Yogurt
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Yogurt is a tasty and healthy food made by mixing special bacteria with milk and letting it change. This makes the milk thicker and gives it a tangy flavor. Most yogurt comes from cow’s milk, but you can also make it from the milk of water buffalo, goats, ewes, mares, camels, and yaks.
The main bacteria used to make yogurt are Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus. Sometimes, other helpful bacteria are added too. Different places have rules about how many bacteria must be in yogurt and which kinds are allowed.
To make yogurt, the bacteria are mixed into the milk, and it is kept warm for several hours. This warmth helps the bacteria change the milk into yogurt.
Etymology and spelling
The word for yogurt comes from Ottoman Turkish. It was written as یوغورت and pronounced yoğurt. This word is linked to a verb meaning "to knead" or "to thicken".
In English, yogurt can be spelled in a few ways: yogurt, yoghurt, yoghourt, or yogourt. In the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa, people usually say yoghurt. In the United States, the common spelling is yogurt. Canada uses the spelling yogourt, which comes from the French word yaourt, but yogurt and yoghurt are also used there.
History
The bacteria used to make yogurt might have first lived on plants. People might have found yogurt when milk from animals like cows mixed with these bacteria by accident. It was probably found first by people in Central Asia and Mesopotamia around 5000 BC, when they began to keep animals that gave milk.
In ancient Greece, people made a type of yogurt called oxygala. Writers like Pliny the Elder wrote about how some groups thickened milk to make a tasty, sour food. Later, Turks also used yogurt, writing about it in books from the 11th century. For many years, yogurt was a common food for people in places like the Russian Empire, South Eastern Europe, and the Indian subcontinent.
In the early 1900s, a student named Stamen Grigorov studied Bulgarian yogurt and discovered the special bacteria in it. Another scientist, Ilya Mechnikov, thought that eating yogurt helped people live longer.
Yogurt began to be made on a large scale by a man named Isaac Carasso in Barcelona, Spain, in 1919. He started a company called Danone. Yogurt became popular in the United States in the early 1900s and was made sweeter with fruit, which helped it become a favorite food for many people.
Nutrition
Yogurt made from whole milk is mostly water — about 81% — and also has protein, fat, and carbohydrates, including sugars. A 100-gram serving gives about 97 kilocalories of energy.
Yogurt is a good source of vitamin B12 and riboflavin, and it also has protein, phosphorus, and selenium.
| Property | Milk | Yogurt |
|---|---|---|
| Energy | 610 kJ (146 kcal) | 620 kJ (149 kcal) |
| Total carbohydrates | 12.8 g | 12 g |
| Total fat | 7.9 g | 8.5 g |
| Cholesterol | 24 mg | 32 mg |
| Protein | 7.9 g | 9 g |
| Calcium | 276 mg | 296 mg |
| Phosphorus | 222 mg | 233 mg |
| Potassium | 349 mg | 380 mg |
| Sodium | 98 mg | 113 mg |
| Vitamin A | 249 IU | 243 IU |
| Vitamin C | 0.0 mg | 1.2 mg |
| Vitamin D | 96.5 IU | ~ |
| Vitamin E | 0.1 mg | 0.1 mg |
| Vitamin K | 0.5 μg | 0.5 μg |
| Thiamine | 0.1 mg | 0.1 mg |
| Riboflavin | 0.3 mg | 0.3 mg |
| Niacin | 0.3 mg | 0.2 mg |
| Vitamin B6 | 0.1 mg | 0.1 mg |
| Folate | 12.2 μg | 17.2 μg |
| Vitamin B12 | 1.1 μg | 0.9 μg |
| Choline | 34.9 mg | 37.2 mg |
| Betaine | 1.5 mg | ~ |
| Water | 215 g | 215 g |
| Ash | 1.7 g | 1.8 g |
Health research
Yogurt may help us stay healthy because it can have live cultures. Some think these cultures are good for our bodies. Studies have checked if eating yogurt can stop some illnesses.
