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Can be prepared and served as a cold or hot soup Cold borscht: Slav and Baltic nations Made from beetroot with optional onions, garlic, carrot, celery parsnip etc; with a base of sour cream, buttermilk, kefir, kvass, or yogurt. May be served with boiled potato or egg. . National varieties include svekolnik, kholodnik, šaltibarščiai. Fruit soup
Cheese. Time: Varies, around two to 12 hours Leaving cheese out overnight can affect quality, but isn't typically dangerous or a safety risk, the Wisconsin Milk Marketing Board says. In fact, all ...
Several variants of fermented milk products are found in Western Finland and Sweden, such as filmjölk ("viili milk") or långfil ("long viili"), which vary in consistency and fermentation. In Norway, filmjölk is usually named "kulturmelk" ("cultured milk") or "surmelk" ("sour milk"), while in Gotland and Iceland, the name "skyr" is used to ...
The term Leben, variously laban, liben, lben // ⓘ (Arabic: لبن) in the Middle East and North Africa, [1] refers to a food or beverage of fermented milk. Generally, there are two main products known as leben : The yogurt variant for the Levant region and the buttermilk variant for parts of Arabia and North Africa (Maghreb).
Clabber is still sometimes referred to as bonny clabber (originally "bainne clábair", from Gaelic bainne—milk, and clábair—sour milk or milk of the churn dash). [8] Clabber passed into Scots and Hiberno-English dialects meaning wet, gooey mud, though it is commonly used now in the noun form to refer to the food or in the verb form "to ...
Doogh is a cold and savoury Iranian drink. It is made with fermented milk. Unlike its sister beverage of Turkish origin, ayran, Doogh is not diluted yogurt.According to the Iranian Ministry of Food Standards, Doogh "is a drink resulting from lactic fermentation of milk whose dry matter is standardized by diluting yogurt (after fermentation) or buttermilk (before fermentation)."
Yeast, salt and water were added to make a dough from the flour, which was left in the sun for around two weeks, and re-moistened with sour yogurt (or sour grape juice) as needed. After 15 days the dough would be seasoned with mint, purslane , cilantro, rue , parsley, garlic and the leafy tops of leeks , shaped into disks, and allowed to dry in ...
Kumis is made by fermenting raw milk (that is, unpasteurized) over the course of hours or days, often while stirring or churning. (The physical agitation has similarities to making butter.) During the fermentation, lactobacilli bacteria acidify the milk, and yeasts turn it into a carbonated and mildly alcoholic drink.