Sir, I really appreciate your endeavors which, to me, is explosive . I am an agriculturist, but I must confess, you are a lot better. I'm a Nigerian. I love you. I love your abilities. Thanks a lot. Keep serving Udeme Brown
I love making LAB! You can cover your jar while it sits, with a paper towel and a rubberband. Wait for it to smell sweet slightly sour like cheese. While the weather is warm outside I let my jar sit outside in the shade. So it's warm but no direct sunlight and it takes about 2 days. Thank for sharing this!! Lab should be applied at least once or twice during a grow season💞✌
I just wanted to let everyone know that I successfully made LAB using milk powder. It must be full cream milk powder, but it works a treat. This may be useful for anyone who is into dried food storage for prep. I use the cheese in a vegetarian Shepards pie, using lentils, onion, celery, soy sauce and the cheese in the filling. Top with potato mash and its delicious!
Hey I like your idea for the dish. I have a good store of lentils--such great food--and I have fresh celery and newly cured onions in from the gardens. We also just completed, a few days ago, digging and putting up all the potatoes in the root bunker. My wife is peeling some Yukon Golds and some Orchestras right now, for our Thanksgiving dinner today (Canada). I am so glad for everyone who has ability to feed themselves in these times. God is good.
Am a Morden farmer and crop production specialist in SA -Africa...you kik me with the simplicity with which you explain. By far my best utube what what . Like your videos to pieces bro. Keep up the good work
Just finished my first LABS using this video! This is so cool! My husband thinks I’m crazy at this point with all the different cultures I’m growing between learning sourdough and my garden. But the results as so good!
We also use this here in the Philippines using rice wash water to feed our garden. This is correct and proper. Plants love it. Never made cheese with it. Will try this with fresh carabao milk. Thanks so much.
Thanks for sharing how to separate milk using rice water and typical store-bought milk to give people more opportunity to introduce probiotic, homemade food to their diet. This is what I do with raw milk by letting it sit on the counter, adding nothing. I don't press the curds but strain until firm. I like to add blueberries or pineapple and shredded coconut to it. The curds last for months in my fridge and the whey lasts about 6 months. I use the whey when I ferment cucumbers, kraut, beet kvass, lemonade, etc. I want to try it on my garden now!
oh yes you are doing it the best possible way!!!... raw milk is by far the best and yes I use this to start fermentation of all sorts of things too.. thank you!
This is how they make curd in India! It is cheap, healthy, and delicious (or was - it is now 40 years since I spent 6 months there!) Refrigeration was not common in rural areas, so having a way to extend the shelf life of milk was a good thing. And worth keeping in mind, if we lose access to refrigeration at some point.
Hey! I love your videos I've been using a lot of them to develop my Farm plan. I need to know how much lactate acid I need for a 30 by 30 m Garden, as well as how often to apply it. Also what is the best way to store it while I build up the amount I need? Thank you!!
@@gardenlikeaviking Thank you for the reply and I look forward to watching the video when you have the time. Great channel by the way, I'm a new subscriber and I'm working my way through your great content. I've learnt so much already, thank you.
Every video I watch on your Chanel is so very informative. I have watched a lot of gardening videos for the last two year and yours are hands down the most informative, concise, and totally adaptable to your situation. Your lifestyle is what I have aspired to and only partially achieved. Thanks
If you use some of those LABS to start a second batch and add some honey and a little water before you add the milk, it ferments super smooth and makes an excellent substitute for mayonnaise!
I just made my first batch of LAB and I must say it was a great success thanks to your video. It is Saturday August 20 and 92 degrees here in Northern Florida. I will be applying this to my garden beds tonight. I got almost 2 full gallons of Lab from my process. Total process time was 5 days. Should be enough to feed my 24 raised beds, if not I know how to make it again thanks to you. The smell and taste of the LAB and Farmer cheese is surprisingly pleasant. No cheese cloth at the moment but will have the next batch. This is just one more step to a full no cost organic garden.
Very interesting video. I like that you’re not shy about showing people new and interesting things! People who can’t get past the “ew” factor are too shallow to absorb the knowledge that you attempt to pass to us!
I made a nettle and seaweed tea (fertilizer) this week. I make it the same way every year, but this year, inspired by this video, I added a cup of that rice water to my concoction. I didn't wait for it to ferment separately, just added it to my weeds and water. Two days later, the whole thing started bubbling, it literally looked alive (still does). So beautiful! 💚 Thanks so much for sharing these ideas 👍 I'm off to the fishmonger now to get some fish for my fish hydrolysate fertiliser 😁
Thank you!!! you've helped this beginner gardener so very much. Would love to see a video on how to prepare LABS for longer term storage. Thanks again for teaching us how to protect our loved ones against what most of us know that is coming.
Keep the LABS sealed in the fridge. Use it as the mother brew, mixing some with Molasses and water to propagate some a while before you actually want to use it and put the remaining mother brew back in the fridge. Should last for months and months in that condition. Disclaimer: heard this from The Weedy Gardener, but I'm only in the process of making my first batch, so can't confirm from practical experience yet.
Success with my first full batch of LABS. I now have 1 gallon of LABS and ate the cheese for 3 days, and my digestion has never been better. Next, I will do a smaller 1/2 batch mainly for the cheese that's a lot more like TOFU but good with seasoning.
I agree that a half batch might be best for me. My garden is smaller, and I don't think I could use the LAB before it lost potency with just 1 Tbsp per gallon. I also love that 2 gallon container, but I have no place to put it ;).
I can’t stop watching all your videos. 70 years old and so much to learn but it makes me happy. Thank you for all your knowledge, for sharing, experimenting….. and I watch Thrive like a Viking also.
I feel like this the single best gardening video I've ever watched. And I've watched them a lot. I was dubious because nobody else talked about it. So I made some googling and found credible researches that prove it actually works.
