What causes the texture difference between Greek style yogurt and regular yogurt?

In the US, Greek-style yogurt and regular yogurt are both made with cow's milk, yet they have a distinctly different texture.
When I described the texture of Greek yogurt to my nutritionist, she used the word "pithy". It, to me, feels like a thin layer of fuzz (like the skin of a peach) gets left on the surfaces of my mouth when I eat it.
Initial thought would tell me that it's because Greek yogurt has less water in it, but I made some homemade yogurt last weekend, using Greek yogurt for a culture, and despite being quite thin, it still had that pithy texture.
What gives Greek yogurt this texture? Or, what makes regular yogurt not have this texture?
Best Answer
I would describe it as an almost chalky texture. Greek yogurt is typically strained 3+ times before packaging and in most cases is made from dairy with a higher fat content. The tang and texture are due to the whey being almost completely removed from the yogurt. The higher milk serum content (whey) in US yogurt makes it sweeter and obviously less viscous.
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Quick Answer about "What causes the texture difference between Greek style yogurt and regular yogurt?"
Because most of the liquid is removed, Greek yogurt is much thicker and tangier than regular yogurt.Why does Greek yogurt have a weird texture?
Greek yogurt is typically strained 3+ times before packaging and in most cases is made from dairy with a higher fat content. The tang and texture are due to the whey being almost completely removed from the yogurt. The higher milk serum content (whey) in US yogurt makes it sweeter and obviously less viscous.How does Greek yogurt differ from traditional yogurt?
But what's the difference? Greek yogurt is yogurt that has been strained to remove its whey, resulting in a thicker consistency than that of unstrained yogurt, while preserving yogurt's distinctive sour taste.What texture does Greek yogurt have?
What Is Greek Yogurt? Unlike regular yogurt, Greek yogurt is strained, which removes the liquid whey, along with some of the salts and sugars dissolved in it. The result is a yogurt that has a denser, thicker, and creamier texture; it is also higher in protein than conventional American-style yogurt.Is Greek-style yoghurt the same as natural yoghurt?
Greek-style yoghurt is just natural yoghurt that has been strained one extra time \u2013 natural yoghurt is usually strained twice while Greek yoghurt is traditionally strained three times.Greek Yogurt vs Regular Yogurt - What's The Difference and Which is Healthier?
More answers regarding what causes the texture difference between Greek style yogurt and regular yogurt?
Answer 2
After creating a new batch using the same process as my first one, but with a different, non-Greek, starter yogurt (which uses a different set and balance of bacteria than the starter I used for my first batch), I found that the texture was the same as my starter yogurt and was without the pithy texture.
Therefore, it seems that it is, in fact, the difference in fermentation, which depends on the types of bacteria cultures in a given yogurt that determine the texture of Greek vs non-Greek yogurt.
Answer 3
Greek yoghurt (as sold by us) is obtained by means of final filtration, to remove the residual acidic water. Method to do it home.
Prepare before the yogurt using the machine normally, following the instructions.
Place a strainer into a bowl. Place the strainer inside a tightly woven cotton cloth.
Pour the yogurt in cotton cloth. It does not matter if you just did, it is okay the next day also.
At this point, wait for the whey drip into the bowl, for a couple of hours or more.
The whey is what gives the flavor a bit sour to the normal yougurt. In a couple of hours you get the thick yogurt. The more time passes, the more it becomes thick yogurt. After 4-5 hours, becomes like cream cheese.
During the filtering, every so often, it is good to reshoot the yogurt with a spoon, so that the more dense (that it lies in contact with the cotton cloth) not makes a "cap" to the more still in the surface.
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PS By us in Italy yogurt is made with both, Lactobacillicus Bulgaricus and Streptococcus Debrucii. In addition we put probiotic ferments.
The Russian microbiologist Ilya Ilyich Me?nikov isolated Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus. And recognized that these Lactobacillus were responsible for the process of breaking down lactose into galactose and glucose. These "ferment" act with a mechanism proto simbiotic: streptococcus works first, creating the conditions for the lactobacillus do the work of breaking down lactose.
Although opinions are sketchy at best, today, in contrast to what is touted by advertising, it is believed that these two enzymes play no active role in the human body: in fact, they die as soon as they come into contact with gastric juices human, I can not stand the acidity
By the result of the positive feedback the use of probiotic ferments in the medical field, today some manufacturers have begun to add yogurt to their products. The probiotic ferments, unlike the Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus, are able to withstand the free acidity of gastric juices, to survive and replicate in the gastrointestinal tract. Since, generally, as bacteria already present in the human body, they are able to restore the bacterial flora to a normal state, when this has been compromised as a result of treatment with antibiotics, by stress or by improper nutrition.
The probiotic ferments exercise also a positive effect in many processes of digestion and prevent intestinal infections and attacks by fungi, strengthen the immune system produce bacteriocins, the so-called "natural antibiotics". The main probiotic ferments added in the fermentation process are the following: Lactobacillus acidophilus, Lactobacillus casei, Lactobacillus lactis, Bifidobacterium bifidum.
The fermented milk obtained from their action deviates slightly from yogurt (traditionally obtained only with the use of Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus), giving rise, rather, to a Kefir.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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