Skip to content
  • Home
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Recipes
  • Self Sufficiency
  • Sourdough
  • Cheesemaking
  • Free Resources

The Nourishing Hearthfire

/

How to Make Yoghurt Off The Grid

Home » cheesemaking

katedownham

·

Aug 9, 2023

·

Natural Cheesemaking, All blog posts, Homestead Recipes
how to make yoghurt off grid - jar of yoghurt culturing surrounded by warm water on edge of wood stove
Keeping yoghurt warm in a pot at the edge of the woodstove, one of the tricks I’ll discuss in this post.

Yoghurt with a taste similar to what we might find in a grocery shop was something I gave up on for a long time. I made only room temperature viili for years, thinking that a good Greek or Bulgarian style of yoghurt was beyond me. At some point I decided I preferred the taste of this style of yoghurt enough to find ways to make it work, and now I make yoghurts far tastier and healthier than anything I can find for sale. In this article you’ll find my recipe, along with extra tips to make really good yoghurt every time without any electrical gadgets.

Homemade natural yoghurt is delicious to eat, and can also be used as a culture for cheesemaking.

Table of Contents

  • How to make yoghurt
  • How to keep yoghurt warm during culturing without electricity
  • Tips for making thick yoghurt
  • Tips for reliable yoghurt culturing

How to make yoghurt

  1. Heat milk in a saucepan until it reaches 82ºC (180ºF) or higher, hold it at or above that temperature for half an hour, if possible, and then let it cool to around 40ºC (104ºF). 

2. Pour into jars, then stir through around 5 tablespoons (75ml) of yoghurt for every quart (litre) of milk.

3. Keep your culturing yoghurt at 40ºC (104ºF) for the next 6 hours or more (I find that 12 to 18 hours is best).

How to keep yoghurt warm during culturing without electricity

A couple of ways to keep yoghurt warm are: 

• fermenting it in an insulated food jar such as a thermos.

• surrounding a normal jar with hot water in an esky (cooler) or on the edge of a woodstove dying down for the night.

I use the latter method, as it means I don’t have to mess around with transferring yoghurt from one jar to another once it’s ready – I culture it in the same jar that I use for storage.

There are special non-electric insulated yoghurt fermenters available, where you fill it with hot water, place your jar of yoghurt inside, seal, and leave to culture, but I find the size of these limiting, as they will only hold a specific size of jar, and from my experience they aren’t that great at keeping the heat in.

There are also electrical gadgets, such as Instant pot and specialty yoghurt makers, but I avoid relying on electricity as much as possible so these are not things I have tried.

• In real life, the temperature does tend to drop over time, so it’s sometimes easier to start culturing it at a slightly higher temperature (up to 46ºC or 115ºF), and leave it culturing for twelve hours or more rather than six. Some of the helpful yoghurt bacteria will still be active in the lower temperatures, and the heat-loving bacteria will still have some time to grow during the earlier, warmer stages of culturing.

In winter I leave my yoghurt jar overnight in a pot of warm water on the edge of the woodstove as it cools down, and then refill the pot with hot tap water in the morning to give it more time to culture at high temperatures. I find that yoghurt tastes the best after around 18 hours of culturing in this way during winter.

Tips for making thick yoghurt

• Experiment with using milk from different animals or different sources. One of the goats here gives very creamy milk that makes excellent thick yoghurt, my other goats give milk that makes a thinner yoghurt. If I were mixing all the milk together I would not have noticed this. Full fat cows milk generally makes lovely thick yoghurt, and milk from a Jersey cow or other cow that gives extra creamy milk will make even thicker, lovelier yoghurt.

• Winter milk makes thicker yoghurt than summer milk. Sometimes it helps to just accept that winter is the time for thick yoghurt and in summer you might want to stain it through cheesecloth if you want it to be thicker.

• Yoghurt will be thicker if it is first heated above 82ºC (180ºF), and then left to cool to the culturing temperature. If you can heat it up slowly, or hold it at the goal temperature for half an hour, this will help to create thicker yoghurt. The high temperature changes the protein structures in the milk, to help create a thicker yoghurt.

• Allowing the milk to cool down and then reheating to 82ºC also can help make for thicker yoghurt.

• You can evaporate some of the liquid out of the milk, by leaving the pot on the heat with the lid off once it’s reached temperature – just observe the level of the milk you start off with, and then remove and allow the pot to cool once it’s reduced by ¼ to ½.

