This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure.
This sous vide yogurt recipe makes an amazingly creamy, tangy yogurt that you just don't get with store bought yogurt.
Using a Greek yogurt as a starter makes this recipe super easy and you can use it to make yogurt over and over again in your own kitchen.
While this sous vide yogurt is great served for breakfast with some granola, fresh berries, honey, or whatever you like, it is also amazing used in sauces (like this garlic honey sauce in this baked parsnip fries recipe).
I love the ability to control the amount of sweet in my yogurt, and absolutely LOVE the tanginess of this homemade version.
Jump to:
Why This Recipe Works
- The sous vide makes this recipe pretty hands off once it is placed in the water bath.
- You have the ability to adjust the cook time depending on your tanginess preference.
- It is a lot cheaper to make at home than it is to buy from the store.
- Using 1 container of Greek yogurt as a starter makes this recipe ultra easy.
If you don't have a lot of experience cooking sous vide yet, you may want to pop over and read what sous vide cooking is and the benefits of sous vide cooking.
Want to Save This Recipe?
Enter your email & I'll send it to your inbox. Plus, get great new recipes from me every week!
By submitting this form, you consent to receive emails from Went Here 8 This.
Ingredients
A good quality pasteurized milk should be used in this recipe. Do not use raw milk as it can possibly contain listeria and can make you ill.
Using a high protein milk will result in a thicker yogurt that may not even need to be strained. Use a brand such as Fairlife or Horizon.
Any Greek yogurt containing live cultures will work for this. You can also use regular yogurt as long as it is plain and contains cultures.
I prefer the Greek as it is thicker and tangier and results in a thicker, tangier yogurt.
Step By Step Instructions
Heat a sous vide water bath to 110F degrees.
Place the milk in a pot and heat to 180F degrees, whisking regularly to prevent it from scalding and sticking to the pot.
The milk gets heated because milk often has some level of bacteria in it and heating to 180F degrees will kill any bacteria, making it safer to use for making yogurt. Heating it first also makes for a creamier end product which is an added plus!
Once it's at 180F degrees, remove the pot from the heat and place in an ice bath to cool to 110F degrees.
Once at 110F degrees, whisk in the Greek yogurt. For a thicker yogurt, cook at 115F degrees.
Pour the mixture into either cleaned 4 ounce balls jars for individual servings, or larger balls jars, as long as they have lids.
Tighten the lids "finger tight," or tight just to where your finger tips feels the lid grab the threads. *Don't overtighten or your jars may crack under the pressure. Don't leave too loose or water can get into your jars. You'll feel it when it's right.
Place the jars in the sous vide water bath and cook for 12 hours. If you like less tangy yogurt, cook for only 8 hours, and more tangy you can cook up to 24 hours.
Remove the jars from the water bath and wipe the moisture off them.
Store in the fridge overnight to fully cool.
For extra thick yogurt, you can strain it through cheesecloth to remove any extra moisture.
Otherwise, serve it garnished with drizzled honey and fresh fruit.
How to Prevent Jars From Cracking in the Sous Vide
Jars can crack if they experience thermal shock or too much pressure.
To prevent thermal shock, we place the jars in the water bath before heating the water. This allows the jars to come slowly to temperature, which should keep them from cracking.
Jars can also crack if there is too much pressure. If they are tightened too tightly, they will crack.
To prevent cracking under pressure, we tighten the jars "fingertip tight." What this means is that we tighten the lids until we barely feel it grab the jar. It should be easy to twist the lid back off with your fingertips, hence the term.
It may feel like it's not closed all the way, but as long as you felt that slight grab, it'll be fine.
Expert Tips
- Use a good quality pasteurized whole milk for the best flavor results.
- Do not use raw milk as it can contain unwanted bacteria that can make you ill.
- You can use regular yogurt instead of Greek yogurt, as long as it has cultures.
- Heat the milk per the instructions as it will kill any bacteria and give you a thicker creamier result.
