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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Raw Milk at Home / 101 Uses For Soured Raw Milk

101 Uses For Soured Raw Milk

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Sour Raw Milk is Safe
  • Uses for Sour Milk (Clabber)
  • Need More Ideas? Let’s Keep Going…

The many uses for sour raw milk at home which, unlike pasteurized milk, does not go putrid, but naturally ferments into probiotic clabber.

sour raw milk with many uses in a teacup

One of the most frequent questions I get from readers is what to do with naturally soured milk, also called clabber.

Sour raw milk is quite unlike pasteurized milk that has gone past its “use by” date. Pasteurized milk goes putrid and must be thrown out at that point, but raw milk is still a highly useful item in the kitchen.

The difference is that pasteurized milk is quite literally a dead food. In other words, there are no enzymes or probiotics present. So, when store milk goes bad, it becomes a huge foodborne illness risk to consume it and it must be discarded.

Sour Raw Milk is Safe

Raw milk, on the other hand, is loaded with enzymes and probiotics. When raw milk starts to sour, it simply means that beneficial bacteria called probiotics have started to use up the lactose (milk sugar) which causes the milk to no longer taste as sweet.

Raw milk that tastes sour is still very much safe to drink and is even more beneficial to health as the higher level of probiotics initiates the fermentation or clabbering of the milk.

So if you find yourself with some soured raw milk in the refrigerator, check through this list and see what makes the most sense for using it up. It doesn’t have to be raw cow milk either. Any type of unpasteurized milk will do including sheep’s milk, goat milk, camel milk, and even water buffalo milk!

Whatever you do, though, don’t throw it out!  There is no need for even a drop of your nutrient-dense, grass-fed dairy to go to waste!

There are so many uses for the clabber itself as well as the raw liquid whey separated from it.

Uses for Sour Milk (Clabber)

1. Make scrambled eggs with it.

2. Whip up a pan of quiche with it.

3. Add it to a breakfast smoothie.

4. Make homemade pudding with it (if slightly soured).

5. Make hot chocolate with it.

6. Use it for garden fertilizer (just pour around the base of your plants or trees). It really gets the worms going crazy.

7. Give it to your pet. Cats love it!

8. Make egg custard pudding with it.

9. Make this traditional British white sauce recipe with it.

10. Ferment homemade kefir with it.

11. Make yogurt with it.

12. Blend with flour to soak pancake batter.

13. Use it to soak cold breakfast cereal batter.

14. Use it to soak waffle batter.

15. Remove the soured cream off the top and add to homemade soups.

16. Remove the sour cream off the top and add to meatloaf.

17. Just drink it. It tastes like buttermilk and is very good for you.

18. Use to make devil’s food cake.

19.  Make omelets with it.

20. Use it instead of water to cook up your soaked breakfast oatmeal.

21. Use it to soak crepe batter.

22. Soak banana bread batter with it.

23. Soak pumpkin bread batter with it.

24. Use it to soak buttermilk biscuit batter.

25. Soak muffin batter (any kind) with it.

26. Separate the liquid whey from the clabber.

27. Remove the sour cream off the top and add to a baked potato.

28. Add buttermilk culture and make buttermilk with it.

29. Take a bath in it. It was good enough for Cleopatra, right?

30. Separate out the liquid whey and make ricotta cheese.

31. Make mozzarella cheese with it.

32. Whip up a pan of flan using it instead of milk.

33. Make sweet potato casserole with the sour cream off the top.

34. Make cottage cheese with it.

35. Use as a base for ice milk (if only slightly soured).

36. Use it instead of evaporated milk to make pumpkin pie.

37. Use it to clear up pinkeye.

38. Soak frozen fish in it until thawed for improved texture and flavor.

39.  Soak dull-looking silverware in it for at least 30 minutes and then rinse for a beautiful shine.

40. Use it as a conditioner for your hair. Or, take a bath in it. Remember Cleopatra?

41. Repair fine cracks in your china by boiling them in the soured raw milk (the milk reacts with a chemical in the china to seal the crack).  I’ve never done this myself but it supposedly works.

