How to Make Goat Milk Greek Yogurt

goat milk yogurt

Turning our raw goat milk into homemade yogurt has been a great way to fill my children with healthy probiotics and boost their immune system.

Unless you heat the milk to a very high temperature (to denature the proteins), heat the milk for an extended time period, or add powdered milk, most homemade yogurt will come out fairly runny. While this is great for smoothies or drinkable yogurt, thicker Greek-style yogurt is preferred in my family for eating with fruit.

goat milk yogurt

To thicken your yogurt, all you really need to do is remove some of the whey (the liquid that separates out). I've used many methods over the years - including cheese cloth and special cone filters. They all worked, but were not the most convenient methods.

I have a new absolutely favorite tool. I purchased this Greek Yogurt strainer* and I LOVE it. (I love it so much that I actually have 4 of them!)

goat milk yogurt

Each strainer can hold one of the Yogourmet* containers that I use. As I mentioned in the previous post, I have two Yogourmets so I make 1 gallon of yogurt at a time. I have four of the strainers because we prefer to leave the yogurt in the strainers for 24-48 hours. This produces a very thick, super yummy yogurt.

goat milk yogurt

To use the strainer, simply pour the finished yogurt into the strainer (be gentle, it does splatter):

goat milk yogurt

Put the lid on and let it sit in the refrigerator for as long as desired.

goat milk yogurt

Then take it out and put the yogurt into a container (or eat directly).

goat milk yogurt

You can see in the below photo how much whey separates initially (strainer on left) vs after 24 hours (strainer on right).

goat milk yogurt

So the question then becomes, if I make so much yogurt, what do I do with all that extra whey? That (of course) is the subject of an upcoming blog post! (Read 21 Uses for Extra Whey)

Have you ever made your own yogurt? Do you strain it?

*Amazon Affiliate Link

7 Responses

Goat Milk Stuff

Terri – powdered goat milk and a dehydrated yogurt culture are not the same thing. If I read your question right, that’s what’s causing your confusion. One is milk and one is the bacteria needed to ferment the milk and turn it into yogurt. Hope that clarifies! PJ

Terri

I’m confused…you say you DONT use powdered milk in the text…but in the questions you say all you need is goats milk heat and powdered milk????

Robyn Pearce

I want to use goat milk in a yogurt maker what do i need to do this.

PJ Jonas

Thomas P – The process is very basic. Warm your milk. Add your yogurt culture. Incubate over a long period of time for the yogurt to culture all of your milk. Strain if desired for a thicker style yogurt. We don’t use powdered milk. You need a yogurt culture to inoculate your milk. You can purchase a dehydrated yogurt culture or you can use a tablespoon of existing yogurt – just make sure it contains active, live cultures. Hope that helps! Yogurt making really isn’t difficult. PJ

Thomas P.

So is it really that simple? Just goats milk some heat and powdered milk?

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