Shop Products
Houzz Logo Print
melva02

Sour cream

melva02
18 years ago

Hi, I'm from the harvest forum & now also the cooking forum. I make my own yogurt & butter. Last time I was culturing I also tried sour cream. I cultured it with yogurt (after realizing store sour cream doesn't have live cultures) and let it sit at about 80° overnight. Then for a few days I would alternately warm the jar under hot water & add a hot water bottle to the incubating cooler, and forget about it & let it sit at cold temperature (65°) for a while. I thought it would be ruined but it tastes like delicious sour cream, thick & pale yellow with some whey at the bottom.

My question is, have I done anything to make it unsafe to eat? My understanding is that once the lactic acid bacteria start winning the war for survival in there, nothing else wants to grow. I know you can't get too sick off spoiled milk, but I just want to check whether botulism is a concern. As a canner botulism is the one thing that puts the fear of god in me, and the jar was closed with not too much oxygen in there, and I don't know how sour it was how soon. Any dairiers know the story on botulism risk in home dairying?

Thanks for the help & I've enjoyed your posts on cheese that turned up in my sour cream search.

Melissa

Comment (1)

  • mercury12
    18 years ago

    Hi Melissa

    I make sour cream using buttermilk instead of yoghurt. To make sour cream using buttermilk the culturing temperature I found was 18C or 65F. I use the easiyo insulated container to maintain the heat overnight.

    I have never had any problems with my yoghurt or sour cream if I left it more than 24 hours in the water bath

    Helen

    Here is a link that might be useful: yoghurt maker

Sponsored