Our Family Weekly Cultured Dairy Routine 2026

Cultured Dairy

Here’s my family’s cultured dairy routine, including how much raw milk we buy, and what we do with it (from making yogurt and kefir to butter and sour cream) so nothing goes to waste!

Easy 30-Minute Classic Chili Recipe

photo collage of homemade ranch dressing, cultured butter, yogurt, and kefir, with text overlay: "Our Family's Weekly Cultured Dairy Routine #AskWardee 146 (yogurt, kefir, sour cream, butter and more!)"

Want to know how much milk you should buy weekly so you have enough for yogurt, kefir, cheese, sour cream, and all your family’s dairy and cultured dairy needs?

I’m sharing our family’s routine on today’s #AskWardee! Keep reading or watching below to learn more!

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The Question: What’s Your Weekly Cultured Dairy Routine?

Kylie G. asked:

I have a request to learn more about all the ways you use dairy when culturing. What would a day-by-day schedule look like after you pick up a fresh batch of raw milk? i.e. ferment 2 quarts for whey, have 1 cup of sour cream from that, store 1/2 cup of that sour cream and use other 1/2 cup for ranch dressing. Skim raw cream from another gallon and the rest is simply for drinking/baking! Another gallon would be used to make butter and 1 cup of buttermilk is produced. Get my drift? 🙂 I’m trying to understand how to produce as much variety as I can with as little waste! And trying to figure out a stream-lined timeline aka “week in the life of…” 🙂 Thank you so much for all you do to help us live the life God intended! —Kylie G.

Kylie, thank you for your question!

Because we’re featuring your question today’s #AskWardee, you’re getting a gift — a FREE eBook and Video Package! Our team will be in contact with you so you can choose which one you’d like!

Where We Buy Our Raw Milk

We buy from Provider Farms out of Mountain Home, Idaho. They do weekly drop-offs throughout the Treasure Valley (Boise area).

Provider Farms offer both whole and skimmed milk, as well as cream. They offer ready-made foods such as butter, ghee, and yogurt, although I don’t buy those because we make our own.

They also have eggs, chicken, beef, and pork (all pastured and/or grass-fed).

We love their food and their family! 🙂

How Much Raw Milk We Buy Each Week

We buy 4 to 6 gallons of raw milk weekly.

The amount we buy fluctuates depending on what our family is consuming, and also depending on what the farm has available. I have to say they are really good at keeping up with our usage, though, and only rarely can we not get the amount we need… even up to 8 gallons sometimes (if I want to make cheese or extra of something).

quart sized glass Mason jars of homemade yogurt, with the Instant Pot insert pot in the background

What We Do With The Milk Each Week (Our Family’s Cultured Dairy Routine)

I believe that cheese, yogurt, kefir, and anything cultured turns out tasting better if the milk is very fresh, so I prioritize doing most of my culturing within a few days of milk pickup (even if we’re not going to eat it right away).

At a minimum, here’s what I we use/make each week:

  • 2 batches of Instant Pot raw milk yogurt* (8 quarts in each batch… total of 4 gallons for the week)
  • 3 to 4 quarts of kefir
  • a quart or so for drinking (we drink very little milk as is)
  • cultured butter from the “soured” cream that rises to the top of the yogurt or kefir — I collect this with each batch and when I have 1/2 to 1 gallon collected, I make butter

*I use skimmed milk for the yogurt because that means we end up with more of the actual yogurt and less of the soured cream. This supplies enough soured cream to make butter for our family’s needs. Or, if I want to make “sweet cream” butter, I buy extra cream or I buy whole milk and skim the cream off just for butter (using the milk for yogurt).

When I want to make cheese (every 2 or 3 weeks), I get an additional two gallons of whole milk. (And use that whey for fermenting.)

homemade ranch dressing in a glass Mason jar

If I wanted to make sour cream (to use on its own or for our amazing homemade ranch dressing), I would make sure that some of the milk was whole so that we have plenty of sweet cream to culture. (Or I can use some of the soured cream off yogurt/kefir!)

And that’s it!

glass jars filled with frothy milk

By The Way…

If you’re interested in learning how to make thick yogurt while preserving the benefits of raw milk — instead of pasteurizing it like many yogurt recipes do — check out my FREE thick raw milk yogurt recipe. You can make it in your Instant Pot, dehydrator, or a cooler… Enjoy!

Any Questions Or Comments?

If you have other questions or comments about your own experience with a weekly cultured dairy routine, be sure to leave them in the comments!

Helpful Links

wooden butter mold pulled back to expose the block of cultured butter

 

Share your family’s weekly cultured dairy routine in the comments!

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