Making Buttermilk, Sour Cream and Cream Cheese

I like to use buttermilk for a lot of my baking - things like biscuits, scones, bread and muffins all have a great texture and flavor when I use buttermilk. I do not, however, like to buy buttermilk at the store. So, we make our own.

We use Kefir Grains to make a soured milk called Kefir - it is much like buttermilk. I purchased a 1/4 cup of the live grains through the mail. When they arrived, we put them in a glass 1 quart jar and added about a cup of whole milk from a local dairy. The milk we use is pasteurized, but not homogenized so it still has cream that comes to the top.

After about 12 hours, we had our first cultured kefir. I strained the liquid through a strainer and put it in a glass jar in the fridge. We can drink this as a drink or use it as you would buttermilk for any baking. I then put the kefir grains back into a glass quart jar, add more fresh milk and start the process over again. We do this every day. For more great info about how to make your own kefir, visit the link here at Tammy's.

Now that we've been doing this a while, we have lots of kefir grains. They continue to grow and multiply and before you know it you could be making a gallon of kefir (buttermilk) a day! When our grains grow to the point where we have excess I either sell some of them or save them (if you are interested in purchasing kefir grains to start your own, please email me by visiting the Contact Me link in the header.

You can save them by drying out the grains and freezing them in a glass jar with powdered milk to protect them. They can usually be re-started up to 2 months after freezing them. You can also dry out the grains and keep them in a glass jar with powdered milk in the refrigerator. You can re-start them this way up to 18 months after storage. Saving some of the excess grains like this ensures grains for the future should something unforeseen happen to my current batch. Here's a photo of about a cup of grains that I've just rinsed and am starting to dry for long-term storage:
kefir_grains

You can also pause your grains for up to a week by putting them in milk in a glass jar in the refrigerator.

We also use the kefir milk to make our own labne (sour cream) and cream cheese. Once I've strained the liquid off the kefir grains, I line a strainer with a sturdy cheesecloth that I've moistened. I put the strainer over a pot and pour the liquid kefir milk into the cheesecloth.

Depending on the amount of liquid, sometime in about 8 to 12 hours you get a cheese texture in the cloth similar to sour cream. Leaving it longer allows it to dry even more and it takes on more of a cream cheese consistency. Here's a batch I'm making for sour cream today. This is how it looks when I first pour the kefir milk into the cheesecloth, then when it is ready as sour cream and a final of how the sour cream looks when I put it in the container:

making_sour_cream Labne_ready labne_final

If I had let this set a few more hours, it would have dried more and been the consistency of cream cheese.

When I end up with more kefir milk in the fridge than I need for baking or drinking, I sometimes take 2-3 quarts of it and make the kefir cheese.

I also save the whey that is left from making the cheese. This I use in baking also, especially when I want something with a really sour taste. When I make my artisan bread, I often substitute most of the water with kefir whey and it gives the bread a delicious sour dough flavor without using sour dough starter. I also use the kefir whey in my regular loafs of bread. Sometimes I pour a little over the food for the dog, as it is excellent protein. There are a TON of uses for kefir whey.

This is how we make our own buttermilk, sour cream and cream cheese. I haven't had to buy any of these products in several months. I do have to buy the milk to keep the kefir growing. The milk we prefer to use from a local dairy is $3.89 per half gallon. I can use anywhere from 1-3 of these half gallons per week, depending on how much kefir we are making. So, it might cost a little more than purchasing sour cream or cream cheese would, but I'd prefer to know the origin of the milk that I use in these products than just buying whatever is on sale this week at the store that often has added fillers and ingredients.

Have you ever made kefir? Does this sound like something you'd enjoy doing or would you get tired of keeping up with it every day? I'd love to hear your comments!

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

I have been making kefir off and on for some time now, and I love it! This should be on everybody's counter! I recently procured some water kefir grains and will be starting those today.


Thanks for your blog! Interesting read.

Marianna DeMyer said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

I'm a newbie kefir person and I am thrilled with the stuff. Everyone in my family has taken to it (except the youngest) because I put a few drops of vanilla in it and added a little sugar... I am thrilled to know you can make sour cream with the stuff and will try that next...I was just disposing of the whey but now I will try it in bread baking...what a great idea! Thanks!

Laura Funderburk said...

I made kefir last year when we were getting milk from our goats. But I let it go when our milk doe dried up. (I'm now getting milk from a friend and need to get it started again! I miss it!) I had a question.... I had read that you were not suppose to use any metallic equipment with kefir...spoons, strainers, etc. I'd like to be able to use a metal strainer as it's easy to wash and reuse. Do you use any metal with your kefir?

Anonymous said...

I have been pouring light cream onto kefir grains in a shallow tupperware w/ airholes & keeping in fridge, where it ferments the cream nicely in about 4 days time. hard to separate, i pour through a plastic strainer & have to shake & mix until it goes through- but getting NICE sour cream every 4 days- it's wonderful w/fresh fruit mixed in ! has anyone else used cream with kefir grains??

Benja said...

I just found your blog searching for tips on what to do with the kefir cream cheese, because I am so keen on the whey, but not the cream cheese! Sour creme - that's a GREAT idea, thanks.

We use the whey to soak our oatmeal overnight to remove the anti-nutrients from the oats and to start off fermented vegetables like sauerkraut. Whey makes fermenting so much easier.

Anonymous said...

this is the exact same blog as Capturing Today (http://capturing-today.blogspot.com/2008/03/making-sour-cream-and-buttermilk.html). are you the same blogger or is this plagiarized?

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Anonymous said...

Haha, my kefir never gets to be anything else... I always plan to make cheese, but then I taste the ferment to see how it is - and then the bowl seems to be empty because I drank the lot - straight from the bowl!!

It's like an involuntary reaction to the taste of kefir. Any kefir! Long ferment, short ferment, fizzy, creamy, sour, tart, mild... you name it, I'm suddenly staring into an empty bowl, as I down the last of it. I've never done a second ferment, because I always do this.

I have actually reserved some today, for the FIRST time, to soak some buckwheat for pancakes. I don't know how I restrained myself. I'm quite capable of drinking a gallon 3 times a day. Hope the pancakes are worth it!