Yogurt? Yep. It’s alright as long as it isn’t soupy. Greek yogurt? I love it. It’s nice and thick. But Icelandic yogurt is another thing entirely. Holy moly. I am obsessed with it.
It’s as thick as Greek yogurt and smoother. In fact, it’s silky smooth. It is so filling that a serving of it holds me from early in the morning until I finally get around to lunch. It’s more substantial than Greek yogurt by quite a bit and regular yogurt by a mile. A MILE, I TELL YOU!
Icelandic Yogurt -also known as Skyr- when served side by side with plain, unsweetened Greek and regular yogurt,
is much less tart and tangy. It’s far more difficult to find in stores, though, sold with a pretty hefty price tag by the brand Siggi’s in mostly higher end grocery stores like Whole Foods, Wegman’s, and more with robust health food sections. Targets often carry it, too, but oof, that price.
What sets Icelandic Yogurt apart from Greek Yogurt (or Syrian Yogurt, depending on who you ask…) is complex. Greek yogurt is merely strained while Icelandic Yogurt is both strained and whipped. The resulting texture is far lighter, far fluffier, and far silkier while still being lower in fat naturally (since it is made with skim milk) and higher in protein.
The methodology is much the same as making yogurt in the customary way, but with one tiny little added ingredient; three drops of liquid rennet. That’s right; the same rennet used in mozzarella and other cheesemaking. Those three little drops make the difference between the sometimes grainy Greek yogurt and the ethereally smooth Icelandic yogurt.
The process is quite easy.
How to Make Icelandic Yogurt or Siggi’s CopyCat:
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- Bring the milk up to a high temperature, then let it slowly lower to 110°F. Stir some of the warm milk into leftover Icelandic Yogurt or some store bought vanilla or plain Siggi’s yogurt or Skyr. Stir that into the pot of warm milk, then add the three drops of rennet stirred into cool, chlorine free water and stir that in. Let it set in a warm place for 12 hours, or until it looks like this…
- Line a colander perched over a bowl with a double layer of cheesecloth or with a flour sack towel or plain, unbleached muslin. Any of those options is fine! Scoop the curd into the bowl. Don’t pour until you reach the very end of the pot or it will damage the delicate curd.
- Let the curd drain in a cool place, undisturbed for between 4 and 8 hours, reserving the whey that drains from it.
- The strained curds will be fairly firm. Transfer them to a bowl and whip them with a hand mixer, adding in 1 tablespoon of the reserved whey at a time until it reaches your desired, silky consistency.
- Sweeten to taste when you serve, being sure to reserve 1/2 cup of the leftover Icelandic Yogurt to make your next batch!
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That’s not so bad, is it?
Cook’s Notes
- This recipe -like Siggi’s- is made with skim milk, making it ultra low fat and ultra high protein.
- Ideally, you’ll use plain or vanilla bean Siggi’s to help culture your batch. If you can’t find it, use plain or vanilla Greek yogurt as your “starter culture”.
- I use one vanilla bean per batch, splitting it down the center, scraping it, and adding both the beans and the scraped ‘caviar’ to the pan.
- Do use a non-reactive pan (i.e. Stainless steel, enameled cast-iron, or copper) to bring your milk to the scalding temperature. This prevents off flavours.
- Take care to slowly bring your milk up to temperature or you’ll face the dreaded “scorch” on the bottom of the pan. If you realize you’ve forgotten to stir very well over the bottom of the pan or you tried to bring it up to temperature over constant high heat, all is not lost… simply don’t scrape up the scorched bits on the bottom.
- I start my temperature at low until the milk reaches blood temperature before moving it to medium until it is hot to the touch, then to high to bring it up to 185°F.
- Let the milk drop back down to 110°F slowly. I do this by letting it sit on a cool burner in my approximately 65°F kitchen. Once it reaches that temp, you stir a ladle full of the warm milk into your 1/2 cup of Siggi’s or leftover yogurt, stir that into the warm milk, then stir together the rennet and water before adding it and incorporating it to the warm milk.
- Cover the pan with a tight fitting lid and top with a double thickness of towel, resting the whole lot in a warm place or simply cover the pan and put in an empty oven with the light on for 12 hours.
- Scoop the curd into a colander lined with a double thickness of cheesecloth or a single thickness of butter muslin or floursack towel and let strain in a cool place for 4 to 8 hours, being sure to place a bowl underneath to collect the whey that drains off. While you’re scooping it, remove the vanilla bean.
