
















🥛 Elevate your homemade yogurt game with pure probiotic precision!
This pack of 12 freeze-dried yogurt starter culture sachets contains live active bacteria strains Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus, designed for making authentic Balkan-style plain yogurt. Suitable for vegetarians and specialized diets, these lab-purified cultures are free from additives, gluten, and GMOs, compatible with all yogurt appliances, and each sachet cultures one quart of yogurt with the ability to re-culture for multiple batches.















| ASIN | B01104U1EY |
| Age Range Description | Adult |
| Best Sellers Rank | 310,733 in Home & Kitchen ( See Top 100 in Home & Kitchen ) 33 in Yoghurt Makers |
| Country of origin | Bulgaria |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (687) |
| Date First Available | 5 Jan. 2015 |
| Manufacturer | Natural Probiotic Selection |
| Manufacturer reference | Impreso en los sobres |
| Number of pieces | 12 |
| Package Dimensions | 16.1 x 9.4 x 2.2 cm; 50 g |
| Package Information | Bag |
| Set Name | Pack of 12 bags |
| Speciality | suitable for vegetarians |
| UPC | 700425220327 700425220259 |
| Unit count | 12 Count |
K**R
Best yoghurt so far
I've found this to produce by far the best yoghurt from ordinary milk, rather than using bought live yoghurt as a starter. What I have not had a great deal of success with is using some of the initial batch as starter for the next. So I've bought a pack of 10 and will just use one for each new batch: it is too nice and too good not to. Best so far is using homogenised jersey milk to one pack of dried probiotic culture; it is usually ready in 12 hours, which is a little longer than usual but the results are most definitely worth it. Update Have now made good yoghurt using the first round as starter. This is really good stuff, and I make it pretty well every day. I'm certain our digestive health has improved too, as a result.
T**N
It does make good Yoghurt which does taste good.
It made good yoghurt which does taste good and it is easy to make one you get started.
N**E
Good and effective starter.
These are good starters, follow the instructions, be patient for the first batch I usually do that overnight in a Lakeland yoghurt warmer, I also use grass fed Jersey whole milk after all rubbish milk in rubbish yoghurt out and this makes smooth creamy mild yoghurt tasty, the Bifido version is slightly more tart.From each batch I put 2 tbsps into a small separate pot before I start using to use as starter for next batch. I make mine in a glass Kilner jar which just neatly fits into the yoghurt warmer.
P**G
Makes excellent yogurt
The Balkan style yogurt culture has worked perfectly for me. So far I have made yogurt very successfully with the cheapest milk I could buy in my local shop, as well as UHT milk. The only time it didn’t work so well was when I used more expensive milk from the supermarket, which I assume contains some preservative. I used the Amazon Basics yogurt maker, replacing the 7 glass jars with a single bowl that fits the maker and holds a litre of milk. After following the instructions given with the culture, the cheap milk had become yogurt in 6 hours. The UHT milk also made yogurt in 6 hours, but because it had already been heat treated I only heated it to 45C before putting it in the yogurt maker. The yogurt this culture makes is tangy but not too sharp. It sets firm in the maker, and gets even firmer after a few hours in the fridge. I have been straining it through muslin to remove about 25% of the volume in whey; and, to me, after straining it tastes like the Greek yogurt that I love. So far I have only made 4 repeat batches. All of these have set in 3 hours. This seems quicker than suggested in the instructions. Perhaps this because my yogurt maker is in the same room as my boiler, which means it is always very warm.
S**E
Delicious home made natural soya yogurt
Bought these cultures as a practice for my son who wanted yogurt from soya milk. I followed the instructions carefully and used fresh soya milk and an electric yogurt maker. The first batch I left for 8 hours, using tepid milk as advised. The yogurt was nice but very thin with a lot of whey. I used 150g of this yogurt to make a second bath which for which I used cold milk and left for 9 hours. This batch was thicker. I am now on to my 4th batch and each one seems to be getting thicker. The last one I used organic soya milk and also added a tablespoon of sugar. I am very pleased with these cultures and they have made delicious soya yogurt.
D**.
Too slow to develop
Although yogurt is tasty, it takes 16-24 hours to be developed in proper yogurt maker. I have tried different temperatures and none of them changed the result. Yogurt is quite runny as well. I would not recommend this as a starter. Edit: After 6th generation of yogurts, fermentation start to settle in 4-5 hours.
D**N
Excellent starter!
