



🥛 Unleash Your Inner Yogurt Artisan!
The Yogourmet 104 Electric Yogurt Maker is expertly designed to maintain the perfect temperature for creating healthy, natural yogurt. It features a dishwasher-safe inner container with a seal-tight lid to ensure freshness, and comes complete with user-friendly instructions and a thermometer for precise temperature monitoring.
| ASIN | B000N25AGO |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,896,192 in Kitchen & Dining ( See Top 100 in Kitchen & Dining ) #442 in Yogurt Makers #29,361 in Breads & Bakery |
| Brand Name | Yogourmet |
| Capacity | 2 Quarts |
| Color | White |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (809) |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00056828121076 |
| Included Components | Yogourmet Electric Yogurt Maker |
| Item Type Name | householdsupplies |
| Item Weight | 0.55 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Yogourmet |
| Material | Plastic |
| Model Name | Yogourmet Electric Yogurt Maker |
| Model Number | 104 |
| Operation Mode | Automatic |
| Part Number | 402 |
| Product Care Instructions | Dishwasher Safe |
| UPC | 885106605874 056828121076 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 1 year manufacturer |
D**N
Superior to Donvier, Heats properly, delivers consistent results
For those considering a yogurt maker, do recognize that you have to prepare the milk first, then you place the milk mixture into this unit. The purpose of this unit (and all yogurt makers I've seen) is to keep your culturing milk at 110F 4-24 hours, until the consistency and flavor is where you want it. It is an easy process once you do it a couple times, but the first time may be a little overwhelming. The second and third times, however, you will wonder what you were worried about, it's really very easy, and very worth it. I bought this yogurt maker after trying the Donvier and enjoying the process of making my own yogurt, but wanting larger batches. So very glad I did! I never would have realized the problems with the Donvier unit. First, the Donvier does not reach 110F, as is needed to make the usual yogurts, such as Greek, Bulgarian ("normal" yogurt), and so on. These are thermophilic yogurts, and require incubation at 110F or very close. I made batch after batch, and to get them to set well, I had to incubate for 12 hours or more, but then they were too sour for my taste. I had much better success with the Yogourmet, but attributed to just having gotten better at the method. HOWEVER, when I ordered high quality yogurt cultures from Cultures for Health (not just using a bit of store yogurt or the Yogourmet direct set starter), the detailed instructions made it clear that the incubation MUST be at 110F. I thought nothing of that, and went ahead with my first batch of Bulgarian yogurt in my Donvier, since your initial batch is smaller than usually done in the Yogourmet. It was ruined. Goat milk yogurt and cows milk yogurt. Neither set properly, and both smelled very sour. So I set up both yogurt makers to incubate some water and check the temperature. They ran for 3 hours on the counter, and then I checked the temp. 100F in the Donvier, 110F in the Yogourmet. Tried again an hour later, same result. Luckily, I had followed the CfH directions on their cultures very carefully, and saved half the powdered culture JUST IN CASE. So, SO glad I did. Set up a new batch in my Yogourmet, using two smaller glass jars instead of the large plastic insert so I could do goat and cow yogurts simultaneously. The Yogourmet activated the cultures and set both versions perfectly. I've since made batch after batch of both Bulgarian and Greek yogurts, many with goat milk and many with cow milk, in my Yogourmet with no trouble. The flavor is excellent, and with some practice on incubation times for the different types of milk, the consistency is usually perfect or darn near! (Goat milk is more difficult to get to set thickly, and many people use powdered milk to achieve this, but I do not, since from what I understand, all powdered milks contain oxidized cholesterol. Giving the YoGo extra time on the goats milk seems to work just fine. Bulgarian is still a little thinner for me, but the Greek sets up pretty thickly.) (The second problem with the Donvier is that the bottles appear to be BPA, which is usually easily identified as a clear (or colored clear) hard plastic, tolerant to heating, with #7 on the bottom. While some still say BPA is safe, I disagree, and nearly all agree that BPA should not be used to heat food, which exactly the purpose in the Donvier Yogurt Maker.) I will be getting rid of my Donvier and the extra jars. I'm actually online to buy another Yogourmet so I can make large batches of goat and cow yogurts simultaneously. You will enjoy your Yogourmet!