42. Use it ice cold to soothe the discomfort of poison ivy.

43. Dab some on mild sunburn for instant, cooling relief.

44. Rub dry skin patches with it several times a day to make skin soft again.

45. Make cheese sauce for Welsh rarebit with it.

46. Make paneer (easy South Asian cheese that requires no rennet).

47. Make potato cheese soup.

48. Freeze the milk and use it later when you have a dire need for clabbered milk.

49.  Make tapioca pudding with it.

50. Make bread pudding (soak the bread in the milk).

soured raw milk in a glass with a straw

Need More Ideas? Let’s Keep Going…

51. Stew pork loin in it.

52. Make no-bake cheesecake with it.

53. Make lassi with it (Indian yogurt-style smoothie).

54. Use it instead of water (or a blend with water) to cook up amaranth porridge.

55. Separate the whey to use as a natural facial toner.

56. Use to cook up teff breakfast porridge.

57. Use blended with water to make cream of buckwheat porridge.

58. Make fermented almond milk.

59. Make homemade orangina soda.

60. Brew some detoxifying beet kvass.

61. Make homemade ginger ale.

62. Add a cup or two of the separated whey to a warm detoxifying bath instead of vinegar.

63. Make fermented lemonade.

64. Use instead of yogurt to make fermented potatoes.

65. Make homemade sauerkraut.

66. Use the separated whey instead of sauerkraut juice to make homemade pickles.

67. Make apricot butter.

68. Make probiotic mango chutney.

69. Use whey instead of raw ACV to make homemade mustard.

70. Use the whey to make fermented corn relish.

71. Blend up some probiotic thousand island dressing using some of the separated whey.

72. Make raw cream cheese.

73. Make fermented cilantro salsa.

74. Use whey to make homemade ketchup.

75. Add the whey to homemade mayo so it lasts three times as long in the fridge.

76. Add separated whey to potassium broth for extra minerals and digestibility.

77. Use to make cultured rice water.

78. Blend some to homemade wild rice milk to add probiotics.

79. Mix a teaspoon into a glass of homemade electrolyte beverage to add more minerals.

80. Use whey separated from clabber instead of kombucha to make a maple dijon salad dressing.

81. Stir a teaspoon of separated whey into homemade barbecue sauce to add probiotics.

82. Use liquid whey instead of raw ACV to make homemade cocktail sauce.

83. Use whey to make fermented salsa.

84. Substitute whey for lemon juice to make homemade steak sauce.

85. Whip up some homemade teriyaki sauce.

86. Add a drizzle of whey to artichoke dip to add probiotics and enhance the flavor.

87. Liquid whey is an important ingredient in hypoallergenic DIY baby formula.

88. Whey from clabber is also a key ingredient in homemade goat milk baby formula.

89. Add a drizzle of whey to sweet potato casserole baby food to add probiotics.

90. Liquid whey separated from clabber (or yogurt) is a key ingredient in homemade baby formula.

91. Use clabber blended with flour to make soaked waffles.

92. Whip up a pan of gluten-free soaked cornbread.

93. Make homemade tomato bisque using the soured milk instead of plain milk.

94. Use it to soak homemade quick oats.

95. Make a pan of Mexican mac & cheese.

96. Use instead of water to cook a pot of whole grain millet.

97.  Make a buttermilk-style egg nog with it!

98.  If only slightly sour, use it to make a refreshing matcha frappe.

99. Use as a substitute for water in this easy rice cakes recipe.

100. If only slightly sour, use to make a red rooibos latte.

101. Drizzle some into your cup of dandelion coffee if the sourness is very mild.

Do you have more suggestions to add? Please share with us in the comments section!

I’m sure there are literally dozens more uses for soured raw milk and the liquid whey separated from clabber that I’ve missed!

More Information

Organic UHT Milk
A1 vs A2 Milk
Why Skim Milk Makes You Fat
Low Temp (Vat) Pasteurized Milk Compared to Raw

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Category: Healthy Living, Raw Milk at Home
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (482)

  1. Eddy

    Oct 20, 2013 at 1:27 pm

    Try Goats milk…
    🙂

    Reply
  2. Molly Malone

    Oct 18, 2013 at 7:45 pm

    Wonderful and helpful article – thank you!

