Q. I have recently been drinking a lot of kefir instead of regular milk. I like that as a fermented food it has a lot of probiotics. I enjoy it plain, but I also like to add it to smoothies, iced drinks, or even with cereal. I have toying with the idea of adding it to some warm dishes as well, such as oatmeal once the winter sets in and I will be looking for warmer breakfasts to keep e going through cold days. I usually make my oatmeal in the microwave, and I don’t know if microwaving the kefir will ruin it. I’ve never heard of anyone using kefir in warm recipes before, so I’m not sure if heating it on the stove is a better idea, or if it’s fine to just heat it in the microwave. Can you microwave kefir?
A. This is a bit of a tricky question. In terms of plain taste, then if you like your kefir warm there’s no reason why you can’t heat it up in the microwave as you would any other liquid. It’s not the traditional way to consume it, but it would certainly add extra flavour to a dish like oatmeal. However, there is the question of the probiotics.
It’s generally believed that heating foods kills the healthy bacteria after a certain temperature. That is regardless of whether the food is heated in the microwave or on the stove. It’s the heat that affects the bacteria, not the method of heating that’s important. Heating kefir to relatively low temperatures may not remove all of the probiotics, but I’m not a scientist so I can’t tell you for certain how hot is too hot.
If you are not overly concerned about the probiotic aspect being compromised from time to time, then you can go ahead and heat kefir in the microwave when you feel like it. Keep in mind that like regular milk, it can burn quite easily, so begin at a medium heat, and check it after short intervals of about 15-30 seconds each. Stirring the kefir partway through the heating process can also help evenly distribute heat. Allow the kefir to stand for a minute or two after heating before consuming. Refrigerate any unused kefir immediately, and consume as soon as possible. I don’t recommend reheating previously microwaved kefir.
Some bacteria and yeast grow with heat.as a fact kefir grows much faster during the summer and Ive read people from brazil that say in a few hours its done.So yes if you take kefir to boil surely probiotics would die but my guess is some hit could even increase its probiotic power..
I meant HEAT LOL
The temperature zone within which bacteria can live is 4 degrees celsius – 65 degrees celsius (39F – 149F). Below 4 degrees bacteria becomes dormant (but doesn’t die), over 65 degrees bacteria is killed. Hence why the perfect temperature to have your coffee is around 55 – 60 degrees. Likely this varies depending on the strain of bacteria, but it *should* be safe to heat kefir to 40-50 degrees (which is a little hotter than lukewarm) without losing probiotic benefits.
How do I know this? Barista for 10 years, studied hospitality hygiene.
Kefir probiotic bacteria include
stearothermophilus species,
the spores of which
can survive boiling temperatures,
So even if kefir’s bacteria in the vegetative state
are killed, the heat
stimulates germination in the surviving spores,
but if you boil it again after germination,
but before sporulation,
then all or most of the probiotics will be killed.
I’ve tested autoclaves
with thermophilus spores,
and have routinely
sterilized media containing
unwanted spore-formers
with an OLD steam-heat technique called
inspisation…