B**O
Great Yogurt Maker for people on the SCD Diet treating an IBD (Tips / Experience / Equipment Included)
*** A LITTLE BACKGROUND ON ME AND SCD *** I personally have Crohn's Disease and I am on a lot of heavy medications to keep me healthy and out of the hospital. Even still I do not have good control of my symptoms. About two months ago I was on an IBD forum and I saw someone mention in passing that they love their SCD yogurt. It was very casual in mid comment for them, but for me.. I never heard of it?!?! This lead me on a quest to buy the book and a couple other cooking books on the diet and google like crazy on the topic. Early on it seemed like the most complicated part of this whole diet is this homemade yogurt that is fermented for 24 hours to build up massive amounts of probiotics. Some people skip this step and realize the diet alone is not enough. The other steps help and are important, but it is no where near as effective as taking the yogurt too. Most of the amazing effects of this diet come from this yogurt, so it is very important to take. I decided a few weeks ago to try making SCD yogurt to help reduce my CD symptoms. For those that do not know what SCD is (Specific Carbohydrate Diet), it is a diet that focuses on building up the beneficial bacteria in your intestines and starving out the detrimental bacteria in a attempt to reduce your symptoms and ultimately "IBD remission". This is the book here on amazon http://www.amazon.com/Breaking-Vicious-Cycle-Intestinal-Through/dp/0969276818 Before this began, I was already a believer in probiotics and my doctor (as well as myself) have seen the positive benefits with IBD patients. However, the results have been all over the place and not super effective in my case. When I read that the amount of probiotics in SCD yogurt is approximately 50 times stronger than most probiotic supplements, "...you'll get 708 Billion beneficial bacteria and that's about 50 times more than that claimed for a typical 15 billion capsule.", I realized the potency of this yogurt. I have read somewhere that there are a few trillion bacteria in your entire intestines so when you take a small 15 billion beneficial bacteria probiotic pill, it's like throwing a stone into the ocean. While this yogurt makes a much more sizable impact (50 times greater). That is when the light bulb when on that I have been doing probiotics all wrong up until now. ---------------------------------- *** THE EQUIPMENT *** Therefore, before I started this diet I wanted to invest the money in a yogurt maker all the other equipment I might need and learn how to make it. I am the type to get very precise with my hobbies :D One does not need to purchase all of this equipment to get started, all they need is the yogurt maker only. * [Yogourmet Electric Yogurt Maker] http://www.amazon.com/Yogourmet-104-Electric-Yogurt-Maker/dp/B000N25AGO I settled on this device for a few of reasons. It has a good SCD track record in the community. They last for years. This model makes 2 quarts of yogurt at a time instead of a lot of other models which makes tiny baby jars which can be finicky to fill and more frequent to make. The downside (to me) was the plastic interior container. I wanted glass instead. I found a couple of replacements online and finally found the best one... read below. * [Glass Jar Replacement that fits the Yogourmet Machine perfectly!] (This is not sold on amazon sadly, but google "DigestiveWellness Yogourmet Glass Jar" to find it. Sadly, the first jar I bought was an Anchor Hocking jar on Amazon and while it did fit. It was very tight, the lid didn't seal at all and the glass was prone to chipping easily.. I cracked glass into my yogurt the first week and I knew it was chip sensative.. avoid those jars! This new jar (the digestive wellness one) has a tight fitting flat lid has perfect breathing room around edges for the hot water to flow around and is ideal for this machine. I bought 2 myself. * [Lutron Lamp Dimmer] http://www.amazon.com/Lutron-TT-300H-WH-Electronics-Plug-In-Dimmer/dp/B0000BYEF6/ref=cm_cr-mr-title When you do a lot of homework on this stuff you realize there is literally NO yogurt maker on the market that I have seen that does not fluctuate in temperature. You need to maintain 110 degrees F the entire 24 hour fermentation process. Depending on the internal temperature of your house it can be much hotter than those 110F which is bad. Anything over 110F starts to kill off the good bacteria which is the entire purpose of making it in the first