frustratedearthmother
Sustainability Master
Okay - ya'll talked me into it. What to do with all that milk?
I decided to go ahead and start this thread now because I have a new raw goat milk product to talk about. Clabber!
Wikipedia says:
Clabber is a food produced by allowing unpasteurized milk to turn sour at a specific humidity and temperature. Over time, the milk thickens or curdles into a yogurt-like substance with a strong, sour flavor.
In rural areas of the Southern United States, it was commonly eaten for breakfast with brown sugar, nutmeg, cinnamon, or molasses added. Some people also eat it with fruit or black pepper and cream. Prior to the now-popular use of baking soda, clabber was used as a quick leavening agent in baking.[1] Due to its stability, clabbered milk has been popular in areas without access to steady refrigeration.[2]
I've got to admit that the thought of deliberately leaving milk out to sour doesn't seem to make sense on the surface, but clabber is good stuff. Just ask my dad! Years ago when I told him I had started milking goats he asked if I ever made clabber. I didn't even know what it was. He explained it to me and told me I had to get him some. And, I did, lol!
At my house clabber is usually produced when I forget to put away the product of the evenings milking which happened yesterday. I was searching high and low for lost baby goats and totally forgot to bring the milk in. Thankfully, I had capped the jars and it was nice and safe sitting in the milk room waiting for me this morning at 5:20am. I brought it in the house, strained it and poured it into a big pot and we will let it do it's thing.
It's good as a buttermilk substitute and can probably be used as a thin sour cream. I'm going to experiment with this batch. I've got some sour cream culture that I might stir in to a small portion of it and see what happens. I even saw a recipe for cottage cheese made from clabbered milk. I will definitely try this one. It'll be a couple days before I can experiment - but pictures if it turns out.
http://www.theselfsufficienthomeacre.com/2013/02/cottage-cheese-made-from-sour-milk.html
Hope some other folks can come up with ideas for using all that milk that I haven't thought of.
I decided to go ahead and start this thread now because I have a new raw goat milk product to talk about. Clabber!
Wikipedia says:
Clabber is a food produced by allowing unpasteurized milk to turn sour at a specific humidity and temperature. Over time, the milk thickens or curdles into a yogurt-like substance with a strong, sour flavor.
In rural areas of the Southern United States, it was commonly eaten for breakfast with brown sugar, nutmeg, cinnamon, or molasses added. Some people also eat it with fruit or black pepper and cream. Prior to the now-popular use of baking soda, clabber was used as a quick leavening agent in baking.[1] Due to its stability, clabbered milk has been popular in areas without access to steady refrigeration.[2]
I've got to admit that the thought of deliberately leaving milk out to sour doesn't seem to make sense on the surface, but clabber is good stuff. Just ask my dad! Years ago when I told him I had started milking goats he asked if I ever made clabber. I didn't even know what it was. He explained it to me and told me I had to get him some. And, I did, lol!
At my house clabber is usually produced when I forget to put away the product of the evenings milking which happened yesterday. I was searching high and low for lost baby goats and totally forgot to bring the milk in. Thankfully, I had capped the jars and it was nice and safe sitting in the milk room waiting for me this morning at 5:20am. I brought it in the house, strained it and poured it into a big pot and we will let it do it's thing.
It's good as a buttermilk substitute and can probably be used as a thin sour cream. I'm going to experiment with this batch. I've got some sour cream culture that I might stir in to a small portion of it and see what happens. I even saw a recipe for cottage cheese made from clabbered milk. I will definitely try this one. It'll be a couple days before I can experiment - but pictures if it turns out.
http://www.theselfsufficienthomeacre.com/2013/02/cottage-cheese-made-from-sour-milk.html
Hope some other folks can come up with ideas for using all that milk that I haven't thought of.