- Add the strained curd to a bowl and mix mercilessly with a hand mixer, adding 1 tablespoon of the reserved whey at a time until it is silky smooth and the desired consistency.
- Don’t throw out that remaining whey! You can use this for lovely homemade English Muffin bread.
- Sweeten your Icelandic Yogurt to taste when serving instead of sweetening the entire batch.
- Hang onto 1/2 cup of the Icelandic Yogurt to “recycle” into the next batch!
Use this to make Icelandic Yogurt:
- Stainless steel soup pot
- Whisk
- liquid measuring cup
- hand mixer
- butter muslin or doubly thick cheesecloth
- Liquid Rennet
- Vanilla Bean
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Icelandic Yogurt {Siggi’s Copycat Skyr}
Rate RecipeIngredients
- 1 gallon skim milk
- 1 vanilla bean slit lengthwise, caviar scraped
- 2/3 cup Siggi's" plain or vanilla skyr
- 4 drops liquid vegetable rennet or 2 drops double strength rennet
- 1/4 cup cool non-chlorinated water
Instructions
- Add the full gallon of skim milk, the vanilla bean, and the vanilla bean caviar to a large, stainless steel or enameled pot with a nice, thick, heavy bottom. Slowly bring the milk to a steady simmer over a medium-high burner, stirring frequently to prevent scalding on the bottom of the pan until it reaches 185°F-190°F; about 15 to 20 minutes.
- If it does scald, take care not to stir the scalded bits into the rest of the milk. As soon as it hits the target temperature, remove the pan from the burner and allow it to cool to 110°F. Whisk together the Skyr or Siggi's and 1 cup of the 110°F milk until perfectly smooth. Pour that into the pot and stir until fully incorporated.
- Use a small whisk to combine the rennet and cool water then immediately stir that into the pot until fully incorporated; about 1 minute. Put the lid onto the pan. Double up a thick bath towel and lay it over the pot. Put the pot in a warm, draft-free place or simply put it lidded pan into an empty oven with the light on for about 12 hours.
- Now you have options. You can line a colander with a double thickness of cheesecloth, use a large nut milk bag, or sew a bag of muslin with straps at the top. Spoon the skyr curds into whichever of those you choose, removing the vanilla bean as you go. You do want to spoon and not pour the curd as it is delicate enough that pouring it could break it. Let the cheesecloth rest int he colander or suspend it and allow it to drip over a bowl. You want this place to be rather cool, so a mudroom, refrigerator, or cool room is your best choice. You let this drip for 4 to 8 hours.
To Store:
- Transfer to jars or an airtight container and store in the refrigerator for up to 4 weeks. Sweeten as you serve**. You'll be able to re-culture this homemade skyr, but should do so within 2 1/2-3 weeks of it being made for optimal results.
For silky smooth skyr:
- Hang onto the whey that drains from it as it thickens. Transfer the skyr to a mixing bowl before jarring it. Beat mercilessly with a hand or stand mixer, dribbling in a tablespoon of whey at a time until it is silky, smooth, and perfect.
If you want to pre-sweeten this skyr:
- You can draw off the amount you'll use to reculture it and leave that unsweetened. Sweeten the skyr as you beat it mercilessly in the stand mixer before you add any whey. Then adjust accordingly. Honey and maple syrup are both beautiful choices, but my preference is for dark maple syrup.
Nutrition
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
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Reader's Thoughts...
Stephanie says
Can you use lactose free milk for this process?
Rebecca says
Hi Stephanie! I have not tried it with lactose free milk, but theoretically, it should be possible! It’d be easier than trying a Greek style yogurt because the rennet will kind of help make up for some of the lack of lactose. Please do let me know how it works out for you if you try it!
Karen Smith says
If I could give this recipe a 10 I would.Finally I can make yogurt consistently at home that has body & creaminess. Rennet is the answer
Rebecca says
Thanks so much for taking the time to rate the recipe and let me know you love it, Karen. I appreciate the 10 star rating. 🙂
Melanie says
Hi Rebecca! Thanks so much for the recipe! I use it in my insta pot. Simple. Mine came out like cream consistency. Delicious, but I want a bit thicker. So I’ll try half whole milk and half heavy whip cream and twice the rennet (4 drops). I’m diabetic and Siggis helps my sweet tooth. I’m using a handy yogurt strainer on Amazon. I just ordered a thermometer that beeps when desired temp is reached. It drove me nuts watching my old thermometer creep. You made a big difference with this recipe. Thanks!