@Garden Like a Viking Hey brother! You got another knockout video here. I envy your travels and life experiences you've mentioned in previous videos. Also, I greatly appreciate you taking the time to share your wealth of knowledge with us. I believe this is exactly how our Creator intended us to live, clean and naturally; absent from the corruption and machinations of corporatism and greed that's being forced on our food supply and so many other areas of our lives. I frequently tell people that even with just a small garden bed you can grow so many things that will bring life to you and your home as well as cut your food costs. I'm kinda awestruck that you did a video using rice water. The reason is because I've been a cook for years and I usually soak the rice and strain it/clean it in hopes of removing the starchy film and dust. And here you come along showing a use for it! 🤣 Now I'm gonna want to do this and use it all the time. I also LOVE cheese and hope to try it out as well. I did have a question about your methods of use for the serum. Do you use it together, mixed or at the same time, with the fish emulsion? Or do you separate their usage? How about maybe a scheduled rotation? For example, emulsion one week and serum the following or maybe emulsion on Monday and serum on Thursday? Would these methods be best used before or after a rain? Times of day? Etc. I'm no expert gardener but I think I have enough experience and knowledge to get by. However I always get mixed reviews on those questions and I think a detailed tutorial using your methods and products would be excellent reference material for everyone. Not to mention, I've met numerous people who don't know the importance of watering a plants roots and NOT the plant. Many people have no idea how dangerous it is to just pour water on a plant; especially in the evening. Once again, I greatly appreciate your time and effort to share this knowledge with us. It truly is priceless and continuous.
thank you for this positive energy my friend!.... I will certainly make a video detailing the things you've asked so thanks for the idea!... I tend to do a root drench once a week and a foliar about once or twice a week.... its good to mix numerous things together to achieve a balanced application... root drench before or during a rain... foliar with no rain and at night only.... video coming soon to explain
Your videos are such a gift. My young son and I are working together to make your wonderful concoctions for our gardens. I am so pleased to be able to pass this on to him. Thank you so much.
My husband is a cheese junky. He’s going to love this, and I’ll get to benefit as well by getting some great microbes 🦠 for my garden. ❤️ your videos. Thanks!
Always wanted to make a "live" cheese. Followed the tuition. It is 101% on its way to a resounding success. Starting to curdle. Can barely wait. Man. Am I thankful!!!!!!!!
I'm going to make this because your facial expression while eating the cheese is so convincing. Thank you! This might me my new favorite and it's healthy! Yay! 😍🙏
i did this right before our last frost date this year, for the first time. my currants are so big that the branches are alost laying down on the ground, and a lot of my blueberry bushes that have been struggeling are now full of berries. it boosted the soil life on my land bigtime. thank you so much!
I’d love to see your cheese recipe that’s a little more involved! Thank you. I’m making this now. I made the JMS yesterday! Almost done. Can’t wait to fix my soil!!
Great video. Health for everyone. I would note though, make sure to use Organic rice. Rice from foreign countries may have used fertilizer containing arsenic. Blessings from Linda in middle Georgia.
There is a company in Singapore that produces a whole range of products from this Lactobacillus. They have fertilizers for plants and probiotics for poultry. They have shown that this probiotic reduced chicken mortality to even less than commercial antibiotics. They were testing them on shrimp and seafood too. These things are gold. I wondered if you could use rice flour instead of washed rice water.
I just love watching your videos and the best part is how you explain the process etc; i am new to gardening and my yard actually is concrete jungle but i refrain from the chemical stuff. my first gardening experience started with young leaf lettuce plants and celery plants and they did quite well but with your advice would have excelled, i only recently started looking at your vids when i have the time of course , its a learning process but what is wonderful is that persons like yourself share the knowledge for some of us who are so inexperienced and for that i am thankful.. you Sir are really good as i have many ah subscriptions but I am quite intrigued by your intelligence in explanations and the fact that you use living organisms as well as dead ones that is readily and easily available, that have not been pumped up with chemicals. May the Lord continue to bless you. I try my uttermost best to try watch all your videos with my limited time and especially since i have started to expand to other plants. Thank you very much !
PLEASE!! PLEASE!! PLEASE!! Show us how to make the cheese 🧀😋🤪😍!! I successfully made the farmers! SO EXCITED to keep learning! THANK YOU NATE!! No price can be put on the value of this training! Love 💖 ur channel!
My 3th batch worked 🥰. Lesson learned: don't fill the pot too high 😂. The cheese 'mushroomed' out of the pot, only slightly contained by the cloth and rubber band 😂😂 Which I could share the picture 😂😂
Thankful you shared this video as well as the fish fertilizer videos. I’ve been working on a farm & one of the others gave me this cheese yesterday. Last night I was given a bag of fish. Will finally be making the cheese so I can make the fish fertilizer.
I guess I was taking the long way around. I’ve been making either water kefir or using my older dairy kefir as an additive to my compost pile. Sort of a variation on the “drunken compost” hack that I saw long ago online. I like to use water kefir as a starter for my veggie ferments and always have more than I can use, no matter how much I drink (or eat) what gets produced. I had noticed that the compost was more rich.
I love this type of cheese. My parents are from Norway, & so we grew up making this cheese. We gave the "whey" to our dog. Should have put it in the garden. I had no idea it would work with regular pasteurized milk from the store. Very good to know
Love ur videos! I’ve been gardening and fermenting many things for years and just happened to come across ur channel a couple weeks ago and can’t stop watching and making my way through all ur great content. I ferment my cherry tomatoes the exact way and can’t wait to make this fermented rice water farm cheese with my raw cow milk 😋 to go along with YES those tasty fermented tomato cherry bombs. Thanks for sharing all ur substantial knowledge and wisdom friend!
I made this a few years ago. I also added molasses. But I think I added a lot more water at the end. I still have some of it. It still smells good so I use it. It doesn’t hurt my plants but I’m not sure if the lacto is still alive.
I've been making LABS by letting organic store-bought Buttermilk separate at room temperature for 1-2 days. I then strain the separated Buttermilk through cheesecloth, this separates the LABS from the whey. This process can shave up to an entire week off of the traditional KNF LABS making procedure and I find the resulting LABS is very high grade. I then use the LABS in various ways including making Bokashi!
I'm making my second batch a little behind schedule plants loved it the 1st time around cheese was great my dogs loved it too much helped themselves while my back was turned opportunistic my homestead critters all had some liquid in there water rabbits turkeys quail horses dont forget the cat poured what was left over into my compost pile I will be on guarding my cheese this time around 😀
Awesome video... I've done similiar in terms of making Milk Kefir Probiotics. It transformed my life. I had digestive issues and panic attacks that went away soon as I started consuming it. It also cured my mother's allergies and eye infection that took her sight, as well as horrible yeast infection that took root after a round of powerful antibiotics. The ordeal actually repaired my relationship with my mother. Very powerful.
@@gardenlikeaviking Thank you Sir... I'm underselling how powerful this general remedy has been for me and people in my life... Seeing this here helped me know I'm on the right track.