Excellent jogurt starter! Since it took me a while to find a "correct" way, of using these ferments, let me share my method. First time you make jogurt, bring 1l whole milk to 85 C quite quickly, then let it cool down until it reaches about 43 C. At this point, mix the content of a sachet and stir with a whip very thoroughly. Place the milk in your jogurt machine and let it rest for approximately 10-12 hours. You will see that it's ready when it smells like jogurt and it doesn't move much if you delicately tilt the container. You can now put the container in the fridge, without stirring. Once it's cool, stir gently with a whip and your jogurt is ready! For all subsequent batches, just follow the same method but keep the milk in incubation for only 3-4 hours. You will need to add a full tablespoon of your old batch to the warm milk, instead of the ferments.
B**R
A most definite winner!
I made my first batch last night using my Easiyo yogurt maker and it has turned out to be perfect. To keep things simple I used 1 litre of UHT whole milk - which saves boiling and cooling - stirred the packet of culture into the milk, filled the Easiyo insulated outer container with boiling water and popped the 1 litre yogurt container inside. I left it for 12 hours and when I opened it this morning it was perfectly set and now that it has been chilled for a few hours in the fridge, I have just sampled it and to me it is a very fine batch of yogurt indeed. Very smooth and creamy with just the right yogurt "tang" to set it off. I prefer the taste of this to Easiyo's own powdered satchets which are mixed with water and I shall therefore use this product in future as it not only tastes better to me, it is also so very much cheaper to produce. I look forward to making my next batch in a few days using some of this present batch as a starter. I can highly recommend this product.
C**N
Première utilisation mes yahourt étaient de la soupe ! 2ème moins de temps en yaourtière ils étaient divin ! Demain essai avec confiture en fond de pots.
A**E
Funziona sia con latte che soia.
L**A
El yogur queda delicioso y es muy fácil fermentarlo en una yogurtera. Yo lo preparé con leche fresca entera bio y le añadí en frío leche en polvo, ¡quedó increíble! No me parece caro porque puedes hacer al menos 3 tandas de yogur con un solo sobre.
M**Z
Muy buen producto, con buen embalaje, presentación, y con mucha información por parte del proveedor de cómo hacer yogur. Los yogures elaborados con este cultivo son realmente buenos, sobre todo cuando se le coge el punto, y digo esto porque yo después de muchas pruebas con distintas leches puedo decir que le he cogido el punto para que me salga un yogur espeso y rico siempre. Finalmente mi elección ha sido leche pascual entera pues es con la que más espeso me sale el yogur. Para la siembra suelo utilizar 1,2 litros de leche. Caliento la leche en una cacerola hasta que sube y dejo enfriar hasta los 41 grados aproximadamente, aprovechando en el enfriamiento para ir quitando la nata que se va formando, unas tres o cuatro veces, con lo cual le quito un poquito de grasa. Después, echo el cultivo, muevo y a la yogurtera. Tras unas 10-12 horas el yogur está perfecto. A la nevera y en unas horas ya está para comérselo. No obstante, yo con este primer yogur lo que hago es depositarlo en cubiteras para congelar y así tener para hacer más yogur. Para las sucesivas tandas suelo utilizar 1,4 litros de leche. Caliento igualmente la leche y en un vaso he depositado mientras tanto dos cubitos de yogur para que se vayan descongelando a temperatura ambiente. Dos cubitos los he pesado y vienen a ser 50-55 gramos aproximadamente. Cuando la leche está a unos 41 grados vierto una poca en el vaso donde tengo los cubitos de yogur y muevo, y a continuación vierto sobre la olla, removiendo todo un ratito y de nuevo a la yogurtera, y en 8-10 horas tengo un yogur perfecto y espeso. Según el proveedor se podría hacer más yogures de la segunda tanda, pero yo tras varias pruebas prefiero congelar la primera tanda y hacer los yogures de esta primera tanda y no más, pues los resultados con la segunda tanda no son malos pero no me convencen del todo. De todas formas, hay que tener en cuenta que de esta forma con un sobre tenemos para hacer aproximadamente 14 tandas de 7 yogures, esto es, 98 yogures para consumir, que por el precio de un sobre no está nada mal.
F**Y
Reçu rapidement, bien emballés. J'ai essayé de faire du yaourt avec les ferments et c'est parfait. Mon yaourt est onctueux, pas trop liquide ni trop épais, de bonne saveur et on ne doit presque pas rajouter de sucre ! De plus, la société Natural Probiotic vous envoie un fascicule de plusieurs pages pour vous aider à faire du bon yaourt de toutes sortes (grec, bulgare, noraml et autres). Je dis BRAVO à cette nouvelle société qui fait des efforts pour avoir de bons produits. En plus, ils ont un bon suivi et vous pouvez leur poser des questions si besoin, ils vous répondent le même jour ! Je recommande vivement
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