![]() My girls, however, felt a little differently. After my first taste, I knew I’d never go back to the store-bought stuff. It’s incredibly easy, and I can’t believe I let not owning a yogurt maker stop me from doing this for years. Time has taught me there’s usually more than one way to get equally successful results.Īnd time is really all you need to make your own yogurt, assuming you have an oven with a light inside. Except for taking down the pasta maker which sits right above the stove or hauling out the pressure cooker which sits happily on a shelf in the pantry, I find it completely annoying to go digging for an appliance just to make a recipe. Which brings me back to needing my essentials out on the countertop. Since we renovated our kitchen three years ago, I promised anything that didn’t get play time within the last six months had to go, and I do a purge every few months to stick to that rule. It’s been my experience that anything not sitting right in my eye’s view will idle away and collect dust. Either I test them and move on, or an item is so exceptional it makes the cut and gets much coveted countertop space. Much of what I receive these days, comes way of samples sent for work, so parting with them really isn’t with sweet sorrow. After years of accruing appliances and gadgets, I’m learning to only hold onto the things I really use. This makes me quite popular with the neighbors and passersby. On any given week, there’s a slew of cookbooks and box of gadgets outside our front stoop for people to help themselves.
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