Hi, I’m Pau from Spain 🇪🇸 New subscriber to your channel, mainly indoor organic gardener (lights) and shaded balconies, but helping a friend set up an open air garden on a rooftop ran into amplified issues I have indoors in summer > excessive heat. We have 298 sunny days per year here so it can and usually does get pretty hot. A hot tiled terrace you can fry an egg on posed some serious challenges but (almost) past that now as we head into autumn. The rooting problem caused me to investigate as though I have had the problem before (heat+plastic pots+water=stew) never serious enough to look further than common sense. To the point: I had seen a lot of YT channels claiming to have the recipe for LABS, half a dozen with the formula; Dry baker’s yeast / fresh yeast + sugar (molasses) + warm water + fresh full cream milk. I tried it out twice and it seems to have been beneficial, 2 days ago. I tried a new batch with some old ‘chemical’ yeast (baking powder) I came across at the back of a cupboard, mixed with the other ingredients and no raise, no rising, I chucked it down drain. Then I saw your two videos, which I must say were very convincing (your knowledge shines through your non nonsense approach) with the rice wash water and the milk (and the cheese). The rice water has been sitting for a few hours. Questions are, if you will, do you use the yeast/ sugar/water/milk formula? Do you have a video explaining the differences between your LABS formula and the other more popular ones I have seen, and if so could you please point me to it or any other relevant? Thanks. I will be wading through your videos one by one over the next few weeks. 👌🏼✌🏼
As a hobbyist brewer, I submit a hearty thumbs up. Any plans on a video that ties this with the fungal based solutions that you've presented in the past?
As someone who just started gardening again last year, and wanting to do all natural fertilizer, your videos are incredible! Thank you for making all on them for free! Very cool of you!
Oh my gosh, this looks amazing! I have to try this for my garden and I wasn't expecting the benefit of actual cheese too. I just heard about your channel and immediately subscribed today. I made farmhouse cheese via a cooking method 2 years ago and although it was good, I'm pretty sure the cooked recipe I followed destroyed all the beneficial bacteria. But I'm going to try this soon. Thank you very much!
yes the cooking process kills the bacteria and that's why this is the type of cheese meant to be eaten fresh!! thank you and welcome to the channel my friend
Anyone else hurting at how long the tap was running before he turned it off? I was like, "Come on, man, you can stir the rice around also AFTER you turn off the water!" Love the clarity of your instructions though, Nate.
I've been making LAB for years and the serum lasts 6 months to a year in the refrigerator, but if you want to be able to keep it out at room temperature you need to add equal weight of brown sugar to saturate the LAB, if you don't completely saturate it it will still be active and make a foamy mess, but in general LAB can last a long time in the fridge
I have done many tests over the years and its power definitely decreases after a few weeks in the fridge... its best to make fresh monthly.... but this is just my personal experience
@@ronlopez3273 If it degrades in the fridge over a few weeks, my opinion is freezing would kill the live bacteria; and, I strongly suspect he would have mentioned a freezing option if it were a viable option-
CURDS and WHEY😄 you can also heat a gallon of milk on the stove to 90 degrees, add 1/2 cup lemon juice or white vinegar. Let it set until the curd is separated from the whey, stirring occasionally, after the curds separate from the way… dump the whey off into a pan or bowl and wrap the cheese in the cloth to drain.. scoop it into a bowl and add your seasonings and a little bit of milk or cream, and you have cottage cheese…if you keep it wrapped in the cloth and press it, it’s farmhouse cheese.
Got raw milk to make the LABS it functioned much differently than the previous batch with pasteurized milk. Waiting to see if it was something on my end or what. The curds did not really separate, and were the texture of mayonnaise rather than kinda solid like before but there was a thin mold layer on top so I filtered out as much as I could through a mesh bag and strainer and set it back in the cabinet. It was still very milky but within a few hours had formed the 3 distinct layers with the whey I recognized in the middle
I love how you explain everything in a simple and precise way. After an eternity of watching soo many videos I finally feel I am getting somewhere. You are lifting my confusion, smile... So is the LAB the same as the starter for Bokashi?
thank you my friend!... LABS is often used to start Bokashi yes but its not the same as the EM1 thats sold with the actual Bokashi kits... a far superior starter to your Bokashi mix would be to make the JADAM Microbial Solution I made a video about because that has a far more diverse population of MO's and will give you a better result... LABS is basically just one particular strain of MO
I understand! A friend of mine shared some of his Bokashi bacteria with me and even though they work fine and decompose super fast once buried (I am trying to work heavy clay soil), I was wondering if the bacteria support my soil or not, because they were brought from the other side of the planet! What do you think?
Thanks for the great info. This process may take a little longer, but it is far simpler than the cooking process to make farmers cheese. FYI, there's another way to make lactobacillus that is people and plant friendly that is much cheaper. Granted, the process takes a little longer but you can make literally gallons of labs with nothing more than a couple of cups of brown rice, two or three cups of brown sugar, which can be made with just regular sugar and blackstrap molasses, and a few spoonfuls of sea salt. Great for the gut, great for plants, great for cleaning solutions, even laundry. So many uses for it.
Dude, I made this per your specs and I am blown away. Yes, I am eating it with the fermented tomatoes. I made two jars of the tomatoes--one of them with four smoked habaneros in there. It isn't quite 2 weeks yet, but oooh my are they something! Now, this cheese is to die for. I have to agree with the addictive part of this, as you warned. Except it is worse than you let on: it is immediately addictive. The crack cocaine of fermented products. I just took the cheese out this AM and I've been into it several times throughout my workday here at the ranch. Now, at the end of the day, I am still buzzing around it like a fly. There are a thousands tasty ways to use this stuff, if you have any foodie in ya at all--I love it also on crackers with homemade corn relish. I would like to get bona fide press to do this, as rigging things can be a bit awky. Do you have any recommendations? One other question I have is why not salt this cheese, and at what stage would it be best to do this? Are you planning to make any aged cheesemaking vids? I am very interested in this at this point.
great and wonderful input my friend thank you!!!... I'll make a video about the cheese press sometime this winter when I make the video about real cheese... either to buy one or its easy to make our own as well... I salt the cheese at point of use...
moving forward, I am making a very simple press with two 1.5" thick boards (double 3/4 plywood glued and clamped) with two lengths of 1" wooden dowl glued into 1" holes drilled into the bottom board, with 1 1/8" holes on the top board, and barbell weights to slip over the dowels on the top board (4 x 10#, 2 x 5# will give enough combinations). The weights are the most costly item, but usually these can be found at garage sales...
Great video. Thanks. Can I ask, my wife and I make our own home made yogurt and always have a jug full of whey at the end of it. Is this pretty much the same as your lactic acid liquid or is there a difference? Could it be used in the same way as you use this liquid when making your quick fish fertiliser? 👍🏻🙂
its not exactly the same but it will work... definitely if you already have the whey as a byproduct then its great to use in this same manner yes... I'd add two cups of it to the bucket instead of just one of the LABS
LAB serum has mesophilic cultures which means they prefer room temperature. Culturing your own gives you a more diverse variety of bacteria. Yoghurt cultures thrive at higher temperatures which is why you incubate your milk when making yoghurt. Yoghurt also tends to have only to or three different bacteria.
