Homemade Vegan Yogurt (Cultured and Creamy)
This Homemade Vegan Yogurt (Cultured and Creamy) will absolutely change your life! It tastes identical to store-bought dairy yogurt, tastes absolutely delicious, and can be used in so many ways from breakfasts to dips to dinners! The process to make it is pretty foolproof, and doesn’t require any special tools or ingredients!
Wow. What a time to be alive where I can make homemade yogurt in my home with no special tools and ingredients, despite what I’ve always heard. Making yogurt from scratch has been a dream of mine. Not, a day dream. I wasn’t writing poems or doodling “Mrs. Yogurt” in my notebooks. It’s just something I’ve always wanted to try. When I took a taste of it though? I might as well have been. Let’s just say this – there’s nothing like that first spoonful of your fresh, creamy, homemade vegan yogurt.
Previously, every time I looked it up, I read that I would need this tool, and that tool, and don’t forget a yogurt maker! A yogurt maker? Who wants to buy a whole yogurt maker? I already have like eight other kitchen gadgets I haven’t used in a year. Then, when I turned vegan, the only way to get vegan yogurt at first was through a starter kit and I wasn’t into it. Years later and life simplified, here we are. Making the most mind blowing and creamy vegan yogurt with water, cashews, probiotics, apple cider vinegar and a blender.
So much to say yet so little time before I bore you. Long story short – make this homemade vegan yogurt. It doesn’t just taste like yogurt – it IS yogurt. It’s a near foolproof, cultured, fermented, good gut bacteria loaded yogurt that’ll satisfy both your tastebuds and your stomach. In fact, I had a mild case of food poisoning from a bad batch of beans that nothing would fix. A few tablespoons of this? I felt so much better.
How to Make Homemade Vegan Yogurt
The process is so straight forward, you might think you’re doing something wrong at first. You’re not. Unless, of course you are, which if you follow my directions, you aren’t :). Blend all the ingredients together, then pour it into a glass bowl or tall jar. Emphasis on glass, I’ll get more into that under “tips”. Now add in your probiotics (open the capsules), then using a wooden spoon or a silicone spatula, stir it in for a good 2 minutes (go pull up a Youtube video, that’ll help).
Cover the bowl or jar with a cheesecloth, or in my case since I ran out, paper towel, and a rubber band. Now, it’s fermenting time! Let it ferment in a nice warm place. I live in the tropics, so it’s always warm! So my countertop did just fine. If you don’t, leave it in your oven with the stove OFF and the oven light on.
Allow the bacteria to culture and everything to ferment for 24-48 hours. I found my sweet spot was around 40 hours, so I just let it sit for the full 48 hours. Feel free by the way to check on it during this process. Everything should look fine, and after about 24 hours, you should start to slightly smell a light yogurt-y sour (not spoiled) smell. Then it’s like a full blown smell by the time 48 hours comes around. Stir, taste, and use like you want
Tips (including making greek yogurt)
Okay, so there are a few ways you can do this wrong. I’ll try and point them all out here, and will also include them in the instructions down below, too.
- Make sure you really blend all your ingredients together. You don’t want any chunks of cashew, in fact, you don’t even want it to look like there was cashew here before, friends. It certainly doesn’t taste like it, so if you blend right, you’ll be on your way to just general amazing vegan yogurt. I blended mine for a good 3 minutes in a high powered blender, so just ensure yours is so blended it already resembles a creamy, no grains, no strains, product.
- Make sure you’re using fresh ingredients and that you soak your cashews. Don’t use anything that’s going bad because it’ll come out in the fermenting process.
- Use a great probiotic. I use JustThrive and have been for over two years now and let me tell you – #goals. I can’t do without this probiotic. While this isn’t sponsored, my good friends over at JustThrive let me know that you can get 15% off if you use the code JESSICA15 which um, YES that’s an incredible deal so definitely go use it! I’m pretty sure mine turned out so great because I was using a top notch probiotic that truly works.
- Do not, I repeat, do not, use metal. Metal can react negatively to the good bacteria and can just kill your entire process. I’ll admit I’ve never tried it with metal and safe to say, just avoid it. That’s why I prefer to add the probiotic powder into the mixture after it leaves the blender, and to use wood and silicone to stir it in a glass bowl. I would also suggest not using a wooden bowl since it’ll seep in and make the bowl smell like yogurt for, well, ever.
- Don’t disrupt your yogurt in the making too often. I would try not to touch it for at least the first 24 hours, and thereafter maybe check on it only like once or twice.
- The consistency of this yogurt is nice and thick, but not greek yogurt thick. I did make some greek yogurt from it (my goodness that was delicious) and it’s very easy to make. Just place some or all of the yogurt in a cheesecloth, tie it, and let it hang over a bowl for 2 hours in the fridge. That will get rid of all the excess liquid, making it thicker. Don’t go overnight though, or you’ll end up making cheese like I did. Which, is a whole other post because after I stirred in some nutritional yeast, sun dried tomatoes and some herbs, I was in vegan cream cheese heaven.