place. This dimmer allows me dial heat up and down depending on the climate. Right now I have it about 1/10 of the way slid down to maintain 110F. * [ThermoWorks ChefAlarm] http://www.amazon.com/ThermoWorks-TX-1100-ChefAlarm-Red/dp/B00EHNH3JC/ref=cm_cr-mr-title I want to first state right away this is very expensive and is not required to do this. Yogourmet comes with a small analog thermometer and you can easily buy nice digital ones for around 20 bucks. You can easily just babysit you pot during the cooking/cooling process with your analog thermo and have no need for this. However, WOW... this ChefAlarm makes this process EASY! This is one of the best digital cooking thermometers on the market (google around). What makes this so great it is has both a HIGH and a LOW temp alarm. Which means I can walk away and be distracted while I make my yogurt. I set high alarm at 180F and low alarm at 110F. The thermo probe has a nice clip to go on the side of the pot. Not many units have both alarms on market and some of the other units on market that have both alarms can cost much much more. * [GI Prostart - Yogurt Culture Starter] http://www.amazon.com/GI-ProHealth-PS-ProStart/dp/B008YX6UGS There is a lot of Yogurt Starters on the market. You can even use a few over the counter yogurts to start your yogurt. I settled on this one, because I found some positive reviews of people with IBD who used it with success. The price seems high upfront, but when you realize how many batches it can make (80x 2Quart batches... 160 quarts of yogurt) you realize the price is not to bad especially compared to buying store bought starter yogurt. It is important to keep this stuff refrigerated and it also ships refrigerated so shipping can cost around 10 bucks. What is great about this starter is you can make non-dairy yogurts too (like almond milk or soy). So this is my setup! I took it over the top.. especially for a novice... but I read a lot of forums and a lot of tips and I knew this was something I wanted to dive head first into. ---------------------------------- *** THE RESULTS! *** I am eating 1 cup of yogurt per morning. My first batch lasts about 6 days. I normally go to the bathroom about 6-15 times per day on average (even with all my medications) with my CD (Crohn's Disease). Within the first 24 hours of taking this I felt some intestinal aches and pains, but I realized my body is going to have to get used to this powerhouse probiotic. After the end of day two I realized I had only went to the bathroom 3 times. This was already shocking to me, but I reserved judgment...after all, good day flukes happen with CD. Day 3 & 4 I went to the bathroom 2-3 times each day only! I instantly saw this was the yogurt working in grand fashion. I noticed I was feeling gassier than I normally do, which I am not a fan of.... but I am a bigger fan of not going number 2 dozens of times a day. Day 5-6 (My first batch lasts about 6 days.) I started feeling bad... really bad. I went to the bathroom about 15-20 times a day. Day 6 I was sickly feeling. I decided to call off the yogurt making process for a few days until I recovered. I was confused by the results. How could I do so well and then do so bad? A few days later I decided to start the process back up again. Same results first 4 days I felt great last 2 days sick as a dog. At this point I knew that my yogurt must be spoiling in some way by those last 2 days. It smells fine, looks fine, tastes fine... but why else would the last 2 days make me sick? This is a natural yogurt with no sugar or preservatives so I can easily imagine how the yogurt would go bad quickly due to this. Now at week 3... I am on a 4 day cooking cycle. I keep my yogurt no more than 4 days in the fridge. Since I have switched to this new cycle... viola... NO MORE PROBLEMS!! I don't have those harsh results anymore on day 5-6 now. I do have to make this yogurt more frequently, but it's worth it for quality of life. ---------------------------------- *** COOKING TIPS *** * The process takes me about 20 minutes start to finish. Then 24 hours of hands free fermenting, followed by 8 hours of cooling in fridge. * When I boil up to 180F I pull the pot off the burner and let it sit about 2 minutes up around 180F to kill off any bad bacteria before I start the fermentation process. * To cool my milk/soy/almond milk I fill my sink with cold tap water and place the hot pot into the sink and stir the mix frequently. I also move the water around the sink to keep it cool on the sides of the pot. I