Lactobacillus is also great for decarboxylating ibotenic acid to muscimol. Amanita Muscaria fermented in it makes a great anti-anxiety tonic in low doses and can be a full-on deliriant in high doses.
Another excellent video my dude. Could you please explain a little further the longer term storage recipe, ie is it straight 1:1 LAB with Brown Sugar? Do you first dissolve the sugar in an amount of water perhaps? It seems like a LOT of sugar, but maybe thats the idea. I use this stuff for a DIY bokashi set up so want to maximise the shelf life. Thanks heaps!
yes I know it is definitely a lot of sugar!... that's one reason I don't promote KNF much because of the unbelievable amounts of sugar used.... but yes if you want to store at room temp its just 1 Liter of LABS to 1 Kilogram of brown sugar.... and yes you just mix the brown sugar directly into the LABS no additional anything... without going into it deeply, the sugar puts the bacteria to "sleep" and they remain dormant until you dilute with water and then they will re-awaken immediately... so it has to be almost like a syrup
@@letsrazzledazzle I make the long term Efficient Microorganisms in the same way as describe Viking, since five years ago. Once the serum is ready, we add 25 litres of rain water and 1 litre of molasses. Tu use it, dilute 50cc of EM in 2 rainwater litres. We use it, until over. As our crop is very small, some times is up two years. I use this more than anything, as a compost component to bokashi.
You said your body actually craves the cheese. I believe that's why you like the smell of the rice wash. It's a pleasant smell because your body knows how good it is.
I think a video of how to take this to “actual cheese” as you referenced @9:08 would be a cool content idea! Thanks for your work brother. Appreciated.
That cheese and my homemade sourdough bread…and I just might add a touch of the garlic scape pesto I just made! Thanks for the vid. I’m a graduate of dr. Ingham’s SoilFoodWeb school… so glad to hear you talking sense about soil biology!
3rd times the charm! Finally successful. Got a sinus infection for my 1st batch and a random stuffy nose for the 2nd... being able to smell is crucial apparently 😊
It's very good to watch your videos; your passion is a flame spreading around so easily; your home is very beautiful! our stomach does the same thing as plants; it makes food turn, and microorganisms make it ready for our bodies to absorb the necessary nutrients and vitamins. Without these beautiful microorganisms, we would not grow or be able to maintain our health properly. We make this kind of fresh cheese in Romania out of many milk types, and it is so delicious! Lactic acid can also be used to ferment many foods so that when we eat them, we absorb so much more nutrients than without the fermentation process. It feels so good to be at the mercy of Mother Nature and the Formless Lord Pervading its Creation of Created beings personified.
he'll make the real cheese when he's full from this cheese! it sounds too good to do something else with:). I just discovered you and subscribed. very very good channel. thank you for sharing w us what you already do so we can learn xoxo
Made a smaller batch of labs and will put it in the refrigerator. This time I will dilute 1 oz of the labs with my gallon of drinking water and put the cheese through my cheese press for snacks. My gallon of last weeks labs went into my compost and JDAM plant fertilizer barrel.
this is a healpful presentation, I watched a video with a Korean Farmer who made the same liquid . He also spoke about using it in compost to help with smells. I am inspired to make some . I wanted to in the spring but miss placed the other video of how to so I am glad I came across yours.
I love all types of cheese! I really hope to try this very soon as I am getting into the JADAM style of farming. Thank you for all the knowledge you bestow upon all of us!
This information is priceless and has a bonus “two-fee” with ending up the process with healthy, tasty Farmer Cheese. I would also like very much to see the process of creating cheese from the curds. You bless me aand thousands od others with your common sense approach to the science side of gardening. For that, I thank you. May your days q be long and sunny. Blessings from Central Florida.
Yes, we too would love a video of you showing process from fresh farmers cheese into “longer lasting” cheese.
its in the works thank you!
@@gardenlikeaviking Did you get the video out?
@gardenlikeaviking Please, and Thank You!!!
Sir, I really appreciate your endeavors which, to me, is explosive
.
I am an agriculturist, but I must confess, you are a lot better.
I'm a Nigerian. I love you. I love your abilities. Thanks a lot. Keep serving
Udeme Brown
thank you for the positive feedback my friend!
I love making LAB! You can cover your jar while it sits, with a paper towel and a rubberband. Wait for it to smell sweet slightly sour like cheese. While the weather is warm outside I let my jar sit outside in the shade. So it's warm but no direct sunlight and it takes about 2 days. Thank for sharing this!! Lab should be applied at least once or twice during a grow season💞✌
I just wanted to let everyone know that I successfully made LAB using milk powder. It must be full cream milk powder, but it works a treat. This may be useful for anyone who is into dried food storage for prep. I use the cheese in a vegetarian Shepards pie, using lentils, onion, celery, soy sauce and the cheese in the filling. Top with potato mash and its delicious!
this is very good to know thank you for sharing!!
Hey I like your idea for the dish. I have a good store of lentils--such great food--and I have fresh celery and newly cured onions in from the gardens. We also just completed, a few days ago, digging and putting up all the potatoes in the root bunker. My wife is peeling some Yukon Golds and some Orchestras right now, for our Thanksgiving dinner today (Canada). I am so glad for everyone who has ability to feed themselves in these times. God is good.
P
Absolutely! I use Hoosier Mills Full Cream milk powder!
@@gardenlikeavikingCan't you leave it in the fridge for some time
Am a Morden farmer and crop production specialist in SA -Africa...you kik me with the simplicity with which you explain. By far my best utube what what . Like your videos to pieces bro. Keep up the good work
thank you for the positive energy my friend!!!
Just finished my first LABS using this video! This is so cool! My husband thinks I’m crazy at this point with all the different cultures I’m growing between learning sourdough and my garden. But the results as so good!
We also use this here in the Philippines using rice wash water to feed our garden. This is correct and proper. Plants love it. Never made cheese with it. Will try this with fresh carabao milk.
Thanks so much.
Thanks for sharing how to separate milk using rice water and typical store-bought milk to give people more opportunity to introduce probiotic, homemade food to their diet. This is what I do with raw milk by letting it sit on the counter, adding nothing. I don't press the curds but strain until firm. I like to add blueberries or pineapple and shredded coconut to it. The curds last for months in my fridge and the whey lasts about 6 months. I use the whey when I ferment cucumbers, kraut, beet kvass, lemonade, etc. I want to try it on my garden now!
oh yes you are doing it the best possible way!!!... raw milk is by far the best and yes I use this to start fermentation of all sorts of things too.. thank you!