Ways to Use Homemade Yogurt
There are so many ways to use this Homemade Vegan Yogurt. Here are a few of my favourite ways:
- In a bowl, with maple syrup stirred in, some vanilla extract, and fruits and granola. So good!
- As an oil substitute in our favourite vegan mug brownie :). I tested this one several times, just for you.
- In your favourite Indian sauce recipes, such as swirled into my Chickpea Tikka Masala, my Indian butter tofu and my Indian Butter Cauliflower.
- For a vegan Tzatziki
- To make labneh
- Into any assortment of sauces and dips
- To your favourite veggie burgers
- Use anywhere instead of sour cream
Okay, my ode to yogurt is over! Enjoy the recipe friends!
Homemade Vegan Yogurt (Cultured and Creamy)
Ingredients
- 2 cups cashews, soaked overnight
- 2 teaspoons apple cider vinegar
- pinch sea salt
- 1 ½ cups clean filtered water
- 3 probiotic capsules, roughly 2 grams of probiotic powder, or ½ teaspoon (I used JustThrive capsules)
Instructions
- First, rinse off your soaked cashews completely. In a high powered blender, add the cashews, apple cider vinegar, filtered water, and the sea salt. Blend until completely smooth and clean. I blended for about 3 minutes on high.
- Pour the contents into a very clean and dry glass bowl or tall jar. Open your probiotic capsules and pour the powered contents inside the cashew yogurt mixture. Using a wooden or silicone spoon, stir the probiotic powder into the mixture and stir/mix into it for about 2 minutes, until fully incorporated.
- Cover the bowl/jar with some cheesecloth or even a clean dry paper towel and secure with a rubber band. Place in a warm, dry place. If you live in a tropical country, you can leave it on your counter top. If you don't, place it in your oven with the oven OFF and the oven light on (do not place right after cooking something, this will be too hot). Leave the yogurt undisturbed as much as possible for 24-48 hours. You should begin to smell a slight yogurt-y smell after about 24 hours. I recommend leaving it for the full 48 hours.
- The yogurt should be much thicker now. Stir to combine fully. If you hear a carbonated sound that is normal, it's a part of the fermenting process.
- Cover the jar/bowl or transfer to a new clean jar/bowl and cover and place in your fridge. It should also thicken up in the fridge and you can start using it now! It'll last in your week for at least two weeks.
- If you want your yogurt any thinner, strain/drain it in cheesecloth or paper towel or a fine mesh colander for about 30 minutes to strain off any extra liquid. If you want greek yogurt, see the notes below.
- Enjoy with any combination of you want including yogurt, maple syrup, vanilla extract and fruits!
Notes
Tips (including making greek yogurt)
Okay, so there are a few ways you can do this wrong. I’ll try and point them all out here, and will also include them in the instructions down below, too.- Make sure you really blend all your ingredients together. You don’t want any chunks of cashew, in fact, you don’t even want it to look like there was cashew here before, friends. It certainly doesn’t taste like it, so if you blend right, you’ll be on your way to just general amazing vegan yogurt. I blended mine for a good 3 minutes in a high powered blender, so just ensure yours is so blended it already resembles a creamy, no grains, no strains, product.
- Make sure you’re using fresh ingredients and that you soak your cashews. Don’t use anything that’s going bad because it’ll come out in the fermenting process.
- Use a great probiotic. I use JustThrive and have been for over two years now and let me tell you – #goals. I can’t do without this probiotic. While this isn’t sponsored, my good friends over at JustThrive let me know that you can get 15% off if you use the code JESSICA15 which um, YES that’s an incredible deal so definitely go use it! I’m pretty sure mine turned out so great because I was using a top notch probiotic that truly works.
- Do not, I repeat, do not, use metal. Metal can react negatively to the good bacteria and can just kill your entire process. I’ll admit I’ve never tried it with metal and safe to say, just avoid it. That’s why I prefer to add the probiotic powder into the mixture after it leaves the blender, and to use wood and silicone to stir it in a glass bowl. I would also suggest not using a wooden bowl since it’ll seep in and make the bowl smell like yogurt for, well, ever.
- Don’t disrupt your yogurt in the making too often. I would try not to touch it for at least the first 24 hours, and thereafter maybe check on it only like once or twice.
- The consistency of this yogurt is nice and thick, but not greek yogurt thick. I did make some greek yogurt from it (my goodness that was delicious) and it’s very easy to make. Just place some or all of the yogurt in a cheesecloth, tie it, and let it hang over a bowl for 2 hours in the fridge. That will get rid of all the excess liquid, making it thicker. Don’t go overnight though, or you’ll end up making cheese like I did. Which, is a whole other post because after I stirred in some nutritional yeast, sun dried tomatoes and some herbs, I was in vegan cream cheese heaven.
Disclaimer: Although jessicainthekitchen.com attempts to provide accurate nutritional information, kindly note that these are only estimates. Nutritional information may be affected based on the product type, the brand that was purchased, and in other unforeseeable ways. Jessicainthekitchen.com will not be held liable for any loss or damage resulting for your reliance on nutritional information. If you need to follow a specific caloric regimen, please consult your doctor first.
