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by BeetleB
1815 days ago
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Interesting. For me (in the US), UHT was usually a failure - but as I said, I do it for only 6.5 hours. I could try doing it for longer, and I guess that's convenient for overnight. But otherwise, heating + 6.5 hours for regular milk is faster. What I don't understand is: Why does heating + 6.5 hours work for non-UHT milk but not for UHT? It's not just me - I Googled at the time and many others had the same experience: UHT milk often fails. Like me, they all were doing 6-8 hours. Googling now, I see lots of people arguing if UHT makes it harder to make yogurt or not. Personally, I'd like to see examples of people making decently thick yogurt (without straining) in under 7 hours with UHT (whether they scald or not). This site[1] says there was a study done that showed unheated UHT was runnier than heated non-UHT. I didn't check the study to see how long they set it for. This site[2] also points out that UHT for 10 hours was still quite runny. They had to add powdered milk to get it thicker. [1] https://www.healwithfood.org/recipes/uht-milk-homemade-yogur... [2] https://www.everynookandcranny.net/instant-pot-uht-milk-yogu... |
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