Yoghurt Cheese Labna Food

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LABNEH (LEBANESE YOGURT)



Labneh (Lebanese Yogurt) image

This is a Lebanese dish, excellent for dipping with vegetables or spreading on bread. It can also be used as a topping for just about any dish.

Provided by Baritone Bob

Categories     Appetizers and Snacks     Dips and Spreads Recipes

Time 10m

Yield 12

Number Of Ingredients 5

1 ½ cups Greek yogurt
¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon chopped fresh mint
1 tablespoon chopped fresh dill
½ teaspoon kosher salt, or to taste

Steps:

  • Mix Greek yogurt, olive oil, mint, dill, and kosher salt together in a bowl. Cover and refrigerate up to 12 hours.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 74.7 calories, Carbohydrate 1 g, Cholesterol 5.6 mg, Fat 7.2 g, Protein 1.5 g, SaturatedFat 1.9 g, Sodium 96.4 mg, Sugar 1 g

LABNEH (LEBANESE CREAM CHEESE)



Labneh (Lebanese Cream Cheese) image

This is the Lebanese version of cream cheese, a lot tastier and lower in calories. Serve on a plate, sprinkled with olive oil, olives, tomatoes, cucumbers and mint. Or simply spread it like cream cheese on pita bread.

Provided by LEBANESE

Categories     Appetizers and Snacks     Dips and Spreads Recipes     Cheese Dips and Spreads Recipes

Time P1DT5m

Yield 32

Number Of Ingredients 3

16 cups plain yogurt
1 teaspoon salt, or to taste
¼ cup olive oil

Steps:

  • Line a large colander with a cheesecloth. Stir salt into the yogurt, and pour the yogurt into the cheesecloth. Set the colander in the sink or bowl to catch the liquid that drains off. Leave to drain for 24 hours.
  • After draining for the 24 hours, transfer the resulting cheese to a bowl. Stir in the olive oil. Store in a covered container in the refrigerator.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 92.1 calories, Carbohydrate 8.6 g, Cholesterol 7.4 mg, Fat 3.6 g, Protein 6.4 g, SaturatedFat 1.5 g, Sodium 158.5 mg, Sugar 8.6 g

GREEK YOGURT LABNEH



Greek Yogurt Labneh image

Provided by Bon Appétit Test Kitchen

Categories     Herb     No-Cook     Yogurt     Advance Prep Required     Bon Appétit

Yield Makes 6 to 8 servings

Number Of Ingredients 7

2 cups plain 2% fat or whole Fage Greek yogurt
1/2 cup (or more) good-quality extra-virgin olive oil
3 tablespoons finely minced fresh herbs (such as tarragon, parsley, and chives)
1/2 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
Special Equipment
Cheesecloth

Steps:

  • Line a large sieve with cheesecloth; set over a medium deep bowl. Place yogurt in sieve. Gather edges of cheesecloth to cover yogurt. Place in refrigerator and let drain for 2-3 days.
  • Gently squeeze out any excess liquid; discard liquid in bowl (yogurt will be very thick and resemble soft goat cheese). Roll yogurt into 3/4" balls. Place in an 8-ounce glass jar.
  • Whisk oil, herbs, and lemon zest in a small bowl to combine. Season with salt and pepper. Pour over yogurt in jar. Cover; place in refrigerator and let marinate for at least 8 hours and up to 2 weeks.

YOGHURT CHEESE (LABNA)



Yoghurt Cheese (Labna) image

This cheese (also labaneh) originates in the Middle Eastern countries and is usually made with goats milk. This give quite a sour cheese so cows milk yoghurt is more to our Western palate. Allow up to 48 hours. From 500mls expect about 250gm of cheese. If you won't eat this in a couple of days you will need to preserve it in oil. This can be done by simply rolling the cheese into walnut sized balls and placing in a jar and covering with olive oil.

