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Simple Soymilk

soybeans for soy milk

2 ingredients, 20 minutes, 1 machine. You’re done.

Ingredients

  • 50 grams soybeans (dry) (no need to soak)
  • 600 ml water (bonus: there’s a line on the machine (20 oz.) but it’s okay to go slightly over)

Instructions

MEASURE THE INGREDIENTS

  1. Weigh 50 grams of soybeans, rinse, and add to the machines bean/nut hopper
  2. Add water to the 20 oz. line on the machine

PUSH SOME BUTTONS

  1. Push the “on” button; select Soy, 20 oz.
  2. Press “Start”

GO TAKE A POOP

  1. Do something else for 16 minutes or so while the machine does its work. When it beeps (around 16 min.), it’s ready. Note that the machine will continue running after making the soymilk as it does a self clean.

STIR AND CHILL

  1. Take the carafe off the machine and whisk the soymilk skin back into the rest of the milk (this works best if the milk is still warm).
  2. Chill the soymilk in the carafe or transfer to an airtight container that you can shake and smack whenever to blend (soymilk and all homemade nut/bean milks will settle and separate somewhat b/c you’re not putting a bunch of weird additives in them.

CLEAN UP

  1. Clean the machine. Always check to see if it spooged out the sides, too — it happens sometimes.

Notes

Don’t freak out about the calories here — 223 calories is the entire 20 oz. batch.

This soymilk is great to bake or cook with or for smoothies and makes a bitchin’ vegan buttermilk (sour milk) when you add vinegar. I’ll admit: I don’t drink milk straight so I have no idea how it stacks up to other milks when consumed au natural. I’ve also never tried it in coffee since I take my coffee black.

Always clean the machine when you’re done. The Chefwave Milkmade has a self-cleaning function that’s part of the soymilk-creation cycle but you should still remove the top and clean it thoroughly AND empty and clean the waste-water chamber (u-shaped thing behind the carafe) after each batch. Also clean the steam release thingy. I do this right after making the soymilk, if I remember, and then run an additional self-clean of either 3 or 8 minutes afterwards to make sure it’s clear. Wipe up any goo it leaves behind too.

BTW, I use a higher ration of beans to water than Chefwave recommends. While their ratio likely results in less mess, it’s also pretty watery. Fifty grams of beans (1.8 oz.) was the sweet spot where the machine didn’t jam up but still consistently gave me a thick, good product. As always, adjust as needed to your taste and to your machine. And contact me if you have questions or just want to tell me I’m wrong about anything or everything.

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