Hi Jessica, I forgot to add the salt, can I add the salt after it ferments? Or does it need the salt in the fermenting process?
I’ve made the recipe twice before, once it turned out fantastic. Delicious! The second time it didn’t taste as tangy but still nice and creamy. It’s a process lol
Hi Sally,
You can add it afterwards if it’s already made! So happy you’ve enjoyed it twice already!! It is a process but by the way you can use some of the leftover yogurt each time to make more yogurt!
This yogurt is amazing! Since becoming dairy free, I have missed yogurt and didn’t want to spend a ton of money at the store. This is now a regular in my house.
Can I flavor it at all before fermenting it? It’s a little sour for me, so I’ve been adding maple syrup when right before I eat it, but would love to try to sweeten/flavor the batch as a whole.
So happy to hear this Rachel!! I would flavour it after fermenting! You can still add it to the entire batch, just after, I’m not sure how the excess sugar would affect it the process!
Hi,
I want to make this….a few questions…
Does it matter how many billion of probiotic the probiotic is?
Can a nutribullet work or it has to be a blender?
How long will this yogurt last in the fridge?
Can you freeze it?
Thank you!
Hi Kay,
re probiotics – the amount shouldn’t matter too much, once it’s the same about as the amount I’ve used (Thrive Probiotics) or higher.
Nutribullet is fine!
It depends on the freshness of your ingredients (like you don’t need *brand new* cashews but don’t use old stale ones) but you should be good for two weeks stored properly. Definitely do the smell and sight tests after week one!)
Yes you can! The texture may be a bit different once thawed (maybe a little runnier) but you can definitely freeze it. You can freeze it for 1-2 months.
Hope this helps – enjoy so much!!
Can you do this in an instant pot? I have an electric oven.
Hi Chrissy,
Yes! I know a few readers have made it in their instant pot (I haven’t!) so it’s best to check out their comments please in the comments’ section! Enjoy so much!
Great recipe, thanks.
Typo step 6…
If you want your yogurt any thinner (thicker), strain/drain it in cheesecloth or paper towel or a fine mesh colander for about 30 minutes to strain off any extra liquid. If you want greek yogurt, see the notes below.
Thanks for highlighting this Peter!!
Hello, How tangy is it after its done. Every recipe I have tried is super tangy and a bit unbearable.
Hi Le Lou,
I don’t find it to be too tangy at all or unbearably so.
Jessica,
Thank you so much for this wonderful recipe! I generally don’t leave reviews for recipes but this one was so darn good that I wanted to give you credit. We put the mixture (including 3 capsules of Jarro-Dophilus EPS 10 billion CFU) in our Ultra Instant pot on the yogurt setting. (Medium temp) at 12 hours, it was ultra smooth but we wanted it a little more tang so we put it back in for another 12 hours. The result was velvety smooth very tangy delicious rich yogurt. We prefer a little less thing though, so next time we’ll try somewhere between 12 and 24 hours. Again, this is a fantastic recipe. I tried another online cashew yogurt recipe, and it was watery and not nearly as flavorful as this. Thank you so much!!!❤️
Hi! So from what I understood, you’re using regular probiotics (the ones you drink), and not cultures that are specifically for yogurt making?
If so, have you also tried with yogurt cultures?
Also, I know some people make yogurt by adding “fresh” ingredients to a certain leftover amount od their old yogurt. Have you tried that with this recipe? If yes, did it have the same taste or was it too sour?
Hi Adriana,
Correct! I haven’t tried yogurt cultures but I have seen where several readers have used old yogurt to re-make this. You can check the comments for some more details, but not haven’t found it too sour at all! I hope that helps!
This is the best yogurt ever! I followed the directions exactly, except I left the bowl on the counter instead of in the oven because it was very hot and humid that week. I used GoLive live and active flavorless pro/prebiotic supplement mix which was well reviewed on Amazon. In addition to eating for breakfast, I’ve used it in sauce and dressing recipes calling for yogurt or sour cream with excellent results.
So happy you enjoyed Jen and thanks for sharing your process too!!
Hi!! I’ve made this 2x and love this recipe.
Question: it’s on my counter right now at the 15 hour fermentation mark and it has expanded like a bubble ovef the mason jar. I have a paper towel on the top that is held in place with a rubber band.
It doesn’t smell funky, but I haven’t seen this happen before. Does this mean it is bad?
Hi Shannon,
I know I’m answering this a day later so not sure if you’re already gotten your answer by going ahead and tasting it. Bubbling is usually fine and a sign of fermentation happening. It could just be a warmer day than usual, or anything else going on in the air – things can change since we’re using active cultures and bacteria! If the smell is fine (not smelling foul or rotten) that’s also a good sign. If you see no signs of pink on it (mold) also a good sign. Check out the texture, it should be creamy and not slimy or separated. IF all the above is good – give it a taste! It should be the usual tanginess, not bitter or taste off. Hope that helps!