Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Yogurt, the old way

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Yogurt, the old way

    From "The Breakaway Cook"
    by Eric Gower

    Baked Peas With Tarragon,Yogurt and Pistachios.


    Posted on Thu, Oct. 16, 2008


    Yogurt, the old way
    By Joyce Gemperlein
    For The Inquirer


    Our daughter refers to my childhood as "the olden days," so when I
    told her that the first time I tasted yogurt was in college, she acted
    as though I had said I didn't have shoes until I was 18 years old.
    "No way!" she said.

    Funny she should say that, because "no-whey" yogurt - the unflavored
    version drained for a minimum of four hours - is a key component of
    one of her favorite pasta dishes.

    To millions of American children, yogurt is a fact of life - and
    dessert. Rather than knowing it as an ingredient, they think it edible
    only if it contains added sugar in the form of flavorings, fruit,
    cereal, or even bits of candy.

    In the olden days, before the American marketplace pumped it full of
    such things, yogurt was a happy, healthy, calcium-rich union of
    certain bacteria and milk that originated in the truly olden days of
    the Neolithic period in Central Asia. It then was popular in ancient
    Greece, Rome and Egypt - and still is. (Tzatziki, the
    yogurt-garlic-dill dip, has a widespread modern following, for
    example.)

    In the United States, though, yogurt began to infiltrate the
    refrigerators of everyday Americans only in the 1970s. Before that it
    was identified with immigrants, then with hippies living off the grid
    in California.

    But even before yogurt was groovy, enterprising new Americans Sarkis
    Colombosian and his wife, the former Rose Krikorian, saw that it could
    be profitable.

    In 1929, the couple began what is now our robust yogurt culture by
    founding the nation's first yogurt manufacturing plant, Colombo & Sons
    Creamery, at their small farm in Andover, Mass.

    Their product, full-fat and non-flavored, was based on Rose's
    traditional recipe from Turkish Armenia, the immigrants' home
    country. At first, it sold only to European transplants familiar with
    its taste and virtues. But by 1940, according to the Massachusetts
    Historical Society, it was selling well throughout New England.

    Over the years the company grew, expanded its offerings, and soon had
    to compete with the product of another immigrant, Daniel Carcasso from
    Portugal, whose company, Danone (now Dannon), pioneered fruit-flavored
    yogurt in 1947. (Dannon is the world's top-selling brand. The
    Colombosian family sold its company in 1993 to the General Mills
    conglomerate.)

    Now yogurt is as ubiquitous a refrigerator item as milk - be it plain,
    laced with fruit jam and/or cereal and/or candy, frozen like ice
    cream, packed into tubes, carbonated to attract more tweens, and, just
    recently for baby boomers, marketed as a "probiotic" aid to digestion
    and the immune system. There are pet snacks covered in it, skin
    conditioners and make-up containing what purports to be yogurt; it's
    an ingredient in toothpaste and cereal.

    All of which is why U.S yogurt sales doubled to $5 billion from 1998
    to 2006, according to the market tracking company Euromonitor.

    Shopping for yogurt requires a glossary: Swiss or custard style is
    mixed with fruit; sundae-style has fruit on the bottom; probiotic
    means it contains bacteria friendly to the digestive system.

    But my favorite type of yogurt is the triple-strained, thick,
    unflavored Greek style, which, happily, is also becoming more
    available. (Look for the Chobani, Fage and Oikos brands.)

    However, since purchasing a yogurt strainer, a strange-looking,
    conical footed contraption made of white plastic and fine plastic
    mesh, I discovered that supermarket brands (but not the type that
    contain gelatin) can be drained to produce similar yogurt - sweet and
    creamy with consistencies ranging from thicker to cheeselike.

    As many people of Middle Eastern descent know, it is delicious eaten
    cold, perhaps with a drizzle of honey and figs in season, among other
    ways.

    It is also an excellent ingredient, but remember:

    Bring it to room temperature before including it in a hot dish so that
    it does not separate.

    Don't boil anything containing yogurt. Heat the mixture gently just
    until it is warm or it will curdle nastily.

    Don't heat it to more than 120 degrees if you want to preserve its
    beneficial bacteria. Stirring it in at the end of a cooking process is
    best.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X