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...
Ellen Meadd says
Hi Rebecca,
I made a batch last night and it is delicious, even better than Siggi’s!! Thank you for your wonderful recipe. I am wondering if I could use skim milk for this in the future and if you have any recommendations about whether/not this is feasible.
Rebecca says
Hi Ellen- I’m inclined to think you’ll get a lower volume yield from skim milk but I haven’t tried it personally! Please let me know if it works for you if you try it. 🙂
Melody Jayde says
hi! love the recipe. can i use greek yogurt instead of skyr as a starter and get a similar texture? i have a greek yogurt that is very high in live active cultures and i am hoping to maximize the probiotics.
Rebecca says
Hi Melody- I have not personally tried that. I’m sure you could get a similar effect, but it wouldn’t necessarily be the same active cultures you get from Skyr.
Ellen Meadd says
Hi Rebecca,
I’m a newbie and liquid rennet is a bit difficult to obtain where I live. Have you used the rennet tablets before and if so, did they work and would you recommend them? Thanks.
Rebecca says
Hi Ellen- Welcome! I have tried vegetable rennet tablets and they work fine, so long as you pulverize them and dissolve them thoroughly. I will advise, however, that you *not* use Junket brand rennet which is sold widely in grocery stores. It is not suitable for this use. 🙂
Mackenzie says
I made this successfully last night. It took longer to heat the milk and cool the milk than expected.
How often do you stir it as it’s heating or cooling? I wanted to do other kitchen tasks like dishes while it heated but wasn’t sure how long I could leave it unattended.
It turned out great though. I ended up straining it overnight and it turned into a consistently like cream cheese — I stirred in some whey and it’s back to yogurt! A 2 for 1 lol 😂
Rebecca says
Thanks so much for taking the time to rate the recipe and let me know you love it, Mackenzie! I stir every couple of minutes just to make sure there is no scorching which would make the whole batch taste off. 🙂
Jenna says
This recipe looks great! How can you use the leftover whey to make english muffin bread? I see the recipe on the website doesn’t have whey included.
Shelby Chapin says
Can I half this recipe?
Rebecca says
Hi Shelby- I haven’t halved it myself, but theoretically it’s possible!
Carrie Connor says
I started this recipe Friday night and let it set overnight. I put it in a colander with double cheesecloth and let it set out on the counter (my house 70 degrees) for around 6 hours. I then put it in the fridge overnight and it’s VERY THICK. This is a great recipe. While it may take a while with all of the “sitting” it has to do, it’s worth it. I also used whole milk and worked perfectly. I’ll definitely be using this recipe again.
Rebecca says
Thanks so much for taking the time to let us know you had success with it, Carrie! I’m so glad you like it!
Dave Klemmer says
I’ve noticed that commercial skyr such as siggi’s has more protein than carbs (which is a great thing for so many people who are trying to lose weight since having more protein than carbs helps with the weight loss process). Also, Painterland Sisters has even more protein per same serving size than siggi’s (yet quite a bit of saturated fat as well).
I was wondering how you determined the amount of protein/carbs/fat of your skyr recipe. Was it an approximate calculation based on the milk that you started with?
Thx, Dave.
Rebecca says
Hi Dave- I used an automatic nutrition calculator. As I’m not a registered dietician or nutritionist, this is the best bet for me. 🙂
Denise L Mccune says
Hello, would love to try and make my own yogurt, wondering where to buy the liquid rennet?
Rebecca says
Hi Denise- I use liquid rennet from the New England Cheesemaking Supply online. Happy Yogurt Making!
Donna Robillard says
What is the probiotic content and which strains are in the culture?
Rebecca says
Hi Donna- I don’t actually know what the probiotic content is, but it’s about equal to the commercial one you’ll use to culture it and the strains are the same. If you have concerns about what probiotic strains are in your final skyr, you’d want to consult the packaging for the skyr you use as your starter culture!
