Packed with protein – live bacteria – low in fat – ideal for post-workout snacks, breakfasts and pretty much any other yoghurt-devouring opportunity you can dream of.
Our skyr-style yoghurts are made right here on the farm. They’re thick, satisfying and completely natural. We don’t add anything “extra” to our yoghurts. No milk powder, no thickeners, no stabilisers, nothing like that. Just live cultures and our own skimmed cows milk, straight from the day’s milking.
Steve and Jonny travelled to the geothermal farmlands of Iceland to be trained in the art of traditional skyr yoghurt making by master skyr maker, Thorgrimur. This is our own interpretation of an iconic staple of the Icelandic diet, handmade here on our Suffolk farm, from the fresh morning milk of our free-ranging Montbeliarde herd. Making it the traditional way is a lot more labour intensive. To achieve that beautifully silky texture and creamy consistency, we gently strain our skyr through natural cheesecloths. This creates a completely natural finish and preserves the delicate milky flavours.
Like all our products, we’ve taken every care when sourcing ingredients we can’t create ourselves on the farm. The honey for our Wildflower honey yoghurt comes from the hives of local Suffolk beekeeper David Martin, who also happens to be a member of the FFD team. Some of his hives are even kept on our farmland, keeping the food miles super low!
The fruit conserves for our layered Strawberry and Blackcurrant yoghurts come from Sky and Kai at England Preserves. Their jam is really special. It’s made with succulent fruit from small British growers and contains a whopping 60% fruit – That’s twice as much fruit as the average supermarket jam. That means half the usual sugar content (who needs it when the fruit is so vibrant?) and they contain no artificial colours, flavours or preservatives.
Most cheese and dairy produce is made away from the farm. It’s actually surprisingly rare to find a business today that controls the whole process from start to finish. Here are our 3 secrets:
These are our 3 secrets:
Like all our products, we’ve taken every care when sourcing any ingredients that we can’t create ourselves on the farm and we’re proud to shine a spotlight on the small batch artisan producers who contribute to making our yoghurt so delicious.
The honey for our Wildflower Honey yoghurt comes from the hives of local Suffolk beekeeper David Martin. Here’s a picture of David in his native habitat. He also happens to be a member of our production team here at the farm and keeps some of his hives on our farmland.
David’s bees forage our surrounding Suffolk hedgerows and wild areas. They are never fed sugar syrup during the honey production season so you can be sure you’re eating true pollen-derived honey, made with minimal food miles. Although, as David likes to point out, the bees themselves do clock up a lot of “air” miles during their busy season!
Both the Strawberry and Blackcurrant conserves for our yoghurt come from the fabulous Sky and Kai at England Preserves. Here’s a picture of them on their first ever Borough Market jam stall back in 1999. Sky and Kai source their fruit from small mixed farms, supporting environmentally sustainable agriculture practices. Their jams are made in their London jammery (is that a word? It is now.)
England Preserves jams contain a whopping 60% fruit, that’s twice the fruit content of your average supermarket jam, which means half the amount of sugar. Who needs so much sugar anyway, when the beautiful fruit speaks for itself?
We travelled to Iceland to learn the art of traditional skyr making. Read on to discover how we hand make the Icelandic speciality yoghurt here on our Suffolk farm
1
The skyr making process begins in the same way as buttermaking, when we separate the cream from the milk to achieve the skimmed (fat-free) milk necessary for making a traditional Icelandic-style skyr. The skimmed milk is then gravity-fed into a large stainless steel vat, where we heat it to a high temperature. This heating process helps to create a silky consistency in the finished yoghurt.
2
We bring the temperature back down again to allow us to add our carefully selected strains of lactic cultures to the milk. These live bacteria instantly get to work acidifying the milk. By the following morning, the milk in the vat has set and now resembles an enormous self-set yoghurt. At this point, we stir the yoghurt until it becomes a fine mush.
3
True to the traditional Icelandic method, we pour the yoghurt into straining tables with muslin cloth laid inside.
We stir the contents of the muslin cloth for several hours by hand as the yoghurt thickens.
5
After a time, the skyr yoghurt becomes thick with a silky texture.
6
When it’s ready to eat, we pour the finished yoghurt into our yoghurt dispenser, ready to fill the yoghurt pots.
7
For our layered skyrs, we add delicious fruit conserves from England Preserves to the pot first.
8
The pots are then filled carefully, to keep the preserves and the yoghurt from mixing in the pot.
9
Finally, the lids go on and our finished skyr yoghurts are ready for the chiller.
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