- You can also heat the milk in the sous vide bath at 180F degrees if you don't want to worry about boiling it over. It will take longer and you will need to cool the bath down to 110F or 115F before putting the yogurt back in.
- For a thicker yogurt, cook at 115F degrees.
- For a thicker, tangier yogurt, cook up to 24 hours.
- For a less tangy yogurt, cook for 8 hours.
- The yogurt can be strained through a mesh strainer and/or cheesecloth if you want a thicker yogurt.
Serving Options
Yogurt has so many serving options that aren't always just in a bowl with some fruit (although, that is always delicious too). Here are some fun ideas:
- Harissa yogurt dip used in these corn fritters
- Stirred into this instant pot chicken curry soup
- Used in this mango lassi
- Served with granola, fruit and/or honey
- You can use it in place of cream in many dishes to make them healthier
- Use it as a marinade like we do in this whole roasted indian chicken
Frequently Asked Questions
The best temperature will be between 110F degrees and 115F degrees to get a good fermentation on the yogurt. If it is heated above 120F degrees, the cultures will die and the yogurt is no longer fermented.
Any longer than 30 hours and you run the risk of the bacteria starving and your yogurt could then go bad.
The longer you cook the yogurt, the more sour it will get when making it at home. The yogurt cultures actually consume the sugar and release lactic acid which is why you get that sour taste. Add some sweet back in by mixing in honey before you serve it.
Sous vide yogurt can be store in the fridge in a covered container for up to 2 weeks.
More Sous Vide Recipes
If you love this recipe, please leave a star rating and a comment below and let us know your favorite thing about it. We'd also love to connect on Instagram! Follow us at @went_here_8_this for awesome recipes and all sorts of fun food stuff 🙂
Recipe
Sous Vide Yogurt
Ingredients
- 7 cups whole milk good quality pasteurized milk
- 1-4 ounce container plain Greek yogurt with cultures
Instructions
- Heat a sous vide water bath to 110F degrees.
- Place the milk in a pot and heat to 180F degrees, whisking regularly to prevent it from scalding and sticking to the pot.
- Once it's at 180F degrees, remove the pot from the heat and place in an ice bath to cool to 110F degrees.
- Once at 110F degrees, whisk in the Greek yogurt.
- Pour the mixture into either cleaned 4 ounce balls jars for individual servings, or larger balls jars, as long as they have lids.
- Tighten the lids "finger tight," or tight just to where your finger tips feels the lid grab the threads. *Don't overtighten or your jars may crack under the pressure. Don't leave too loose or water can get into your jars. You'll feel it when it's right.
- Place the jars in the sous vide water bath and cook for 12 hours. If you like less tangy yogurt, cook for only 8 hours, and more tangy you can cook up to 24 hours.
- Remove the jars from the water bath and wipe the moisture off them.
- Store in the fridge overnight to fully cool.
- For extra thick yogurt, you can strain it through cheesecloth to remove any extra moisture.
- Otherwise, serve it garnished with drizzled honey and fresh fruit.
Expert Tips:
- Use a good quality pasteurized whole milk for the best flavor results.
- Do not use raw milk as it can contain unwanted bacteria that can make you ill.
- You can use regular yogurt instead of Greek yogurt, as long as it has cultures.
- Heat the milk per the instructions as it will kill any bacteria and give you a thicker creamier result.
- You can also heat the milk in the sous vide bath at 180F degrees if you don't want to worry about boiling it over. It will take longer and you will need to cool the bath down to 110F or 115F before putting the yogurt back in.
- For a thicker yogurt, cook at 115F degrees.
- For a thicker, tangier yogurt, cook up to 24 hours.
- For a less tangy yogurt, cook for 8 hours.
- The yogurt can be strained through a mesh strainer and/or cheesecloth if you want a thicker yogurt.
Heather
I made this and it came out so delicious. It was a little looser than I like, so I'll probably strain it next time, but the flavor was on point!
Danielle
So glad to hear it! If you like thick yogurt, you would need to strain this 🙂