    Make cheese! I set 4C on the counter for 12 hours to sour at room temp. then add the juice of 1/2 lemon and stir it up – this clabbers the milk into curds – let it set 2-4 days, until you like the sourness of it. Now line a strainer or colander with cloth – anything works, cheesecloth in a couple layers or a thin dishtowel like I use. Strain it in the ‘fridge [chilling slows the bacterial action down to a crawl] over a bowl to save the whey – it’s very good for you if you can stand it [we can’t, the dogs get it!]. Now you have tangy cheese that spreads and it is raw, never heated.Worth a fortune in health. Raw milk healed my son’s eczema on his face, and this cheese surely helped.

    You can mix anything you like into it, too, like minced veggies or herbs or fruit, it’s all good!

    Eat well!

    Reply
    • Molly Malone

      Oct 18, 2013 at 7:54 pm

      PS — We also use soured cream in stroganoff, tomato soup, creamed tuna, and it spreads on toast with lemon curd nicely. Some if not all of this has been said already, but I second it! Soured cream is made the same way as soured milk – by accidentally leavint it too long, or by setting it on the counter for 1-4 days. You can control the sourness by doing it on purpose, but about 1/4 of the time I do it by accident. :o)

  3. Jak Plihal

    Oct 1, 2013 at 10:03 am

    I pour it in a glass, and drink it 🙂

    Reply
  4. Sheila

    Oct 1, 2013 at 2:37 am

    So, my soured milk has been in my fridge for a very long time…I think 6 months, maybe 7. 2 are still sealed. 2 have been opened. Soooooo, still edible/drinkable? Thoughts, suggestions?

    Reply
    • Tiffaney

      Oct 7, 2013 at 9:30 am

      I would say not edible, but might be good in other things.

  5. Istvan

    Sep 28, 2013 at 6:26 pm

    You could heat up the soured milk in order to separate the curd (cottage cheese) from the whey. You could use the cottage cheese in many meal. The Eastern and Central European cousin is full of meals containing curd, cottage cheese. The remaining whey (which still contains a lot of vitamins) could also be used in several way such added to home made breads and doughs as ascorbic acid replacement which helps raise it even better or also in different meals.

    Reply
  6. Ilene

    Sep 28, 2013 at 5:36 pm

    Does not work with hot chocolate. It just curdles when it’s heated.

    Reply
  7. K

    Sep 28, 2013 at 4:14 pm

    I am confused about how to get the sour milk to a kefir culture…..new to this stuff sorry…..we only buy a 1/2 gal at a time (not huge milk drinkers) but when it does go bad I would LOVE to use it….please help – thanks 🙂

    Reply
    • Tiffaney

      Oct 7, 2013 at 9:31 am

      You would have to let it sour at room temp to get kefir.
      If it sours in the fridge, you wouldn’t get kefir from it.

  8. Mary F

    Sep 28, 2013 at 1:59 pm

    My great grandmother used soured milk (all she had was raw milk) to treat stains on sheets. She said to soak the stains in the soured milk and lay them in the sun. Not sure about this, but I do know that chemical reactions are worth something!

    Reply
  9. Lonna

    Sep 28, 2013 at 1:52 pm

    How long will raw milk last in the fridge before it starts to sour?

    Reply
    • Tiffaney

      Oct 7, 2013 at 9:32 am

      We get 14 gallons every other week. As long as we shake all the gallons every other day, it won’t sour in two weeks. By getting 14 gallons, we only have to drive to the farm twice a month.

  10. Cyndi

    Sep 15, 2013 at 4:49 pm

    Thanks for the info! Love the long list of uses! — I’m wondering HOW LONG can one continue to use the soured milk? Is there a time-limit when it should be finally be thrown out? (Ex: I have a 1/2 gallon that has been in my fridge for 10 weeks –thanks

    Reply
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