This is how they make curd in India! It is cheap, healthy, and delicious (or was - it is now 40 years since I spent 6 months there!) Refrigeration was not common in rural areas, so having a way to extend the shelf life of milk was a good thing. And worth keeping in mind, if we lose access to refrigeration at some point.
Yum
Hey! I love your videos I've been using a lot of them to develop my Farm plan. I need to know how much lactate acid I need for a 30 by 30 m Garden, as well as how often to apply it. Also what is the best way to store it while I build up the amount I need? Thank you!!
Great video, thank you. I'd love to see the process you use to turn the farmers cheese into "real" cheese.
thank you my friend and yes I'll be making one of those when the time is right
@@gardenlikeaviking Thank you for the reply and I look forward to watching the video when you have the time. Great channel by the way, I'm a new subscriber and I'm working my way through your great content. I've learnt so much already, thank you.
yes PLEASE. I realize it's a little time consuming to make the real cheese !
Yes please
Me too.
Every video I watch on your Chanel is so very informative. I have watched a lot of gardening videos for the last two year and yours are hands down the most informative, concise, and totally adaptable to your situation. Your lifestyle is what I have aspired to and only partially achieved. Thanks
thank you for your positive energy and feedback my friend I'm happy you are here!
If you use some of those LABS to start a second batch and add some honey and a little water before you add the milk, it ferments super smooth and makes an excellent substitute for mayonnaise!
Nice, thanks for the hint :)
How much of all ingredients? How muchLAB? How much honey, etc?
I just made my first batch of LAB and I must say it was a great success thanks to your video.
It is Saturday August 20 and 92 degrees here in Northern Florida. I will be applying this to my garden beds tonight. I got almost 2 full gallons of Lab from my process. Total process time was 5 days. Should be enough to feed my 24 raised beds, if not I know how to make it again thanks to you. The smell and taste of the LAB and Farmer cheese is surprisingly pleasant. No cheese cloth at the moment but will have the next batch. This is just one more step to a full no cost organic garden.
Very interesting video.
I like that you’re not shy about showing people new and interesting things!
People who can’t get past the “ew” factor are too shallow to absorb the knowledge that you attempt to pass to us!
Yes, the "ew factor" is actually poor mental hygiene.
Lab cheese and fermented tomatoes,,,,,,
The best tast explosion ever!!!
I'm thinking goats milk and some delicious goat cheese
I made a nettle and seaweed tea (fertilizer) this week. I make it the same way every year, but this year, inspired by this video, I added a cup of that rice water to my concoction. I didn't wait for it to ferment separately, just added it to my weeds and water. Two days later, the whole thing started bubbling, it literally looked alive (still does). So beautiful! 💚 Thanks so much for sharing these ideas 👍 I'm off to the fishmonger now to get some fish for my fish hydrolysate fertiliser 😁
Thank you!!! you've helped this beginner gardener so very much. Would love to see a video on how to prepare LABS for longer term storage. Thanks again for teaching us how to protect our loved ones against what most of us know that is coming.
Keep the LABS sealed in the fridge. Use it as the mother brew, mixing some with Molasses and water to propagate some a while before you actually want to use it and put the remaining mother brew back in the fridge. Should last for months and months in that condition.
Disclaimer: heard this from The Weedy Gardener, but I'm only in the process of making my first batch, so can't confirm from practical experience yet.
Success with my first full batch of LABS. I now have 1 gallon of LABS and ate the cheese for 3 days, and my digestion has never been better. Next, I will do a smaller 1/2 batch mainly for the cheese that's a lot more like TOFU but good with seasoning.
I agree that a half batch might be best for me. My garden is smaller, and I don't think I could use the LAB before it lost potency with just 1 Tbsp per gallon. I also love that 2 gallon container, but I have no place to put it ;).
@@nancyspruiell347 Use it full strength to speed up composting
I can’t stop watching all your videos. 70 years old and so much to learn but it makes me happy. Thank you for all your knowledge, for sharing, experimenting….. and I watch Thrive like a Viking also.
Thank you sir for changing the way I live and garden! Much respect
you are very welcome my friend
I feel like this the single best gardening video I've ever watched. And I've watched them a lot. I was dubious because nobody else talked about it. So I made some googling and found credible researches that prove it actually works.
@Garden Like a Viking Hey brother! You got another knockout video here. I envy your travels and life experiences you've mentioned in previous videos. Also, I greatly appreciate you taking the time to share your wealth of knowledge with us. I believe this is exactly how our Creator intended us to live, clean and naturally; absent from the corruption and machinations of corporatism and greed that's being forced on our food supply and so many other areas of our lives. I frequently tell people that even with just a small garden bed you can grow so many things that will bring life to you and your home as well as cut your food costs. I'm kinda awestruck that you did a video using rice water. The reason is because I've been a cook for years and I usually soak the rice and strain it/clean it in hopes of removing the starchy film and dust. And here you come along showing a use for it! 🤣 Now I'm gonna want to do this and use it all the time. I also LOVE cheese and hope to try it out as well. I did have a question about your methods of use for the serum. Do you use it together, mixed or at the same time, with the fish emulsion? Or do you separate their usage? How about maybe a scheduled rotation? For example, emulsion one week and serum the following or maybe emulsion on Monday and serum on Thursday? Would these methods be best used before or after a rain? Times of day? Etc. I'm no expert gardener but I think I have enough experience and knowledge to get by. However I always get mixed reviews on those questions and I think a detailed tutorial using your methods and products would be excellent reference material for everyone. Not to mention, I've met numerous people who don't know the importance of watering a plants roots and NOT the plant. Many people have no idea how dangerous it is to just pour water on a plant; especially in the evening. Once again, I greatly appreciate your time and effort to share this knowledge with us. It truly is priceless and continuous.
thank you for this positive energy my friend!.... I will certainly make a video detailing the things you've asked so thanks for the idea!... I tend to do a root drench once a week and a foliar about once or twice a week.... its good to mix numerous things together to achieve a balanced application... root drench before or during a rain... foliar with no rain and at night only.... video coming soon to explain
Your videos are such a gift. My young son and I are working together to make your wonderful concoctions for our gardens. I am so pleased to be able to pass this on to him. Thank you so much.
Your presentation is fabulous, Sir.
by far, this has been my favorite video about LAB making. Having cheese to eat. Thanks so much for making and sharing this video!
My husband is a cheese junky. He’s going to love this, and I’ll get to benefit as well by getting some great microbes 🦠 for my garden. ❤️ your videos. Thanks!
Always wanted to make a "live" cheese. Followed the tuition. It is 101% on its way to a resounding success. Starting to curdle. Can barely wait. Man. Am I thankful!!!!!!!!