Provided by auntchelle

Categories     Spreads

Time P1DT3m

Yield 5 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 4

500 ml plain low-fat yogurt (best quality you can find)
salt (optional)
olive oil
mint leaf

Steps:

  • Place a sieve over a large bowl. Line the sieve with a piece of cheesecloth or a Chux cloth.
  • Stir your yoghurt well then pour into the cloth in the sieve. Fold the sides of the cloth over the yoghurt.
  • Place the bowl & sieve into the fridge and leave to drain for up to 48 hours. I like to drain the whey every few hours so I can monitor the progress.
  • The cheese is ready when it is not releasing any whey. At this point taste and season with salt, if desired. Shape into a ball/mound.
  • Use as you would any other soft cheese. To serve with dips simply drizzle the mound with good olive oil and garnish with shredded mint.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 63.6, Fat 1.6, SaturatedFat 1, Cholesterol 6.1, Sodium 70.7, Carbohydrate 7.1, Sugar 7.1, Protein 5.3

YOGURT CHEESE (LABNEH)



Yogurt Cheese (Labneh) image

This is an old-world recipe. It is really just drained, salted yoghurt, very easy to make and very easy to preserve. I guarantee that once you have made these and tasted how delicious they are, they will become a staple in your home.

Provided by evelynathens

Categories     African

Time 5m

Yield 2 cups

Number Of Ingredients 2

6 cups Greek yogurt
2 teaspoons salt

Steps:

  • In a large bowl stir the salt into the yoghurt.
  • Spoon the yoghurt in the center of a piece of doubled cheesecloth or soft cotton fabric (preferably undyed and immaculately clean).
  • Pull corners up and tie tightly.
  • Suspend from a stationary object over a bowl (to catch liquid).
  • Let this hang overnight or about 12 hours.
  • When well drained it will be the consistency of cottage cheese.
  • Remove from the cloth.
  • Store covered in the refrigerator until needed.
  • You can mix in fresh or dried herbs, minced garlic, pepper flakes, anything you would use to make an herbed cheese.
  • Or you could drizzle with olive oil, sprinkle with fresh lemon juice and some cumin and dip pita crisps into it-- The sky's the limit really- so many uses!
  • To make Yoghurt Cheese Balls (Labneh Makbus) (a great little appetizer!), drain the yoghurt for 10-12 hours longer.
  • Take about one tablespoon at a time and roll it into smooth, round balls and place on a tray.
  • Chill until firm.
  • This will take several hours.
  • After they are firm and slightly dried out, place in a sterile, air tight jar, cover with olive oil.
  • Seal the jar and store at room temperature.
  • The labneh will keep this way for several months but you will have eaten them all up long before that!
  • Enjoy Labneh Makbus cut into halves, drizzled with olive oil and eaten with olives and fresh pita bread.

Nutrition Facts : Sodium 2325.5

LABNA (YOGHURT CHEESE)



Labna (Yoghurt cheese) image

The Labna is ready to eat immediately, but improves after a couple of days. The oil which surrounds the Labna can be used later in dressings, bread doughs etc.

Provided by Missy Wombat

Categories     Cheese

Time P2DT5m

Yield 1 batch

Number Of Ingredients 6

2 kg Greek yogurt
75 ml extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon salt
1 lemon, juice and rind of, grated
1 tablespoon chopped thyme
4 tablespoons chopped mint

Steps:

  • Mix all ingredients together well.
  • Pour into a colander lined with muslin.
  • Tie the muslin to form a bag.
  • Hang the yoghurt mixture for 2 days, placing a pot or bowl underneath to catch the liquid.
  • After the 2 days, remove the Labna from the muslin, roll into walnut sized balls.
  • Place in a large jar, then cover with a light olive oil.

LABNA, LEBANEH, LABEN



Labna, Lebaneh, Laben image

This is the yoghurt cheese made in the Middle East. It is EASY to make, but there's a lot to explain! I saw other recipes on here but they call for store-bought Greek yoghurt (different flavor) or low fat store yoghurt (yuk) instead of home-made, which is very easy to do and gives far better flavor. The consistency of home-made is not as creamy as store yoghurt because it doen't have added thickeners and stabelizers in it. You're just going to drain it anyway, and the flavor's so much better that when you taste it, you won't care if the yoghurt itself doesn't look picture perfect. I have heard this called different things depending where in the M. E. people are from. I learned this in '87 from a Christian Arab man from Nazareth who was taught by his mother. He (Elias) called it 'lebani' my dad calls it 'labna' (we were in Saudi Arabia) and there's probably many more related names. This recipe calls for some archaic methods which will not meet with approval from many people. It is the old way of doing things. For instance, I really do doubt it's neccessary thes days to kill bacteria by heating the milk, but I don't know, & I do all the steps as I was shown by Elias. We are so conditioned today to believe that without refrigeration we'll all be immediately dead of a bacterial infection; not so. I have made this for 25 years and the recipe has never failed, and no-one has sickened and died! If they could do this in the M.E. without refrigeration, I'm pretty sure I can pull it off in middle America, lol.

