lwheelr
Lovin' The Homestead
The top of your fridge, in the back where it is warm, will usually do to incubate yogurt (might not in mid-winter in a cold house - but if you can feel the heat from it, it should be enough). Pasteurize the milk (it gets a thin film of bubbles on top when it is hot enough - no big bubbles left), cool it down so it is no longer HOT (I hold my hand on the outside of the pot - if I can keep my hand there, it is cool enough), put in the culture and set it on top of the fridge at the back, cover with towels.
I've also done it in a gas oven that had a pilot light, with just the pilot light on. We did it that way up at Scout Camp this summer, in a large 2 gallon bowl.
I do mine in a large flat bowl usually. As long as it is covered, it works. Usually do 2-4 quarts at a time, and my ungrateful kids just eat it all - my husband even helps them! There's no such thing as too big a batch!
My mom used to preheat her oven on warm, turn it off, then put the yogurt in overnight to incubate. The residual heat worked fine. Could do that after baking something, just make sure it is no longer too hot inside.
Laura
Mom to Eight, Web Designer, Milker of Goats, Feeder of Chickens
I've also done it in a gas oven that had a pilot light, with just the pilot light on. We did it that way up at Scout Camp this summer, in a large 2 gallon bowl.
I do mine in a large flat bowl usually. As long as it is covered, it works. Usually do 2-4 quarts at a time, and my ungrateful kids just eat it all - my husband even helps them! There's no such thing as too big a batch!
My mom used to preheat her oven on warm, turn it off, then put the yogurt in overnight to incubate. The residual heat worked fine. Could do that after baking something, just make sure it is no longer too hot inside.
Laura
Mom to Eight, Web Designer, Milker of Goats, Feeder of Chickens