Thursday, September 27, 2012

Woohoo Yogurt Woohoo

I ramble. I will recap at the end.

So here is me making yogurt. I took ideas from several online crockpot yogurt recipes and something I read in Adele Davis and developed my own recipe.

The first half gallon I made was kind of runny, a lot thinner than I like. I followed this one recipe I found except I put the crock in the oven after acculturation of the heated milk. That is an excepted method of maintaining heat. The yogurt tasted fine but was just too thin for me.

At this point I decided to tweak and combine recipes.  The first recipe called for 2 hours and 45 minutes on low setting. I'm impatient so I decided to try it on high and monitoring the heat.

Wait, I got the horse behind the cart. Ingredients needed are (for this time) a half gallon of whole milk. I have a friend with a cow so I don't have to worry about the amount of pasteurization the milk has suffered. Also, you will need a packet of yogurt culture (available at Purple Mountain for the Romans reading this) or a small thing of plain yogurt from the grocery store. You will also need dry milk. I used a half cup out of the jar I keep around for various recipes. That's it for ingredients. Whisk dry milk into the milk. Side note, you can use any milk from skim to whole. 

Next there is the equipment. For this one you will need a crockpot, a whisk, a small bowl, and a towel. Yes, I said towel. Now we can got back to the time discussion. 

As I said earlier one recipe said 2:45 on low. I wanted to speed things up so I set the crockpot, with milk in it of course, on high and checked temp every 30 minutes. I took the milk out at 180* after 2:15. Using high instead of low saved 30 minutes. Big deal, I was expecting to drop an hour. So, I guess the setting is up to you. The milk will be at 180 after 2:15 on high and 2:45 on low.

Next you take the crock out and put it in room temperature water that comes to just below the handles of the crock. I used the sink. No brainer, don't get water in the heated milk. Now leave the crock in the water for 15 minutes and no longer, don't want the milk to get to cool. Take the crock out and put it back in the base that you left on warm (low if your crockpot doesn't have warm). Scoop out about a cup of heated milk, I just scooped out half a bowl full. Now put the yogurt in and whisk it in well. Return this acculturated milk to the rest of the milk in the pot and whisk in. 

Almost there, wrap the crockpot in the towel. Yes, the whole thing. Then unplug the crockpot and let it sit for 8-9 hours. When you unwrap the crockpot take the crock out and put it in the fridge to stop the culture from working, bout an hour.

All that to say this. Take half a gallon of milk (your choice) and whisk in a half cup of dry milk (not powdered milk). Next put yogurt starter out to get warm, put the milk in the crockpot and turn it on high and wait 2 hours and 15 minutes. Fill your sink with water while waiting. Take the crock out of the base and put it in the water, don't let water over the lip. 12 minutes later remove crock from the water and return to the base (that you left on warm). Now, scoop out about a cup of warm milk and add the starter to this. Whisk till well mixed and return to crockpot and mix well. Wrap with towel and unplug. It should take less than five minutes from returning the crock to the base to wrapping and unplugging. Wait 8-9 hours, or longer if you wish, and then put in fridge for an hour.

You're done,
Eat, Enjoy.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Chicken Recipe I Found

I haven't tried this yet, but it looks pretty good in the pictures. I may add some olives to the mix. We'll just have to see what happens.

Jo's Rustic Italian Chicken

20 red pearl onions (give or take)

½ lb. mushrooms, washed, stemmed, and cut in half

1 whole chicken, cut up (I used a hatchet knife)

coarse salt and pepper

2 T. olive oil

1 tsp. dried oregano

1/3 cup dark balsamic vinegar

To skin the pearl onions, place in a pot of boiling water for about 3 minutes, drain and transfer to a bowl of cold water.  Let stand for a minute, cut off the top and squeeze the outer skin off.  Discard the skins.

Preheat the oven to 375º.

Pat the chicken dry with paper towels.  Sprinkle generously with coarse salt and pepper.

Place a roasting pan over two burners on your stovetop and heat on medium high.  Add the olive oil and coat the bottom of the pan until almost smoking.  Place the chicken, skin side down, in the pan and cook for 2 to 2 ½ minutes.  Turn and cook for another minute.  Throw the onions and mushrooms into the pan.  Sprinkle with the oregano.  Pour the balsamic vinegar over the top and place in the oven, uncovered for 30-40 minutes.  (I took mine out at 35.)  Place the pan back on the burners and heat on high for several minutes as you reduce the balsamic at the bottom until it resembles a dark glaze.  Transfer the chicken, onions, and mushrooms to a serving platter and pour the remaining vinegar sauce over.

I started roasting the potatoes in the oven about 15 minutes before the chicken, and took them out at the same time.  (Peel some potatoes, quarter them, toss with olive oil, salt and pepper, place them – one layer – on a cooking sheet or glass dish in a 375º oven for 45 minutes to an hour.)