I'm going to make this because your facial expression while eating the cheese is so convincing. Thank you! This might me my new favorite and it's healthy! Yay! 😍🙏
i did this right before our last frost date this year, for the first time. my currants are so big that the branches are alost laying down on the ground, and a lot of my blueberry bushes that have been struggeling are now full of berries. it boosted the soil life on my land bigtime. thank you so much!
Your short videos have the most knowledge per minute, not a second wasted, I look forward to watching anything you make. Thanks. Nate
thank you for the positive and helpful feedback my friend!!
Please save water, water is precious. Thanks for sharing the information.
I’d love to see your cheese recipe that’s a little more involved! Thank you. I’m making this now. I made the JMS yesterday! Almost done. Can’t wait to fix my soil!!
This guy has so much knowledge. I love his way of teaching us.
Great news! I’ve made the LAB. Can you make an instructional video on applications and options for usage?
Very good thank you for not having music in the background
Great video. Health for everyone. I would note though, make sure to use Organic rice. Rice from foreign countries may have used fertilizer containing arsenic. Blessings from Linda in middle Georgia.
thats great advice thank you Linda!
arsenic is not from fertilizer, instead it is naturally occurring in the soil. Organic rice is still better.
Awesome! I'm buying whole milk and rice tomorrow to try this. That cheese looks out for this world 😋
There is a company in Singapore that produces a whole range of products from this Lactobacillus.
They have fertilizers for plants and probiotics for poultry. They have shown that this probiotic reduced chicken mortality to even less than commercial antibiotics. They were testing them on shrimp and seafood too. These things are gold.
I wondered if you could use rice flour instead of washed rice water.
Made labs for first time last week . Turned out lovely over the moon .
I just love watching your videos and the best part is how you explain the process etc; i am new to gardening and my yard actually is concrete jungle but i refrain from the chemical stuff. my first gardening experience started with young leaf lettuce plants and celery plants and they did quite well but with your advice would have excelled, i only recently started looking at your vids when i have the time of course , its a learning process but what is wonderful is that persons like yourself share the knowledge for some of us who are so inexperienced and for that i am thankful.. you Sir are really good as i have many ah subscriptions but I am quite intrigued by your intelligence in explanations and the fact that you use living organisms as well as dead ones that is readily and easily available, that have not been pumped up with chemicals. May the Lord continue to bless you. I try my uttermost best to try watch all your videos with my limited time and especially since i have started to expand to other plants. Thank you very much !
thank you so much for the positive energy and feedback my friend I appreciate you!!!... I wish you the highest success in growing your food!!
PLEASE!! PLEASE!! PLEASE!! Show us how to make the cheese 🧀😋🤪😍!! I successfully made the farmers! SO EXCITED to keep learning! THANK YOU NATE!! No price can be put on the value of this training! Love 💖 ur channel!
My 3th batch worked 🥰.
Lesson learned: don't fill the pot too high 😂. The cheese 'mushroomed' out of the pot, only slightly contained by the cloth and rubber band 😂😂
Which I could share the picture 😂😂
Same for me! Did yours smell awful? Mine is terrible!!!
@@katyyoder1481 no, smell was quite neutral but then I'm used to ferments
Thankful you shared this video as well as the fish fertilizer videos. I’ve been working on a farm & one of the others gave me this cheese yesterday. Last night I was given a bag of fish. Will finally be making the cheese so I can make the fish fertilizer.
I guess I was taking the long way around. I’ve been making either water kefir or using my older dairy kefir as an additive to my compost pile. Sort of a variation on the “drunken compost” hack that I saw long ago online. I like to use water kefir as a starter for my veggie ferments and always have more than I can use, no matter how much I drink (or eat) what gets produced. I had noticed that the compost was more rich.
I love this type of cheese. My parents are from Norway, & so we grew up making this cheese. We gave the "whey" to our dog. Should have put it in the garden.
I had no idea it would work with regular pasteurized milk from the store. Very good to know
Love ur videos! I’ve been gardening and fermenting many things for years and just happened to come across ur channel a couple weeks ago and can’t stop watching and making my way through all ur great content. I ferment my cherry tomatoes the exact way and can’t wait to make this fermented rice water farm cheese with my raw cow milk 😋 to go along with YES those tasty fermented tomato cherry bombs. Thanks for sharing all ur substantial knowledge and wisdom friend!
Love your very educational videos! Sometimes have to listen twice! A great addition to my organic gardening education!
Love your short and sweet explanation regarding microorganisms. Very informative video in a nutshell 👏
You absolutely CAN store LABs without activating it with sugar. Just store in fridge in a jar. The sugar is added to store at room temp.
I thought that too. Super saturating is to make it shelf stable.
I made this a few years ago. I also added molasses. But I think I added a lot more water at the end. I still have some of it. It still smells good so I use it. It doesn’t hurt my plants but I’m not sure if the lacto is still alive.
OMG, I made my first batch of Lab then made the cheese!!!! Holy smokes it was DELISH!! Thanks for this recipe. Starting my next batch tonight❤❤❤
I've been making LABS by letting organic store-bought Buttermilk separate at room temperature for 1-2 days. I then strain the separated Buttermilk through cheesecloth, this separates the LABS from the whey. This process can shave up to an entire week off of the traditional KNF LABS making procedure and I find the resulting LABS is very high grade. I then use the LABS in various ways including making Bokashi!
Very nice, where can I find this organic buttermilk? We live in rural and the only store close to us is Walmart. Thank you.
I'm making my second batch a little behind schedule plants loved it the 1st time around cheese was great my dogs loved it too much helped themselves while my back was turned opportunistic my homestead critters all had some liquid in there water rabbits turkeys quail horses dont forget the cat poured what was left over into my compost pile I will be on guarding my cheese this time around 😀
Awesome video... I've done similiar in terms of making Milk Kefir Probiotics. It transformed my life. I had digestive issues and panic attacks that went away soon as I started consuming it. It also cured my mother's allergies and eye infection that took her sight, as well as horrible yeast infection that took root after a round of powerful antibiotics. The ordeal actually repaired my relationship with my mother. Very powerful.
My daughter has gastro parents and is also legally blind as the result of pseudotumor celebri. Would this help gastro paresis?
this is a powerful testimony thank you for sharing!
@@gardenlikeaviking Thank you Sir... I'm underselling how powerful this general remedy has been for me and people in my life... Seeing this here helped me know I'm on the right track.
Hi, I’m Pau from Spain 🇪🇸 New subscriber to your channel, mainly indoor organic gardener (lights) and shaded balconies, but helping a friend set up an open air garden on a rooftop ran into amplified issues I have indoors in summer > excessive heat. We have 298 sunny days per year here so it can and usually does get pretty hot.
