool down? What is the purpose of the high heat first? It would be much easier to just heat the milk to 115 degrees.

    Thanks

    1. Paul Cotter Avatar
      Paul Cotter

      Many people have asked the same question. The reason is chemistry, not biology. This applies to RAW AND PASTEURISED milk. Holding the milk at 185F/85C for 30 minutes or 195F/95C for 10 minutes improves the consistency of yoghurt. Quoting from the food Bible ‘On Food and Cooking’ by Harold McGee, 2nd edition page 48

      “…denatures the whey protein lactoglobulin, whose otherwise unreactive molecules then participate by clustering on the surfaces of the casein particles. With the helpful interference of the lactoglobulins, the casein particles can only bond to each other than at a few spots, and so gather not in clusters but in a fine matrix of (molecular) chains that is much better at retaining liquid in its small(er) interstices”.

      Luckily the chapter “FRESH FERMENTED MILKS AND CREAMS” is available as a free sample in Google Books at:

      https://play.google.com/books/reader?id=bKVCtH4AjwgC&printsec=frontcover&output=reader&hl=en_GB&pg=GBS.PA47

      See page 65. It is well worth reading the whole chapter if you want to understand milk, how it works and how it affects our digestive tract.

      That book is a most wonderful treatise on food and cooking. 900 pages and no recipes. So you think you understand eggs? Read that chapter and you realise how little one knows. Same goes for bread, fish, meat, grains, beer, chocolate, sugar, salts nuts, vegetables and so on. (ps no relation to the author / press 🙂

      1. Anita Avatar

        Paul, this is an amazing book! Nobody should be without it!. It is my absolute favorite resource book! Kudos to you for your thoughtful share.

      2. Nancy Avatar

        Thank you for the recommendation. I’m shocked that my local library actually has this book. Plan on checking it out from there, but it sounds dense and like it is good references material. So may wind up purchasing the book once I can skim through it from the library.

  4. Angela Avatar

    so i only got to incubate for about 10-12 hours and its not as tangy this time as it was last time i made it. I suppose there is nothing i can do to fix that now?

  5. Kristen Avatar

    5 stars
    Hello — I’d like suggestions on adding flavors. I’m used to grocery store flavors I’m bashful to admit — adding jam doesn’t really work because it stays in little jam lumps … local honey would be good. I have no money, so fresh berries wouldn’t work all the time … if anyone has nice inexpensive ways to add some different flavors, I would be grateful.

  6. Jolene Avatar

    This yogurt was super easy to make! My kids love eating it with frozen blueberries(or huckleberries) with maple syrup on top!

  7. Kevin Avatar

    Thank you, Mama!

    I am a little confused, though. I have my first batch of raw milk yogurt percolating in my dehydrator right now (four 16oz mason jars). I tested the temperature and it’s very accurate, about 110 degrees F.

    After doing your recipe and sitting here going over the facts and reading more on the Net, everywhere I looked for raw milk yogurt recipes I noticed (even in this comment section) nobody said to heat the milk to 180 degrees F. They all said much lower temperatures. Is this particular Wellness Mama recipe supposed to be just a dummy-proof recipe for us newbies?

    At any rate, I very much appreciate your website and will probably join soon.

    Thank you.

    K

  8. Roy Avatar

    Kindly specify whether the temperatures are in degrees Celsius or degrees farenheit.

    1. Jo Avatar

      Why don’t you people asking this question try thinking critically.. Do you think its even possible to heat milk past the boiling point of water? This **** ain’t sugar. With temperature over 100 it should be obvious its Fahrenheit.

  9. Greg Avatar

    It’s pretty obvious once you finish reading but could you edit the recipe to say that all temperatures are in Fahrenheit? Or even write the Celsius value in parentheses. I’m sure that would avoid a lot of confusion.

  10. Paula Avatar

    5 stars
    This time, I kept careful watch of the time and temperature, but modified half the batch as vanilla yogurt upon request of my 14yo son. In the past, I have used a counter culture that does not require heating (mesophilic bacteria) and with raw milk. Both are successful. The non heat produces a “slick” texture and is tastey. But my children scoffed my past efforts. With some hesitation, they eventually tried my first batch using your recipe (incidentally that last jar dated at 9 weeks) and immediately LOVED your “tastey, creamy, smooth” recipe. They have even requested that I start making yogurt again and to keep using only this recipe! Thank you so much for helping me ignite a familial love of homemade yogurt, and for helping turn a once vehemently tide against my efforts to one that is swelling with excitement. We are an adventurous family with fermented foods and I look forward to experimenting more requested flavors with my children. Happy New Year to you and your family!

  11. Paula Avatar

    5 stars
    Thank you so much for this post. I use raw whole milk I get from a local farmer, costs $8 and my belly reports it is worth every penny! I also use my oven set to 115°F as my incubator. Your recipe produces a very creamy and delicious plain yogurt. The first time I tried, I accidentally overheated the milk and left the batch a bit too long in incubation, but it turned out beautifully! The jars self sealed upon cooling in the fridge. The last jar was opened 9 weeks after the batch was made, and IMHO was even tastier than the first jar!

    1. Geordie Avatar
      Geordie

      I’m not an expert but my understanding is if you ferment it for 24 hours the cultures consume all the lactose and casein. A shorter ferment makes yogurt but leaves these milk products in.

  12. Linda Avatar

    5 stars
    This recipe is amazing. I used local raw milk and a dehydrator. I heated to 180 put in the canning jars let it cool to 115 then added old whole milk yogurt I had on hand. I had never ever eaten honey in my yogurt but I am now in LOVE with this combination! I never knew yogurt could be this good.

  13. Carla Avatar

    We have been eating the commercial smooth, thick Greek yogurts and just learned about making homemade yogurt. The method I used was to heat in a heavy kettle, cool and add plain Greek God yogurt, then cover the kettle, wrap in towels and place in the unheated oven for 6 hours. The taste is great but the consistency is not. It has small curds which we don’t like. I mix it with a spoonful of commercial yogurt because of the texture when eating it. How do you get the smooth texture of the commercial yogurt? We would like to get away from buying commercial yogurt except when needed as a starter for the homemade. Thank you!

  14. Agnes Avatar

    On making yogurt, When I mixed the yogurt with the milk (180) it curled, What did I do wrong

  15. Lesleyann Avatar
    Lesleyann

    5 stars
    Hi, I made the Greek style yogurt with the live culture yogurt from Coles and also used another batch with the Jalna Greek yogurt, also added fruit to some of my tubs. Both are the same. I strained some of my home made yogurt and I am using the whey for a cake and the result was great, the curd part came out like a cream cheese and using that as a spread. Lovely, thank you for the easy to do recipe.

  16. Sophie Avatar

    4 stars
    I tried this last night and my oven light did not keep my oven warm at all. I turned the oven on a few times but then it would get really hot so quickly. I was making bone broth in my crockpot so I set the jars on the counter next to the crockpot and threw a towel over them. I think this idea might have worked but I somehow pushed the jars against the crockpot and upon checking this morning the one was 147 degrees and the other 124. So I’m guessing I’ve pasteurized my raw milk and killed the cultures. Is 124 degrees hot enough to kill it? It would have been at this temp for at least 6 hours

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