Jigs,
I don't own one but from looking at it, I think the bread proofer feature means it stays at a low constant temperature.
I saw a bread/ Yogurt thing in a catalog.
Your new oven looks cool.
I agree with Cinisajoy that it probably keeps a constant, not too warm temperature.
Jigs, what kind of curd are you talking about? I make quark, which makes curds, and yes, I can add some quark to milk to make more quark. That works for yogourt too.
Taxlady, thx for your reply. I guess it may be a problem in translation. In Nepal, we call yogurt here Dahi, and that's translated into english as curd. So I guess I don't know what the machine is talking about. And what's quark? I know that from Physics and my machine does not have a particle-accelerator mode (at least I don't think it does).
It's a dairy product that is made from thick, sour milk that is strained. It's quite similar to cream cheese. That's how I usually use it. Since our milk doesn't sour properly, we have to inoculate the milk with the lacto bacillus (It's the same one as in sour cream.) and let it sit at room temperature until it gets thick. You can just strain the thick, soured milk, or you can heat it in the oven, at ~65°C, for a while to let the curds and whey separate and then strain it. It's popular in German speaking countries and Scandinavia.
Have you ever made yogourt? The trickiest part is keeping it a constant 110-115°F for 6 to 12 hours. I'm pretty sure that's what your new oven will do.I see. Still don't know if my MWO makes yogurt or not - ha! That would be wild.
Have you ever made yogourt? The trickiest part is keeping it a constant 110-115°F for 6 to 12 hours. I'm pretty sure that's what your new oven will do.