A hot tiled terrace you can fry an egg on posed some serious challenges but (almost) past that now as we head into autumn.
The rooting problem caused me to investigate as though I have had the problem before (heat+plastic pots+water=stew) never serious enough to look further than common sense.
To the point: I had seen a lot of YT channels claiming to have the recipe for LABS, half a dozen with the formula;
Dry baker’s yeast / fresh yeast + sugar (molasses) + warm water + fresh full cream milk.
I tried it out twice and it seems to have been beneficial, 2 days ago. I tried a new batch with some old ‘chemical’ yeast (baking powder) I came across at the back of a cupboard, mixed with the other ingredients and no raise, no rising, I chucked it down drain.
Then I saw your two videos, which I must say were very convincing (your knowledge shines through your non nonsense approach) with the rice wash water and the milk (and the cheese). The rice water has been sitting for a few hours.
Questions are, if you will, do you use the yeast/ sugar/water/milk formula?
Do you have a video explaining the differences between your LABS formula and the other more popular ones I have seen, and if so could you please point me to it or any other relevant?
Thanks. I will be wading through your videos one by one over the next few weeks. 👌🏼✌🏼
As a hobbyist brewer, I submit a hearty thumbs up.
Any plans on a video that ties this with the fungal based solutions that you've presented in the past?
yes I can do that! thank you
As someone who just started gardening again last year, and wanting to do all natural fertilizer, your videos are incredible! Thank you for making all on them for free! Very cool of you!
Oh my gosh, this looks amazing! I have to try this for my garden and I wasn't expecting the benefit of actual cheese too.
I just heard about your channel and immediately subscribed today.
I made farmhouse cheese via a cooking method 2 years ago and although it was good, I'm pretty sure the cooked recipe I followed destroyed all the beneficial bacteria.
But I'm going to try this soon. Thank you very much!
yes the cooking process kills the bacteria and that's why this is the type of cheese meant to be eaten fresh!! thank you and welcome to the channel my friend
Anyone else hurting at how long the tap was running before he turned it off? I was like, "Come on, man, you can stir the rice around also AFTER you turn off the water!" Love the clarity of your instructions though, Nate.
I've been making LAB for years and the serum lasts 6 months to a year in the refrigerator, but if you want to be able to keep it out at room temperature you need to add equal weight of brown sugar to saturate the LAB, if you don't completely saturate it it will still be active and make a foamy mess, but in general LAB can last a long time in the fridge
I have done many tests over the years and its power definitely decreases after a few weeks in the fridge... its best to make fresh monthly.... but this is just my personal experience
Can you put the LAB in the freezer to use in the future?
@@ronlopez3273 If it degrades in the fridge over a few weeks, my opinion is freezing would kill the live bacteria; and, I strongly suspect he would have mentioned a freezing option if it were a viable option-
CURDS and WHEY😄 you can also heat a gallon of milk on the stove to 90 degrees, add 1/2 cup lemon juice or white vinegar. Let it set until the curd is separated from the whey, stirring occasionally, after the curds separate from the way… dump the whey off into a pan or bowl and wrap the cheese in the cloth to drain.. scoop it into a bowl and add your seasonings and a little bit of milk or cream, and you have cottage cheese…if you keep it wrapped in the cloth and press it, it’s farmhouse cheese.
Got raw milk to make the LABS
it functioned much differently than the previous batch with pasteurized milk. Waiting to see if it was something on my end or what. The curds did not really separate, and were the texture of mayonnaise rather than kinda solid like before but there was a thin mold layer on top so I filtered out as much as I could through a mesh bag and strainer and set it back in the cabinet. It was still very milky but within a few hours had formed the 3 distinct layers with the whey I recognized in the middle
I lightly melted my cheese together with a double boiler. I managed to keep a lot of microbes alive. Best cheese ever.
I love how you explain everything in a simple and precise way. After an eternity of watching soo many videos I finally feel I am getting somewhere. You are lifting my confusion, smile...
So is the LAB the same as the starter for Bokashi?
thank you my friend!... LABS is often used to start Bokashi yes but its not the same as the EM1 thats sold with the actual Bokashi kits... a far superior starter to your Bokashi mix would be to make the JADAM Microbial Solution I made a video about because that has a far more diverse population of MO's and will give you a better result... LABS is basically just one particular strain of MO
I understand! A friend of mine shared some of his Bokashi bacteria with me and even though they work fine and decompose super fast once buried (I am trying to work heavy clay soil), I was wondering if the bacteria support my soil or not, because they were brought from the other side of the planet! What do you think?
That was absolutely awesome, thank you for your generous gift an voice of a Viking 👍😅
Thanks for the great info. This process may take a little longer, but it is far simpler than the cooking process to make farmers cheese.
FYI, there's another way to make lactobacillus that is people and plant friendly that is much cheaper. Granted, the process takes a little longer but you can make literally gallons of labs with nothing more than a couple of cups of brown rice, two or three cups of brown sugar, which can be made with just regular sugar and blackstrap molasses, and a few spoonfuls of sea salt.
Great for the gut, great for plants, great for cleaning solutions, even laundry. So many uses for it.
Heya Natureboy if could be so kind as to point me in the direction of this cheaper way, a link perhaps or a channel I would be grateful
@@jekesainjikizana9734 TH-cam channel
Healthy roots and strong wings. 🤗
Dude, I made this per your specs and I am blown away. Yes, I am eating it with the fermented tomatoes. I made two jars of the tomatoes--one of them with four smoked habaneros in there. It isn't quite 2 weeks yet, but oooh my are they something! Now, this cheese is to die for. I have to agree with the addictive part of this, as you warned. Except it is worse than you let on: it is immediately addictive. The crack cocaine of fermented products. I just took the cheese out this AM and I've been into it several times throughout my workday here at the ranch. Now, at the end of the day, I am still buzzing around it like a fly. There are a thousands tasty ways to use this stuff, if you have any foodie in ya at all--I love it also on crackers with homemade corn relish.
I would like to get bona fide press to do this, as rigging things can be a bit awky. Do you have any recommendations?
One other question I have is why not salt this cheese, and at what stage would it be best to do this?
Are you planning to make any aged cheesemaking vids? I am very interested in this at this point.
great and wonderful input my friend thank you!!!... I'll make a video about the cheese press sometime this winter when I make the video about real cheese... either to buy one or its easy to make our own as well... I salt the cheese at point of use...
moving forward, I am making a very simple press with two 1.5" thick boards (double 3/4 plywood glued and clamped) with two lengths of 1" wooden dowl glued into 1" holes drilled into the bottom board, with 1 1/8" holes on the top board, and barbell weights to slip over the dowels on the top board (4 x 10#, 2 x 5# will give enough combinations). The weights are the most costly item, but usually these can be found at garage sales...
