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You are here: Home » Food Preparation » What’s The Best Cultured Dairy For Probiotics? #AskWardee 044

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What’s The Best Cultured Dairy For Probiotics? #AskWardee 044

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Kefir, yogurt, clabber... With all the options out there, which one is the cultured dairy with the most probiotics?? Watch, listen, or read to find out my answer! | AskWardee.tv

“What is the cultured dairy with the most probiotics… yogurt, kefir, or clabbered milk?” Emily asks.

Great question, Emily!

Like with many ferments, we can reason out a pretty good answer yet… it’s not quite so cut and dried.

In today’s #AskWardee, we’ll talk about which cultured dairy has the most probiotics… and which is the best to eat. Depending on you, your family, and your needs, the answer to one may not be your answer to the other. 🙂

Let’s dive in…

I broadcast #AskWardee live each Wednesday at 10am Pacific (1pm Eastern) on Periscope and Facebook Live. Both the podcast and video replay of this week’s show are below. Enjoy!

Subscribe to #AskWardee on iTunes, Stitcher, YouTube, or the Podcasts app.

The Question

Emily asked me:

What’s good, better, and best when it comes to yogurt, kefir, or clabbered milk? I’m finding it really easy to clabber milk for smoothies. Which one has the most probiotics?

My Answer

Although all of the cultured dairy Emily mentioned — as well as others like sour cream and other regional or heirloom dairy ferments — are fabulous for providing beneficial probiotics, in terms of a count…

So what is the cultured dairy with the most probiotics?

Kefir has the most strains of beneficial yeasts and bacteria, hands down. There is a difference, however, between using powder or grains as your starter and if you make your own at home or purchase. The grains have more beneficial organisms. Purchased kefir has fewer strains of bacteria. (Learn more about kefir grains vs. kefir powder here.)

Yogurt is the next in line after kefir. Depending on the variety of yogurt culture you use, it has a few strains of beneficial bacteria.

Clabbered milk (or clabber) is after that. Though truly, clabber varies from region to region. Pure clabber’s probiotic culture — where you take raw milk and let it culture itself with the organisms that are naturally present — will have whatever the local milk carries. So you can see it could vary widely.

Some people make clabber by adding a probiotic culture to it at the beginning. This not only helps boost it from the beginning (ensuring a good result and possibly a better flavor), but it introduces more organisms.

By the way, if you want yogurt that combines the best of yogurt and clabber… be sure to grab my free thick raw milk yogurt recipe. It uses the yogurt culture AND also keeps the culture that’s naturally present in the raw milk AND it stays nice and thick. (Most yogurt recipes use pasteurized milk; if one were to use raw milk instead, it would turn out runny.) Go here to get the free recipe!

Which is best to eat?

As with so many judgments we make with what to prepare and eat… it’s not always clear cut.

A purist who is seeking to eat the most probiotics, will quite possibly choose kefir.

Yet it’s not wrong, if you’re someone who is balancing other factors of real life when choosing which dairy to ferment, to choose a ferment with fewer total probiotic strains.

How much time you have, what’s the most doable for you, and even which one you and your family prefer eating are all important things to consider.

If that’s you, then really any of the above are fantastic cultured dairy to include in your diet.

Better to make the one that works for you rather than not get around to making another… or better to make the one you like to eat because the other would go to waste, right?

And also… above all things, rather than hang your hat on “the perfect cultured dairy”, try to have a variety of fermented dairy and other ferments in your diet. Not necessarily every day, but in seasons. In this way you’re introducing diverse probiotics into your gut. And no one gets stuck in a rut or bored.

Don’t forget! If you want yogurt that combines the best of yogurt and clabber… be sure to grab my free thick raw milk yogurt recipe.

For More Information:

  • Free Thick Raw Milk Yogurt Recipe
  • Kefir Grains Or Kefir Powder — Which Is Better? #AskWardee 040
  • Where to buy cultures — Cultures For Health

What Is The #AskWardee Show?

The #AskWardee Show is the live weekly show devoted to answering your niggling questions about Traditional Cooking: whether it’s your sourdough starter, your sauerkraut, preserving foods, broth, superfoods or anything else to do with Traditional Cooking or your GNOWFGLINS lifestyle.

I share tips and resources, plus answer your questions about Traditional Cooking!

The Details

When: Wednesdays at 10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern

Where: @TradCookSchool on Periscope or Traditional Cooking School on Facebook

What If You Can’t Make It?

Don’t worry. You can catch the replays or listen to the podcast!

  • Come back here to AskWardee.TV; all replays will be up within hours of airing live; the print notes are always posted at the same time I go live.
  • Follow @TradCookSchool on Periscope or Traditional Cooking School on Facebook to view the replay.
  • Subscribe to the #AskWardee podcast on iTunes, Stitcher, YouTube, or the Podcasts app. While you’re there, be sure to leave a rating and review!

Want To Get YOUR Question Answered?

Here’s how to submit your question. If we answer it on #AskWardee, you’ll get a gift!

Or, you can…

  • Tweet your question to @TradCookSchool on Twitter; use hashtag #AskWardee
  • Send an email to wardee at AskWardee dot tv — add #AskWardee to your email so I know it’s for the show

Please do NOT add future questions for #AskWardee to the comments of this post because they might get missed!

What is the best cultured dairy for probiotics for YOU?

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Posted in: #AskWardee Cultured Dairy Fermenting & Culturing Food Preparation Health & Nutrition Q & A Videos

About Wardee Harmon

Wardee lives in the Boise area of Idaho with her dear family. She's the lead teacher and founder of the Eat God's Way online cooking program as well as the author of Fermenting, Sourdough A to Z, and other traditional cooking books. Eat God's Way helps families get healthier and happier using cooking methods and ingredients from Bible Times like sourdough, culturing, and ancient grains.

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I’m Wardee Harmon and I help Christian families who know they should eat healthy but are tired of complicated, time-consuming, weird-tasting, and unsustainable “healthy” diets…

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