Yogurt that keeps on giving
Fri, May 15 2009 at 5:31 PM EST
Eating local, healthy foods is apparently helping Boing Boing’s Xeni Jardin save money too. At GOOD, Xeni shares her easy yogurt-making instructions: “It takes maybe 20 minutes of actual work and attention, zero equipment beyond stuff I already had in my kitchen, and yields a yummier, healthier, and yes, “probiotic” product that costs five to 10 times less than the store-bought stuff.” (via lifehacker)

Sterilizing the equipment seems like the toughest part of the process. Unfortunately Xeni uses a lot of disposable plastic cups to make her yogurt [correction: Xeni does not use plastic cups! The GOOD people decided to use Flickr photos from someone who used plastic cups, which confused me] — but I’m sure you can find more eco-friendly reusable substitutes.
Made too much yogurt — or let the yogurt you bought expire? Reader’s Digest has some great advice for using up old yogurt (via good human via allie’s answers). The article has instructions to:
- Make moss “paint” — basically a moss-yogurt mixture that’ll beget more moss.
- Make a face mask
- Relieve sunburn — if you’re able to time your accidental burning with your accidentally letting yogurt expire
- Make fingerpaint
- Cure pet flatulence
Depending on how much yogurt you usually buy, these tips could end up saving you quite a bit of money -- and keeping a lot of packaging out of the waste stream! Enjoy the yummy yogurt, the painting fun, and the extra cash –
Photo: Leamington Malfoof
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Comments(2)
Posted By Xeni Jardin - Fri, May 15 2009 at 11:45 PM ESTno plastic
"Unfortunately Xeni uses a lot of disposable plastic cups to make her yogurt"
No I don't!
I don't use disposable plastic cups, read the article! The GOOD Magazine art editors chose that photo from some guy's Flickr stream -- those aren't my photos.
I use recyclable glass jars and big steel bowls and stuff. No plastic in the process, actually. - Xeni Jardin


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good to know!
Thanks for the correction! I did get a bit confused because you talk about ceramics in your process -- but then the pic was full of plastic cups. I'll update the post :)