I love to experiment with foods, and make most of my own things. I have been searching the web to find out how to make whey protein. Sure I know I can buy it as a powder- I have plenty of it- but i want to actually make it.
Does anyone know where to look, or even know how to do it? I know how to make curds and whey, and a few simple cheeses, but the whey from nutrition informations I found is just sugars and carbs......which makes me wonder how they get whey protein at all?
If anyone knows of links I can use, or even know of the process- which I am sure is possible- please let me know.
I couldn't fit it in the title, but besides whey, I'd also like to learn how to make caesin protein, as well.
Thanks.
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Thread: homemade whey- make it yourself?
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10-25-2005, 04:34 PM #1
homemade whey- make it yourself?
Willie
h2o6
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10-25-2005, 04:40 PM #2
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11-12-2005, 01:16 AM #3
thanks- I have been experimenting - and I have done basic curds and whey, and I also made riccota. Sure- it's pretty much cheese making, but I am slowly making a few tasty discoveries with it. I would love to be able to make my own whey protein some day- perhaps this is what indeed the beginning bodybuilders did before the powders came to be.
Originally Posted by SleeplessWillie
h2o6
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08-13-2006, 11:51 PM #4
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Originally Posted by WillieInc
Homemade Yogurt
Ingredients
1/2 gallon milk
1/2 cup plain yogurt
1. Warm up the milk in a saucepan over medium-low heat until bubbles appear around the edge and steam rises from the surface.
2. Pour the warm milk into a large bowl to cool until the temperature reaches 125 degrees on a cooking thermometer.
3. Put the starter in a small bowl, add some of the heated milk, and stir until well blended. Return the mixture to the large bowl, a third at a time, making sure to stir and blend well after each addition. End with a final stir, making sure all is well blended. Cover with a heavy towel and keep at room temperature for 6 to 8 hours.
4. Drain liquid whey into separate container using a cheesecloth or something similar.Last edited by plik; 08-14-2006 at 11:18 PM.
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08-14-2006, 11:01 PM #5
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08-14-2006, 11:05 PM #6
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08-14-2006, 11:17 PM #7
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08-14-2006, 11:24 PM #8
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08-14-2006, 11:49 PM #9
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Originally Posted by Sparticus80
Milk is very hard for most people to digest (and most people don’t realize it).
Yogurt, on the other hand, has live cultures. The proteins have been broken down into a form that our body can easily assimilate. That’s why whey is so great. Our body can assimilate whey by itself, much better than milk.
And, home-made liquid whey is much more natural and easy to assimilate than powder whey. The only problem is you’d need to drink a quart of liquid whey to get the protein you would from a scoop of powder.
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08-15-2006, 12:34 AM #10
But you'd also be taking in a heck of a lot of fat and lactose to get that whey protein. If it's easier to digest for you, more power to you.
Personally, I avoid milk because I have trouble digesting it. I can consume yogurt no problem though. Whey I consume enormous amounts of. Heck, half of my daily protein comes from whey powder"Pain hurts, lemme tell ya. It can ruin your whole day." -Bill "Superfoot" Wallace
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08-15-2006, 03:00 AM #11
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08-15-2006, 01:38 PM #12
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08-15-2006, 01:50 PM #13
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12-13-2010, 12:11 AM #14
I think i made whey. I took the left over from cheese making and put it in a pan a low temp let the water evaporate what was left was a yellowy gooey substance just like a picture of homemade whey i saw on some website. the stuff tastes like **** i wanted to mix it with chocolate flavoured milk but am reluctant as it may take me back to square one. what should i do is it actually whey is it healthy?