Eating yogurt might help women after menopause not break their hips. It could also make it easier to digest milk. Yogurt may help keep bones strong and maybe lower the chance of some diseases. Eating yogurt often might help stop weight gain and support heart health. Many yogurts also have extra helpful bacteria added to them.
Safety
Yogurt made with raw milk can contain harmful bacteria like Listeria, Cryptosporidium, Campylobacter, Brucella, Escherichia coli, and Salmonella. These can make people very sick.
Sometimes, yogurt can have harmful mold inside. If you see mold on yogurt, it cannot be safely used because the mold can spread deep inside the yogurt.
Varieties and presentation
Different ways to turn milk into yogurt exist around the world.
Dahi is a type of yogurt from the Indian subcontinent. It comes from an old word in Sanskrit, meaning "sour milk". Sweetened dahi, called mishti doi or meethi dahi, is popular in eastern India and is made by fermenting milk with sugar. While cow's milk is most often used for yogurt today, goat and buffalo milk were also used in the past (see buffalo curd).
Bogurar doi is a special sweet yogurt from Bogura, Bangladesh. It is a famous local food and is officially recognized as a special product of Bangladesh.
Dadiah or dadih is a traditional yogurt from West Sumatra, made from water buffalo milk and fermented in bamboo tubes. Yogurt is common in Nepal, where it is served as both a starter and a dessert. In Tibet, yogurt is made from yak milk.
In Northern Iran, mâst chekide is a type of kefir yogurt with a sour taste. It is often mixed with a green herb mix called delal. Common dishes include spinach or eggplant borani and wild shallots.
Matzoon is an Armenian yogurt found in the Caucasus and Russia. Cold soups like Tarator and cacık are made from yogurt in eastern Europe. These soups include ingredients like ayran, cucumbers, dill, salt, olive oil, and sometimes garlic and walnuts. Tzatziki in Greece and milk salad in Bulgaria are thick yogurt dishes similar to tarator.
Khyar w laban (cucumber and yogurt salad) is a dish from Lebanon and Syria. Many dishes in these countries use yogurt. Dovga, a yogurt soup with herbs and rice, is enjoyed in winter and summer. Jameed, a salted and dried yogurt, is eaten in Jordan. Zabadi is the main type of yogurt in Egypt, made from the milk of the Egyptian water buffalo. It is especially linked with Ramadan because it helps prevent thirst during long days without eating.
Sweetened and flavored
To make yogurt less sour, it is often sold sweetened, with added flavors, or with fruit or jam at the bottom of the container. The two common types found in stores are set-style yogurt and Swiss-style yogurt. Set-style yogurt is poured into containers to set, while Swiss-style yogurt is stirred before packaging. Either type can have fruit added to make it sweeter.
Lassi is a popular drink from India made from stirred yogurt that can be salty or sweetened with sugar (or sometimes honey) and combined with fruit. The texture can vary.
Commercial yogurts often have large amounts of sugar or other sweeteners. Some have added modified starch, pectin or gelatin. These may be called Swiss-style, but they are not the same as real Swiss yogurt. Some yogurts use whole milk so the cream stays on top. Sweetened and flavored yogurts are common around the world, sold in single-serving plastic cups. Popular flavors include vanilla, honey, and toffee, as well as various fruits.
Straining
Main article: Strained yogurt
Strained yogurt has been poured through a filter, usually made of cloth, to remove the liquid called whey, making it thicker. This is often done at home. Strained yogurt in Middle Eastern countries is called labneh. It is thicker than regular yogurt but thinner than cheese, and can be used in sandwiches.
Some strained yogurts are first boiled to reduce the liquid. A sweet Indian dessert called mishti dahi is a thicker, sweeter version of traditional dahi. In western India, strained yogurt mixed with sugar and spices makes the dessert "shrikhand". Strained yogurt is also a main part of tzatziki, a sauce for gyros and souvlaki sandwiches. Srikhand is an Indian dessert made from strained yogurt, saffron, cardamom, nutmeg and sugar, and sometimes fruits like mango or pineapple.