Rebecca says
I’m so glad you like it, Melanie!! Thanks for taking the time to let me know! I wonder if your rennet is regular strength vs. double strength?
Brandi Huesmann says
Much better tasting and consistency than I’ve found from other Skyr recipes online! Thank you so much for sharing it!
One question, however. After my husband and I honeymooned in Iceland and fell in love with Skyr, we got our entire household hooked on it. So rather than making a new batch every 3-4 days, I’d love to try to make a double batch of this recipe.
Would you recommend doubling all of the ingredients then? I don’t want to waste two gallons of milk on an experiment if you know the answer already! Thanks again!
Rebecca says
Hi Brandi- I have not actually doubled this because it works find for our household. Theoretically, it should work quite well, but I haven’t tried it! If you do, please let me know how it works out for you. And thank you for taking the time to rate the recipe and let me know you love it!
Carol Saghir says
Looks awesome! Will it work with a nut milk like Milkadamia?
Rebecca says
Hi Carol- I’m sorry to say I have no idea whether it works with nut milks! Please let me know how it works out if you try it!
Karlie says
Hi Rebecca, do you just use whatever skim milk you can find at a grocery store for this recipe? I found another recipe wherein the author opined that it doesn’t work very well unless you can find low temp pasteurized milk: have you encountered the same issue?
Rebecca says
Hi Karlie- I simply bought a gallon of Wegman’s brand skim milk and used that. 🙂 I’m not sure whether it was low-temp pasteurized, but I do know it wasn’t UHT pasteurized. In other words, the stuff I bought was refrigerated and not shelf-stable. I wonder if the other poster lives in an area where shelf-stable UHT milk is more common? It is a thing in certain places!
Karlie says
Maybe that’s the case! I As far as I can tell, shelf-stable UHT milk is not even allowed where I live, so maybe it won’t be a concern. I’ll see if I can just use my normal milk brand.
Thanks for your response. 🙂
Martha says
Thank you for posting this recipe! I recently discovered Siggi’s Triple Cream yogurt and LOVE it. Then the quarantine happened. So, it’s more difficult to find in stores now. If you love the triple cream variety as well and want to try to make your own, but are unsure about the process, you can read a little bit more about it on the label. Just peel it down from the tab on the side of the container. I’m hoping this will help me as I’ve never made yogurt before. Fingers crossed! :O)
Janet says
I have made this four times now and it is my family’s favorite. Now I keep it on hand always and it’s so easy to make and always consistently wonderful! My husband says it’s better than store bought! Love this!!!!
Rebecca says
Thank you so much, Janet!! I’m so glad you and your family love it. I do, too, and I haven’t made it in a while, so this comment is timely <3
Bianca says
Thank you for sharing this recipe! My boyfriend eats a Siggi’s everyday and I want to start making it homemade to save money and to also avoid all of the single-use plastic waste. I shopping on a yogurt culture website, but then I had an aha moment that I could just use a Siggi’s as my starter culture. I have an Instant Pot that I was going to make it in, but after reading your instructions it doesn’t appear that this recipe requires the consistent (thermophilic process) heat to culture it? During this time of year my kitchen temperature is about 60-65 degrees – will this be warm enough to just culture in the oven with just the light on and no heat? Or do you recommend I set the Instant Pot at a low setting temperature to culture? Thank you!
Rebecca says
Hi Bianca- The beauty of using the oven method is that the light generates enough heat to sloooooooowly lower the temp. This is ideal because you have that first higher temp that drops gently and yields a ‘sweeter” end yogurt. You can, of course, feel free to try it both ways to see which you prefer!
Agathe says
Just made this recipe and I’m impressed! Turns out really good even without any sugar or flavouring added! The only thing that could be improved is that my skyr has tiny ‘grains’ even after being whipped with the whey. Any idea of why it is so? Thanks for your recipe!
Rebecca says
Thank you, Agathe! I wonder if your rennet was perhaps more powerful than mine? If so, it may have formed tiny curds that were a little tougher to whip in. Another potential cause would be if anything acidic came into contact with the milk. That would also form little curds: think ricotta. Let’s see if we can figure this out for you, but I’m glad you liked it anyway!