@@MrKevinStraub please be sure to email me pictures of this design once completed!!!
@@gardenlikeaviking DONE
You are absolutely a genius and your videos are priceless and knowledgable for anyone considering organic farming or gardening . Great work .
I would love to see you make the cheese video
Great video. Thanks. Can I ask, my wife and I make our own home made yogurt and always have a jug full of whey at the end of it. Is this pretty much the same as your lactic acid liquid or is there a difference? Could it be used in the same way as you use this liquid when making your quick fish fertiliser? 👍🏻🙂
its not exactly the same but it will work... definitely if you already have the whey as a byproduct then its great to use in this same manner yes... I'd add two cups of it to the bucket instead of just one of the LABS
Exactly what I was going to ask.
@@gardenlikeaviking That’s great to know, thanks. 👍🏻
LAB serum has mesophilic cultures which means they prefer room temperature. Culturing your own gives you a more diverse variety of bacteria. Yoghurt cultures thrive at higher temperatures which is why you incubate your milk when making yoghurt. Yoghurt also tends to have only to or three different bacteria.
Lactobacillus is also great for decarboxylating ibotenic acid to muscimol.
Amanita Muscaria fermented in it makes a great anti-anxiety tonic in low doses and can be a full-on deliriant in high doses.
Another excellent video my dude. Could you please explain a little further the longer term storage recipe, ie is it straight 1:1 LAB with Brown Sugar? Do you first dissolve the sugar in an amount of water perhaps? It seems like a LOT of sugar, but maybe thats the idea. I use this stuff for a DIY bokashi set up so want to maximise the shelf life. Thanks heaps!
yes I know it is definitely a lot of sugar!... that's one reason I don't promote KNF much because of the unbelievable amounts of sugar used.... but yes if you want to store at room temp its just 1 Liter of LABS to 1 Kilogram of brown sugar.... and yes you just mix the brown sugar directly into the LABS no additional anything... without going into it deeply, the sugar puts the bacteria to "sleep" and they remain dormant until you dilute with water and then they will re-awaken immediately... so it has to be almost like a syrup
@@gardenlikeaviking Ahhhh amazing that makes sense, cheers! So then would you dilute it say 1:100 with water when you go to use it next?
@@letsrazzledazzle I make the long term Efficient Microorganisms in the same way as describe Viking, since five years ago. Once the serum is ready, we add 25 litres of rain water and 1 litre of molasses.
Tu use it, dilute 50cc of EM in 2 rainwater litres. We use it, until over. As our crop is very small, some times is up two years. I use this more than anything, as a compost component to bokashi.
@@vickychicote5883 Awesome thanks for your experience with it Vicky, appreciated :)
I would love a video with the next steps on how to make cheese 🧀 👍🏻💪🏽🌱
You said your body actually craves the cheese. I believe that's why you like the smell of the rice wash. It's a pleasant smell because your body knows how good it is.
I think a video of how to take this to “actual cheese” as you referenced @9:08 would be a cool content idea! Thanks for your work brother. Appreciated.
That cheese and my homemade sourdough bread…and I just might add a touch of the garlic scape pesto I just made! Thanks for the vid. I’m a graduate of dr. Ingham’s SoilFoodWeb school… so glad to hear you talking sense about soil biology!
garlic scape pesto is so delicious!!!... what is your personal recipe for making it if you don't mind sharing?
3rd times the charm! Finally successful. Got a sinus infection for my 1st batch and a random stuffy nose for the 2nd... being able to smell is crucial apparently 😊
What a wonderful learning, beneficial lactic acid bacteria for soil and wonderful raw cheese 👏👏
I love to know the process of making a real cheese. I just found you yesterday but I am loving your videos already. ❤️❤️❤️
I love making farmhouse cheese and Mozzarella...great videos
That's a great idea using the rice washed water to make cheese and by product lacto bacter serum. That 2 gallon glass jar, awesome.
It's very good to watch your videos; your passion is a flame spreading around so easily; your home is very beautiful!
our stomach does the same thing as plants; it makes food turn, and microorganisms make it ready for our bodies to absorb the necessary nutrients and vitamins. Without these beautiful microorganisms, we would not grow or be able to maintain our health properly.
We make this kind of fresh cheese in Romania out of many milk types, and it is so delicious!
Lactic acid can also be used to ferment many foods so that when we eat them, we absorb so much more nutrients than without the fermentation process. It feels so good to be at the mercy of Mother Nature and the Formless Lord Pervading its Creation of Created beings personified.
this is beautiful my friend thank you for sharing your thoughts!
he'll make the real cheese when he's full from this cheese! it sounds too good to do something else with:). I just discovered you and subscribed. very very good channel. thank you for sharing w us what you already do so we can learn xoxo
In the lab making my LABS today! Thank you for the tutorial - stay tuned!❤❤❤❤
Glad this soil amendment actually finishes with a consumable product!
Very practical and simple healthy living thank you so much for sharing🙌
The cheese is amazing. I love it!
Made a smaller batch of labs and will put it in the refrigerator. This time I will dilute 1 oz of the labs with my gallon of drinking water and put the cheese through my cheese press for snacks. My gallon of last weeks labs went into my compost and JDAM plant fertilizer barrel.
You are just a phenomenal human being... excellent communicator... thanks for sharing your knowhow... I'm inspired all the way from Nigeria...
Dude your videos and education is super cool ...
this is a healpful presentation, I watched a video with a Korean Farmer who made the same liquid . He also spoke about using it in compost to help with smells. I am inspired to make some . I wanted to in the spring but miss placed the other video of how to so I am glad I came across yours.
I love all types of cheese! I really hope to try this very soon as I am getting into the JADAM style of farming. Thank you for all the knowledge you bestow upon all of us!
This guy is the best
oh wow. I just finished step one. the smell.....ompfff on to adding the milk! thank you😊
Let me keep this video with my comment much love from Uganda ❤
What a find for me today.. I never knew cheese was so easy to make! Thank you for sharing this info.
This information is priceless and has a bonus “two-fee” with ending up the process with healthy, tasty Farmer Cheese. I would also like very much to see the process of creating cheese from the curds. You bless me aand thousands od others with your common sense approach to the science side of gardening. For that, I thank you. May your days q be long and sunny. Blessings from Central Florida.
may your days be long and sunny as well my friend!!!
Thank you for sharing this wonderful info!
I like your positive outlook on life!
Yes, we want to see the cheese video. Thanks
Made 1st batch and it's a success. Thanks Nate