In North America, strained yogurt is often called "Greek yogurt". Sometimes powdered milk is added instead of straining to make it thick. In Britain, only yogurt made in Greece can be called "Greek".
Beverages
Ayran, doogh ("dawghe" in Neo-Aramaic) or dhallë is a salty drink made from yogurt mixed with water and sometimes salt.
Borhani (or burhani) is a spicy yogurt drink from Bangladesh. It is often served with kacchi biryani at weddings and special meals. It is made from yogurt mixed with mint leaves (mentha), mustard seeds and black rock salt (Kala Namak).
Lassi is a yogurt drink that can be slightly salty or sweet, and may have added flavors like rosewater, mango or fruit juice.
An unsweetened yogurt drink called jogurt is enjoyed with burek and other baked goods in the Balkans. In Europe (including the UK) and the US, sweetened yogurt drinks with fruit and added sugar are common, called "drinkable yogurt". There are also "yogurt smoothies" that have more fruit and are like smoothies.[citation needed]
Production
Yogurt is made by heating milk to a warm temperature so it doesn’t kill the helpful tiny living things that turn milk into yogurt. Special bacteria, usually Streptococcus thermophilus and Lactobacillus bulgaricus, are added to the warm milk. The milk is kept warm for several hours to let the yogurt form.
Sometimes, milk with more solids is used to make the yogurt firmer. This can be done by adding dried milk. The way yogurt is made helps keep it safe by using heat and natural acids. After the yogurt is made, it can be strained to make it thicker by removing some of the liquid.
Microstructure
Yogurt is a thick, smooth food that changes when you stir it or move it. It forms when milk is changed by tiny living things called bacteria. This makes the proteins in the milk clump together, creating the soft, creamy texture of yogurt.
The way yogurt looks and feels depends on how much fat and protein is in the milk used to make it, and how it is processed. Yogurt made from different kinds of milk, like goat or sheep milk, can feel thinner or thicker than yogurt made from cow milk. Some yogurts are stirred during making, which gives them a coarser texture, while others are left undisturbed, keeping a smoother consistency.
Commerce
There are two main types of yogurt for trading between countries. One type is pasteurized yogurt, which is heated to remove bacteria. The other is probiotic yogurt, also called live or active yogurt. This type is heated first, and then special bacteria called Lactobacillus are added before it is packaged. There is also a drinkable version of probiotic yogurt.
In the United States, rules say that milk must be pasteurized before it is made into yogurt. Sometimes, it is heated again to make it last longer, but most commercial yogurts still have live cultures. Yogurt with live cultures can help people who have trouble digesting lactose.
Lactose intolerance
Lactose intolerance is when people have trouble digesting lactose, a sugar found in milk and other dairy products. In 2010, the European Food Safety Authority said that eating live yogurt cultures (lactobacilli) can help people with lactose intolerance. These live cultures can break down the lactose in other dairy foods. Yogurt must have at least 108 live microorganisms per gram to make this claim on labels.
Plant-based products
In the 2000s, people began making yogurt-like foods from plant-based liquids such as soy milk, rice milk, almond milk, and coconut milk. These are created by using special bacteria to ferment the liquids. They can be helpful for people who can't digest lactose well or who choose not to eat animal products, like vegans.
Plant-based liquids are different from regular milk, so these products might taste or feel a little different. In some places, like Europe, companies aren't allowed to call these products "yogurt" because that word is only for foods made from animal milk.
Ant yogurt
Red wood ants are used in Bulgaria and Turkey to make a special kind of yogurt. A few ants are added to warm milk and left to ferment. Scientists think the ants help make the milk sour and allow helpful tiny living things to grow. These tiny living things also help break down the milk to create yogurt.
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