Julie says
How much skyr does one gallon of milk make?
Sarah M says
I have found a brand called Skyr (the brand itself called that, I get it at Sprouts or HEB in TX) lately that’s *so* delicious. It has less additives than Siggis, which is a win in my book!
I was wondering 2 things.
1) what would happen if you used full fat milk?
2) I see different finishing temps for the cooking part in the few recipes I’m finding. I want to use raw milk, so I’m wondering what would be the lowest possible temp to reach? (Yours is one of the lower ones I’ve found, but I’m wondering where the “line” is and why… my nerd brain needs answers, haha!)
Thank you for any help!!
-Sarah
Derek says
I’m not entirely sure, but I’d think that the only result of using whole or full fat milk would be a higher fat content in the finished product. I can’t imagine that it would really affect the end result otherwise. I think most people are inclined to use skim simply because they’re going for the lower fat,
Anne Kimberly says
I love this recipe and have been using it for a few years. Came to love Skyr when I visited Iceland! I do note that the “whipping” really smoothes it alot but as the week goes on it becomes less smooth….. but I love it. I also use the leftover whey to feed my plants in and out! Sometimes I give some to my pets as well…
thank you!
Rebecca says
Thanks so much for taking the time to let me know you love it, Anne! I appreciate the feedback so much!
Renee says
Hello, can I drain this longer than 8 hours? Just trying to figure out my timeliness. Thanks!
Rebecca says
Hi Renee- The longer you drain it, the thicker it will end up being… That said, feel free. 🙂
Bathia says
I’m excited to try this. I’ve made Greek yogurt for a long time but I love skyr. My question is can I use tablet rennet or powder rennet?
Rebecca says
Hi Bathia! I use liquid rennet for two reasons. First, because I know it’s the right stuff. 🙂 You don’t want to use Junket rennet from the grocery store. You definitely want to use vegetable/cheesemaking rennet. If you’d like, you can substitute tablet rennet dissolved in a little cool water for the liquid, but you’ll want to check the setting power of the rennet and use whatever the equivalent amount is to the liquid rennet. Happy Skyr making!
Ilana says
Easy and amazing! I eat skyr most days for breakfast and the freshness and creaminess of home made was more like a dessert!! I didn’t even add sugar, just fresh berries. Yum!!
Rebecca says
Thank you so much for taking the time to rate the recipe and let me know you love it, Ilana! I so appreciate it! And you’re right. The homemade stuff really is so creamy!!
Tina says
I’m planning on making this. I have been making homemade yogurt for years. I’m confused a bit though. Do you not chill the curd before draining? Traditional homemade yogurt or Greek is always chilled for a few hours before any straining or using.
Rebecca says
Hi Tina- This is a little different because the rennet helps set the curd a bit more. 🙂 No chill needed!
Jamie says
I just made my first batch, delicious! Have you ever tried subbing some of the milk with coconut milk for coconut flavored yogurt?
Rebecca says
Hi Jamie! I have not tried that but it sounds delightful! Please let me know how it works out if you give a go!
Khadijah Liau says
My Skyr turns out grainy & very sour. I heat the milk slowly in the microwave—around 30 minutes at a low temperature. I also left it in the warm oven for 12 hours. Strained, whipped, strained again. Still grainy & very sour. Was going to leave in the oven perhaps 8 hours to test the sourness. Any other suggestions?
Khadijah Liau says
Figured it out. In addition to straining every step in the process, I used the oven method & cut the incubation period to 8 hours. Terrific recipe!
Hannah Lyon says
Hi, how do you re-culture the yogurt that’s made? I’d like to be able to use the yogurt I make to keep making more and more, etc. Thanks!
Rebecca says
Hi Hannah- You’ll want to reculture it at least once every 7 days to make sure you have enough of the live and active cultures to create the new batch. 🙂 Otherwise, you can use the homemade skyr just like you would use the commercial one to reculture it!