The Real Yogurt and Labneh For Washingtonians


One of my fellow Washingtonians suggested an awesome idea that I should have thought of it myself – sharing my cooking skills with other Washingtonians and of course the rest of the world. Those of you who don’t know me, I am a good cook. Thanks to my fat Mamma who taught me how and what to cook before she shipped me to DC 23 years ago. This is her when she was a babe :-) :-) . I have been making most of my own food from scratch which has contributed significantly to my good health and weight :-)

Considering our crappy economy, I think you’ll will find my cooking beneficial – both in terms of health and saving more money in your pocket. Here is the first one:

How to make Yogurt or Labneh (strained yogurt)

Stuff you need:
. One 32 Oz Yogurt
. One Gallon of Milk
. A pot
. A bag made out of cloth. Can’t find one, use one of your spare pillow cases

Instruction:
1. Pour the gallon of milk in the Pot and heat it up on stove for a bout 20-30 minutes on medium till it starts boiling. Once you see it boiling, let it boil for 5 minutes

Important Note: during the heating process, make sure to stir the milk once every 5 minutes so the milk doesn’t burn and get stuck to the bottom of the pot. If the milk does burn a little bit like it is shown in this picture, no a big deal do. Just let it be.

2. Once the milk boiled for 5 minutes, take the pot off the stove, pour it into another pot, and let it cool off. Not too cool though. It should reach to the point till the milk is still warmer than room temperature. You can check it out by sticking your finger into it. It might take an hour to an hour an half for the milk to cool off, depending on the room temperature.

3. Add the half or all of the 32 oz yogurt to the already cooled off milk in the pot, and stir it till the yogurt is dissolved in the milk.

4. Put the top of the pot back on and wrap the pot up with a blanket so it stays warm. Keep it warm for minimum 4 hours. I usually wrap it up with the blanket and stuff it in the oven. Obviously, no need to turn on the oven. I just do this so it stays warm. It might help to warm up the oven first before stuffing the wrapped pot into the oven. Make sure the oven does not get hot at all. Just keep it warp and then turn it off before you put the pot in there.

5. Take the blanket off the pot and put the pot in the in the refrigerator for one or two hours

6. At this point, your yogurt is ready, but you will see some yellowish water on top of it. Depending on how watery you want your yogurt, you can just stir it so the water on top becomes part of the yogurt or dump the yogurt into the bag and start squeezing the water out of it. Again, if you want your yogurt harder, simply squeeze the bag more for longer period of time like it’s shown in the picture.

7. Empty the strained yogurt into a container; add salt and paper and it is ready.

So, again, the more you get water out of your yogurt, the harder the yogurt will become.

Bone Appetit :-)

Bookmark and Share


About Elias Shams
I have been a serial entrepreneur in telecom and social media space for past 12 years or so. I hold a M.S. degree in Telecommunication Engineering from the George Washington University and a B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Maryland. I’ve lived and worked in many countries and cities including London England, Tehran Iran, Bonn Germany, Paris France, Alicante Spain, Delhi India, and my favorite of all Washington, DC of great US of A. Two of the greatest Washington, DC based companies I worked for and very proud of are Yurie Systems which was sold to Lucent in 1998 and telezoo.com that I founded in 1999:

4 Responses to The Real Yogurt and Labneh For Washingtonians

  1. Masoodiani says:

    Wow!!! I love it. It really works :-)

  2. Roya says:

    Good job for explaining step by step instruction! However, what is important in this instruction is the Hemat and ghirat do you teach that too?? That is the missing ingredients!!

  3. Priti says:

    Thanks for finally revealing the secret

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <pre> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>