• For thick Greek yoghurt, allow your yoghurt to continue culturing at warm room temperature until the whey begins to separate. Pour it into cheesecloth and allow the curds to continue dripping whey until it’s as thick as you’d like it to be, anywhere between two and twelve hours.

Tips for reliable yoghurt culturing

• Yoghurt is best made at least once per week, to keep the culture fresh. It is worth keeping a small amount of yoghurt tucked away in the freezer, just in case your yoghurt gets contaminated or abandoned.

• Cultures that contain acidophilus seem to be more reliable home kitchen conditions

• If in doubt, add more yoghurt to start it off, rather than less. Some recipes advise using only two tablespoons for a litre (quart) of milk, but I always use 5 tablespoons and it doesn’t hurt it, it just makes the milk get colonised more quickly while the temperature is warm.

• To keep your yoghurt culture as active and pure as possible and avoid having to buy new culture, it’s a good idea to keep everything as sterile as possible: Heat and cool your milk in a pot with the lid on, heat-sterilise your jars, don’t leave them open to the air any longer than you have to, and be very careful with any jar of yoghurt that you’ll be using as a starter for your next batch – pour the yoghurt out rather than reaching in with a spoon (unless the spoon is heat sterilised). For even better results, make an extra smaller jar of yoghurt that you can use as your culture, and then it doesn’t matter what happens to your jar of eating yoghurt.

Like this:

Like Loading…
  • Share using Native toolsShareCopied to clipboard
Kate Downham off grid homesteader

About Kate Downham

Kate Downham has been growing, preserving, and cooking real food since 2007. She is the author of four books on homestead skills: A Year in an Off-Grid Kitchen, Natural Small Batch Cheesemaking, Backyard Dairy Goats, and Sourdough Without Fail.

Off-grid with her family of nine in the Tasmanian forest, Kate milks her own goats, makes all their cheese, mills all her own grain, and bakes fresh sourdough bread daily.

Learn more about Kate’s books →

Related posts

  • How Homemade Dairy can Transform your Homestead
  • Salted Caramel Cheesecake Pie (grain-free)
  • Natural Cheesemaking: How to Make and Use Your Own Cheese Culturesnatural cheesemaking homemade cheeses on a plate

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

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

Recipe Rating




8 different homesteading ebook covers

My books

Sourdough without fail: 100% whole grain sourdough breads, pizza, and pastries for any kitchen fresh milled flour sourdough book cover
a year in an off grid kitchen by kate downham off grid homesteading book cover
natural small batch cheesemaking natural cheesemaking book cover
backyard dairy goats homesteading book cover

More Resources for Off-Grid Living

off grid solar dehydrator
garden master course
diy wood fired pizza oven
the $50 and up underground house
natural swimming pools

Categories

  • All blog posts
  • Homestead Recipes
  • Natural Cheesemaking
  • Self Sufficiency & Homesteading
  • Whole Grain Sourdough Baking

Recent Posts

  • Magic Overnight Sourdough Pizza Dough Recipe with Fresh Milled FlourMay 26, 2026
  • Cooking year-round on a wood cookstove: the dream, the reality, and the practicalities of relying on our own firewood and being off the gas gridMay 20, 2026
  • 100% Whole Grain Fresh Milled Flour Sourdough Bread for Beginners: A Step-by-Step GuideMay 4, 2026
  • Easy 100% Whole Grain Sourdough Cinnamon Raisin Bread (honey-sweetened, and works with fresh milled flour & ancient grains)May 4, 2026
  • Natural Cheesemaking: How to Make and Use Your Own Cheese CulturesMay 2, 2026

The Nourishing Hearthfire is reader-supported and mostly ad-free

Buy me a coffee

Search

  • Home
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Recipes
  • Self Sufficiency
  • Sourdough
  • Cheesemaking
  • Free Homestead Resources

© 2026 Kate Downham – The Nourishing Hearthfire. This blog is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Join The Nourishing Hearthfire mailing list for thoughtful monthly emails and free ebooks
Find us on forums and social media

Permies: Permaculture and Homesteading Forums

Instagram

Facebook

X

Goodreads

About

Contact

Privacy Policy

Terms and Disclaimer

The Nourishing Hearthfire

%d