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06-17-2011, 02:06 PM #15
raw milk from grass fed cows not on antibiotic or growth hormone is magic
Fresh raw milk from pastured cows, or kefir grains added to make kefir is easy to digest for nearly everyone. Whey powder?! It's rather a gimmick unfortunately, and I'm sorry to say, whey is good stuff food manufacturers have found, most of it's junk, most of it comes from cows on growth hormone and often antibiotics, most of its junk. Is there any good whey protein? I don't know, I haven't found any, not even Mercola.com's unless 16 ingredients added is considered a good thing, which I don't think it is. I don't mean to rain on your parade, but most whey protein is not good stuff, it is a money maker for those food processor terrorists, however. Best milk product: raw cheese from France, raw milk from grass fed cows, kefir grains added to raw milk, that is, real milk, home made yogurt from raw milk that needs to be heated or the good bacteria in raw milk will compete with the yogurt culture, (I'm not sure about this, it may not be true and I have made yogurt from raw milk that wasn't headed, and it tasted great. There’s a book titled the Milk Diet, whereby you drink 5-7 quarts of milk per day for about a month or two, and eat or drink nothing else. Raw milk was once the most effective way of treating illnesses and then came those mad dogs who patent drugs and the world has become a target for corporate terrorism. Organic foods, raw dairy, cheese or milk, low carbs, high quality proteins, very little cardio exercise which is referred to by Ori Hofmekler as junk food exercise, he, by the way, wrote, The Warrior's Diet and on Mercola.com he is interviewed 6/17/11 and gives ways to increase testosterone, which every man I know covets like gold for without that, it's erectile dysfunction drugs, not a happy thought that. There are some good people out there and the list is growing each day whereby we might someday wake up and send the sociopaths who run corporations and government packing. They are responsible for ruining the overall health of the American people, and isn't it time to shout, "Enough!"
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06-17-2011, 02:10 PM #16
Well, I was going to suggest trying raw milk to the people who don't digest milk well as it seems to work really well for me (now that I can buy it, I do a gallon of raw and 2 gallons of regular whole milk a week). However, I'm not sure if I'm wanting to jump on the same bandwagon as the dude above me. I must think on this one.
*Unaesthetic Crew* Disregard V-Taper, Acquire PRs.
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10-19-2011, 07:32 PM #17
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01-19-2012, 03:47 PM #18
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Absolutely correct! Drink ONLY raw milk. In a nation ravaged by cancer, obesity and disease you'd think we'd learn by now.
Pasteurized, homogenized milk is chemical-laden trash. Pour a glass of Franken-milk and you can see the chemicals floating on top. Worse yet, the super heating in the pasteurization process destroys all living organisms in it. You are drinking a dead product. All that's left is a soup of white chemicals and dead cells.
The corporate food giants and their enablers at the FDA are - quite literally - killing us.
My protein shakes usually consist of:
- 8 oz raw milk
- 2 raw free-range eggs from organically-fed chickens
- 1 tb flaxseed oil
- some fruit for flavor
I do use protein powders, but am not a huge fan. I'd rather get protein more naturally, through raw milk, organic eggs and organic meat.
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01-19-2012, 05:46 PM #19
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07-06-2014, 06:40 AM #20
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07-06-2014, 07:16 AM #21
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01-11-2015, 09:51 PM #22
Hey man so look, im half iranian and my family has been making cheese and whey like this forever, with a simple method you can make whey without using vinegar and can be done in like 10 minutes. Get organic whole milk and heat it till it boils....squeeze half a lemons worth of juice in to it, you get the same acid effect as the vinegar but with a more palatable taste. This will cause curding and the separation of fat and casein from the whey you can then strain...its best to get a good cheese cloth as well to get all of the whey you can, but regardless you have your whey. Now like you I am wondering about the exact protein in it, but I can say that some people who are saying the macro nutrient ration is the same as milk are mistaken... the majority of fat is all with the casein in the curd...if done properly there should be much less fat compared to protein.
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01-11-2015, 10:00 PM #23
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02-21-2015, 07:43 PM #24
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So, basically... you didn't disagree with a thing I said. Pasteurized milk is a dead product. It is superheated to kill the bacteria (good and bad, it kills everything). The purpose is not for some mythical "scientific reason," but simply to prolong shelf life.
The reason why pasteurized milk is "fortified with vitamins" is because the pasteurization destroys everything in it. That's why they have to artificially put the vitamin supplements back in it - because the natural vitamins and minerals are nuked into infinity.
So instead of throwing out unsupported, mystical "scientific facts," I recommend putting those books back on the library shelf and researching things for yourself. Now have a great day and go lift somethingLast edited by sopwith21; 02-21-2015 at 07:48 PM.
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