Provided by Weewah

Categories     Breakfast

Time P3DT15m

Yield 5 cups, 15 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 3

1 gallon whole milk (or 2%, goats milk would be SUPER if you can get it)
1/2 cup yogurt, with active cultures (PLAIN -not vanilla!)
salt, to taste

Steps:

  • To make the yoghurt, pour a gallon of milk in a pot with a very heavy bottom and put it on the fire until it starts to boil, or even just foam heavily.
  • Stir occasionaly to prevent the milk from burning.
  • Turn off the heat and let the milk cool (stir to cool quicker) just until you can stick your pointer finger way down it without getting burned.
  • Take the active yoghurt culture and pour it down the side of the pan into the milk. I usually do this is a couple of different spots.
  • Cover the milk with a close fitting lid and wrap the pot well in a heavy blanket or two. You are holding in that heat, and it will soon start to generate it's own heat, which you are also conserving with the blanket.
  • Place it somewhere warm where it won't be disturbed for 24 hours. I have successfully made this after the yoghurt was let to develop from 24 - 36 hours.
  • If you'd rather, merely wrap the pot in a bath-towel -wrap the lid too- and set it on a heating pad on low. I've started doing this and it works great too.
  • After you have yoghurt, dump it into an inside out pillow case (lint will be in the inside corners) and suspend the pillow case up over a drain of some sort. I tie mine up to the safety bar on the wall over the bathtub (less traffic than the kitchen sink).
  • The yoghurt will begin to drain whey immediately, I let mine go for 24-36 hours depending on how stiff or soft (w/ remaining liquid content) I want it. Usually 24 hours.
  • When it's as firm as you'd like, turn the cheese into a mixing bowl and salt to taste. I use around 1 1/2 - 2 tablespoons salt. I know, it's a lot. I think the salt was originally a preservative, but that's the way I like it.
  • Elias' mum used to make balls of this cheese and store it in stoneware crocks, covered in olive oil. I keep it in a mixing bowl in the fridge, smoothed flat and covered in olive oil. It keeps a long time like that. If it's going to be eaten quickly, doesn't need the oil for preserving, just eating : ).
  • Enjoy this for a n Arabic breakfast with flat bread (pita) and olive oil. It is also good flavored with garlic, dill or za'ater to your taste. Also pine nuts!

LABNA CHEESE



Labna Cheese image

Labna is a traditional middle eastern cheese, Its very easy to make at home, and extremely tasty, and quite healthy. After seeing this for $15 for 100g, I decided to make this myself.

Provided by AussieHusky

Categories     Cheese

Time P3D

Yield 40 balls, 10 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 5

500 g Greek yogurt
good quality olive oil
1 teaspoon garlic salt
fresh herb (any mix of Basil, Rosemary, Thyme, Sage, Taragon)
5 drops Tabasco sauce

Steps:

  • Mix the garlic salt thoroughly with the Yogurt, Traditionally we would use real garlic, But Garlic can Botulise in oil and become toxic, So to be safe this provides the same flavour without the health risk.
  • Line a strainer with a Chux Cloth (Or any fine, clean cloth) and pour in the yogurt, place it in the fridge for 2-3 days over a bowl, roughly half the liquid (Whey) will be removed.
  • Roll the cheese into small balls about the size of a large cherry, Place them in an airtight container, Do one layer of balls, Then sprinkle your selection of herbs over the top, pour in just enough oil to cover them, then one drop of Tabasco, Repeat the layering until you are finished,.
  • The oil may solidify, This means the oil you have used has a high wax content, or your fridge is to cold, But this shouldn't happen to most people, and if it does just leave it out for 2 or 3 minutes before eating some, the oil will melt.
  • Let them marinate for at least 5 days before eating, They will keep for about a month, The oil is wonderful for cooking with when your done.

Nutrition Facts : Sodium 1.2

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