🥄 Elevate your gut game with every homemade spoonful!
Yogourmet Yogurt Starters come in 6 freeze-dried sachets, each making 1 liter of natural, probiotic-rich yogurt. Certified kosher, halal, gluten-free, and non-GMO, these starters boast a 24-month shelf life and are produced under rigorous quality standards, empowering you to effortlessly create fresh, healthy yogurt at home.
Size | 18 g (Pack of 1) |
Speciality | Kosher |
Unit count | 18.0 gram |
Manufacturer | Yogourmet |
Package Dimensions | 9.4 x 6.6 x 3.1 cm; 30 g |
Package Information | Pouch |
Country of origin | France |
N**O
Good Yogurt Starter
This product was easy to use! I just followed the simple instructions on the package to make my home made yogurt and it worked! My yogurt came out perfect!. The thickness was exactly how I wanted it to be . So it does what is described as.
L**R
Great
UpdateI made yogurt says 8 to 10 hours did for 8 mine came out like yogurt drink so going do next batch with litte less milk cook bit longer but very tasty i added blueberries and honey for sweetnessVery pleased this is my first attempt of making own yogurt so easy instructions to follow
E**E
Great for thick yoghurt with easy to follow instructions
Easy instructions to follow and makes yoghurt overnight. I was able to make thick yoghurt in 8 hours using raw cow's milk.
H**P
A bit hit & miss.
I found this product confusing, I did follow the instructions. Sometimes the yogurt set & other times I had to drink it. I am using a proper Yogurt maker.
C**O
Yoghurt starter.
I tried every recipe l could find but after countless attempts l failed to make yoghurt with yoghurt starter.
L**E
It makes a lovely and consistent yoghurt
It’s yoghurt weather for me, again, and I was searching through amazon for my usual starter, when Icame across the Yogourmet brand yoghurt culture starter pack.Not much to say, except it works well, with no problems, and makes a delicious yoghurt, and is very competitively priced.On my third batch now with this culture, and only my second sachet, with no fails.
S**E
Quite thin yogurt
I normally make yogurt in a 1-litre yogurt maker, using 100g of a previous batch or most of a pot of organic Greek-style yogurt. I strain it and it's great.Using this culture - even using two sachets - I haven't been able to make yogurt to our taste. The flavour is okay, but the consistency is very thin, even after straining.It's okay for an emergency, but cheaper to buy a 150g of organic yogurt.
J**R
Makes a reliable non-dairy yogurt!
The only shop bought non-dairy yogurt that I regularly buy is the "Coconut Collective" one. The yogurt has a nice creamy flavour and firm texture. The fly in the ointment is that it has become quite expensive.I have tried on multiple occasions to culture my own non-dairy yogurts with varying degrees of success. By the time you factor in the cost of the milk and culture a "failure" can be an expensive waste of money.I have finally found a reliable recipe for homemade non-dairy that works.I use Alpro UHT soya milk with extra protein using Yogourmet Yogurt Starters. I also add half a cup of cashews liquidised in some of the milk. It's best to soak the cashews overnight to soften them. To make a thicker product I filter the yogurt through a yougurt sieve. If you leave the yogurt in the sieve for 24 hours or more the final product can be very thick, akin to clotted cream.Please note that the Yogourmet Yogurt Starter does contain milk. If you want to make strictly vegan yogurts you may have to look elsewhere.The one thing I don't like about using soya milk is that yogurts made using it can have a distinct soya "twang". My initial results suggest that the soya twang can be minimised by fermenting the yogurt for no longer than necessary.
TrustPilot
4天前
1 个月前