FERMENT · MILCHFERMENTE

Greek yogurt

Στραγγιστό γιαούρτιstraggistó giaoúrti

Griechischer Joghurt — gewöhnlicher Joghurt, abgetropft bis dick

Fermentationsdauer Same as base yogurt (4-8 hours), plus 2-12 hours straining
Temperaturbereich 40-45°C (104-113°F) ferment, 4°C (39°F) strain
Salz / Lake none
Schwierigkeit Einfach
Bedeutung Etabliert
Übersetzungshinweis

Der Haupttext dieser Seite ist in v1 nur auf Englisch verfügbar. Die Benutzeroberfläche und Metadaten sind ins Deutsche übersetzt. Die redaktionelle Übersetzung folgt in v2.

Profil

Greek yogurt is, microbiologically, the same product as standard set yogurt — the same Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus, the same fermentation, the same end pH. What distinguishes it is a finishing technique applied after fermentation: the finished yogurt is strained through cheesecloth, butter muslin, or a specialized straining bag for 2-12 hours in refrigeration, removing approximately half its volume as whey. The result is a yogurt three to four times thicker than the standard set, with a fat content (in the strained portion) roughly doubled, and a strikingly different mouthfeel and culinary utility.

In Greek cooking, the strained yogurt occupies a different role than thinner yogurts. It is the base for tzatziki — combined with grated cucumber, garlic, dill or mint, lemon juice, and olive oil — where its body holds the sauce together. It is eaten with honey and walnuts as a dessert. It is used as a sauce for grilled meats, where its higher density resists weeping under heat. The standard yogurt of supermarket-style runny consistency would not perform any of these roles.

The editorial position is that Greek yogurt is best understood as a finishing technique, not a separate ferment. The fermenter who masters one yogurt has mastered both; the difference is whether the finished product is strained or not. The marketing-driven proliferation of "Greek-style" supermarket yogurts has, in recent years, included thickening agents like milk protein concentrate, gelatin, or modified starch — products that achieve thickness through additions rather than through straining. These should not be confused with the actual preparation.

The whey that drains off during straining is itself useful: it can be used as the liquid in bread doughs (the lactic acid contributes to fermentation), in marinades for chicken (it tenderizes), in lacto-fermented vegetable starters, or as a tangy addition to smoothies. Discarding it is wasteful but common; collecting and using it elevates the practice.

Schlüsseltechniken

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Häufige Fehler

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