Marion says
Hi you say to use the whey for the English muffin bread and I’d like to know what it’s supposed to replace in the recipe of your website ? Thank you
Tanya says
Hi. I made this recipe recently. It tastes great. I have encountered a problem wit the finished product: after 2 days in the fridge it separated and is runny? Any ideas?
Rebecca says
Hi Tanya- I’m betting that it’s just whey separating out. You should be able to whisk or briskly stir it back in just fine!
خشکشویی says
thanks
Susan says
The best Siggi’s skyr is the 9% double cream. Any idea how to make that. Next best is the 4%. I never buy 0%. Skim milk is not good for you. Carb to fat ratio is too high. Contributes to obesity epidemic in this country. It’s sugar, not fat, that causes obesity, inflammation, diabetes, heart diseas.
Rebecca says
Susan- It’s interesting that you’re asking me to develop a recipe for you and still rating my recipe 3 stars without having tried it. I am not into shaming people for their food choices. I honestly don’t assign moral value to food, and this is a space where I encourage everyone to choose the foods they like best/that make them feel best. As for how to make the one you’d like to make, I encourage you to play around with the basic method here subbing in whatever fat content dairy you prefer. As it is, I just plain enjoy this yogurt as it is made. 🙂
Tracey says
Just thought you should know…I make this with fresh goats milk and if you accidentally forget it while it is chilling (a day and 1/2, not 6 hours. Oops) it makes the best sour cream you have ever tasted!
Rebecca says
That is hilarious (I’m so sorry) and good to know! I would love to try that!
Greg says
That sounds like a great recipe. Siggi’s Triple Cream Vanilla and Raspberry Skyr on my favorite. Do you have any idea how I could make the Triple Cream Vanila Skyr?
Rebecca says
Hi Greg- I’d sub in part whole milk and part heavy cream for the skim milk and that oughta do it!
rbbtrrdg says
I’ve found that large coffee filters are the best way to strain yogurt. After straining, the filters release the yogurt cleanly and then you just throw them away – no mess. I place the filter in a strainer or small colander set over a container, spoon in the yogurt, cover it with Stretch Tight plastic food wrap, (snug the plastic wrap on the top of the yogurt to keep the air out), then put it in the refrigerator overnight to drain. The next morning, my yogurt is the perfect consistency. I make my yogurt with 2 cups heavy cream and 4 cups of whole milk, bring to 195 degrees, cool to 110 degrees, whisk in 1/4 to 1/2 cup yogurt, then process for 10 hours in my yogurt maker. I’m wondering what benefit I’ll get by adding the rennet. I already have a thick, creamy yogurt. Does the rennet increase the nutritional benefits?
Stacy Greene says
I’m not familiar with rennet. Is it necessary for making Icelandic yogurt? I make Greek-style in the Instant Pot all the time and have never used that. Thanks!
Rebecca says
Hi Stacy- It is actually necessary for making Icelandic Yogurt. That’s part of what makes it different from Greek style which is merely strained. You can purchase rennet from cheesemaking supply places online or even from Amazon. You just don’t want to use junket rennet which is basically for custard making. 🙂
Barb Dauncey says
Would you know all of the nutritional info? Serving size? Protein, carbs, fat? Thank you
Rebecca says
Hi Barb! You can definitely plug this recipe into a free nutritional calculator online! There are 12 servings (approximately) in each batch, and each serving is 156 kCal. I hope this helps!
Barb says
Thank you, I did enter the info into a converter, now I have 3 calorie amounts per serving, the recipe says 114, my converter says. 130, and you say 156. Either way, I made it yesterday, I wasn’t aware that the rennet could be double or triple strength (first timers mistake) I used 4 double strength drops, but it came out perfect, was very easy and it tastes EXACTLY like Siggis, I am thrilled!
Thank you for sharing.
Rebecca says
Heh. Let’s call it 130. I made a typo when I said 156. I meant to type 136. I’m glad you like it!
Sean says
Just delicious! Cream smooth and yummy. Made mine in my Instant Pot like I make my yogurt every week. Your directions were easy to follow. Plan to make the English muffins recipe with some of the leftover whey.
Ashpazkhaneha says
delicious and perfect thanks for this recepy