Having made quite a bit of yogurt from raw cow's milk, I
wonder if the
breastmilk yogurt came out watery because it did not
incubate long enough? When I
do the yogurt with cow's milk I need to let it incubate
about 16 hours to get
it thick enough for my liking. If that is not the problem
perhaps pasteurizing
the breastmilk before adding the starter? Although that
really takes away
some of the benefits, if the antibodies are killing off the
culture it would be
the only way.
Jennifer Stevens, RN
In a message dated 11/3/2006 11:05:36 AM Eastern Standard
Time,
LISTSERV PEACH.EASE.LSOFT.COM writes:
# A mom has just asked me if she can make yogurt with her
breastmilk.
I know, after reading Fiona Giles=B4 book "Fresh
Milk" that ice cream
can be made, but I don=B4t know about yogurt. I suggested
she use
kephir, which is what I use (adding cow=B4s milk to it, cow
milk yogurt
is made). #
I tried that about four years ago, and it didn't really work
out .
The result was not thick (it was very watery), and the
structure was
not smooth but more like thin slimy clumps here and there ;)
. I
thought the antimicrobial properties in fresh human milk
prevented the
yogurt bacteria from working like they should have.
Sanna-Mari
bf support group leader / Imetyksen tuki ry
Finland, Scandinavia
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