can get the temp down to 110F within a couple minutes... this make this step super fast. * Try not to let the temperature drop to low or the yogurt maker has a hard time getting it back up to 110F. * At 110F I pull the pot out of the sink and mix in the culture (1/8 teaspoon) thoroughly until its perfectly mixed in. Do not add the culture above 110F or it kills off the bacteria. By the time you are done mixing the temp should be around 106-108F from my experience. * If you drop way below 100F you may want to gently warm it back up again... just be careful not to go over 110F. If you mix the culture quickly you will not even need to do this though. * When I first start the process I plug in my yogurt maker so it has time to warm up and I put in 2 cups of hot water (from tap) into the the machine... 2 cups is what is required to work perfectly with the replacement glass I recommend above. By time I am ready to ferment the machine is nice and toasty warm at 110F ready to go. * I recommend you measure the water temp of the yogurt machine to make sure you are not going over 110F. If you are adjust the light dimmer lower and come back and measure again in an hour or two. Keep doing this until you are dialed in perfectly. * Once you find the perfect dimmer setting use a marker and make a small dot next to the location of the slider so you can use this as a quick reference for the future. I have noticed once I find my magic dimmer setting it requires very little worrying in future batches, at least until the outdoor season changes again. ---------------------------------- *** IBD CAUTIONS *** I have spoken to some people who are VERY sensitive to probiotics. As we all know IBD gives us random symptoms to random things... we are not all equal. If you know you are sensitive and get sick from probiotic supplements... I would caution you away from this process since it will only be 50 times stronger. If you know you handle probiotics fine this process may be worth experimenting with. No matter who you are though just be careful when adding new things to your diet.. as always :D I hope this write up helps some people. Please feel free to chime in and comment about the good/bad results you have had with SCD yogurt, perhaps share your techniques too.
P**T
Very good product... pity it was sent with a north american plug, in a 110 volts version. Buyers in India will need a transformer...
P**E
Simple and clear instructions, very easy to use. I tried regular and probiotic cultures, and each time the yogurt turns out perfect. Even made some cream cheese (instructions provided as well), and it turned out great! It requires you to boil then cool milk to the specified temperature, but a thermometer is provided. I'm extremely happy with this product. If you prefer not to use the plastic interior container, you can easily find a large glass cookie jar that you can use instead, and it will work equally well.
M**Z
I am sure this product is brilliant in the USA, but if you order from the U.K consider the following: The product needs an adaptor. In the UK the temperature of the Yogourmet raises till 60º. You end up with pudding rather than yogurt. You will need to get a dimmer to adjust the temperature. It is shipped through Royal Mail, therefore on top of delivery costs you will have to add £3 for customs + £8 RM handling charges. If you want to do scd yogurt consider other options!!
C**A
Super easy to use, and creates the perfect yogurt every time. There is a bit of prep work (heating up the yogurt), but the thermometer that is included makes is easy to do. I keep it in the bin in the water a bit longer, as I like thicker yogurt, but it is a pretty fantastic tool!!
J**D
Please note that if you are purchasing this in the UK you will need to buy an electrical plug socket adapter. Cheap enough but annoying given the cost of the item.I would love to comment on the yogurt produced or even using the maker but having finally got ready with milk heated to make a batch of yogurt I realised that the electrical plug attached is designed for the market in USA/Canada NOT the UK! I have travel adapters but they are of course designed for when I go abroad not the other way around! So, I now await an adapter. Why oh why cannot it be pointed out that one is required in the UK or better still manufactured accordingly as it is clearly marketed in Britain? I was surprised that there was no thermostat especially given the price but fingers crossed - when I finally get to use it that is!
Trustpilot
5 days ago
2 days ago