FERMENT · MILCHFERMENTE

Skyr

skyr

Skyr — isländisches abgetropftes Milchferment, technisch ein Frischkäse

Fermentationsdauer 12-18 hours warm fermentation, 4-12 hours straining
Temperaturbereich 38-42°C (100-108°F) fermentation, 4°C (39°F) straining
Salz / Lake none
Schwierigkeit Mittel
Bedeutung Etabliert
Übersetzungshinweis

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Profil

Skyr is the Icelandic strained dairy ferment with a history extending back to Viking settlement of the island in the 9th century. It is technically a fresh cheese — in Iceland it has historically been classified as such for tax and labeling purposes — but it functions on the plate as a thick yogurt and is eaten with the same flexibility. The defining features are very high straining (much more aggressive than Greek yogurt, removing approximately three-quarters of the original volume as whey), heritage culture (a specific mesophilic-tending-thermophilic blend distinct from standard yogurt cultures), and the use of rennet in the traditional preparation to firm the curd before straining.

The culture mix matters and is specific to skyr: heritage strains of Streptococcus thermophilus, Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus, and lactic acid bacteria distinctive to Iceland that have been propagated continuously in farmhouses for centuries. Some modern industrial skyr products simplify this to standard yogurt cultures, producing a faster-fermenting product that strains similarly but lacks the heritage flavor character. The traditional version is made from skim milk, fermented warmer than mesophilic but cooler than yogurt-standard (38-42°C), then dosed with a small amount of liquid rennet (about 1/8 the amount used for hard cheese) to firm the curd, then strained heavily.

The resulting product is extraordinarily thick — thicker than Greek yogurt, with a clean dairy flavor, low fat (because made from skim), and high protein concentration (roughly 11g per 100g, double standard yogurt). The texture is closer to a dense fresh cheese spread than a yogurt; eaten with a spoon, it holds its shape on the spoon without slumping. Traditional Icelandic preparation serves it with cream poured over (restoring some of the fat removed by using skim milk) and a topping of fresh berries, sugar, or honey.

For the home fermenter, skyr is meaningfully more demanding than yogurt: heritage culture must be sourced, rennet must be used in the right amount (too much produces curd-and-whey separation rather than a smooth firm gel), straining is more aggressive than Greek yogurt (4-12 hours rather than 2-6), and the temperature window during the warm fermentation is narrower than yogurt's. The reward is a product that genuinely cannot be bought at most supermarkets and that occupies a unique culinary register — a dairy ferment with the body of cheese and the flavor of yogurt.

Schlüsseltechniken

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Häufige Fehler

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