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blueberry greek yogurt
submitted over 5 years ago by vinniejangro

Alright, so I am new to DIY. Ive only started 2 months ago. But i've been watching videos and reading for the past 6 months to prepare myself. I've came up with a few okish recipes. But today, not even meaning to or setting out to i created a blueberry greek yogurt that is commericial level good. I dripped it and knew already that its going to be fucking stellar. I've added some bavarian cream to it to give it a thicker mouth feel. every thing is perfect. But it is slightly dry. Its on the cusp of being moist. its stuck in a weird limbo of almost dry and almost moist. My question is what can i add to it to moisten it up. Ive tried 5-6 different searches such as"yogurt dry", "how to moisten yogurt" etc. but havent been able to find anything. So reddit im here to ask you what can i add to my recipe to moisten it up. Once ive nailed the moist part down i'll release the recipe, because i truely believe its something special. im just hesitant to release a recipe that is not done yet.

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9 points
 
by EdibleMalfunctionover 5 years agoI found my thrill on Blueberry Hill

We need your recipe

7 points
 
by vergaerdover 5 years ago

INW Cactus (~0.2%) is known to add moisture.
FA Pear up to 3% can also be used to add moisture. Its a pretty weak flavor, but may actually fit in these profiles as a backnote if you take it to 4-5%.

If your recipe is relatively acidic you can try bringing that down a little by using more rounded like darker, sweeter berries. Something like VTA Shisha Blackcurrant or FLV Mixed Berries come to mind.

Good luck

6 points
 
by Nexiam1over 5 years ago

#ReleaseTheRecipe

2 points
 
by ADeepCeruleanBlueover 5 years ago

I really am curious what kind of results you get googling 'how to moisten yogurt' 😂

also FE lemon is great at adding juiciness to blueberry and is great in yogurt too

2 points
 
by JohnRykerover 5 years agoWTF is a "Terpene?"

From watching videos, reading, and listening to all these DIY mixers. I have written down a few things that supposed to help with the dryness in an e-liquid. Some have already been suggested. INW Cactus, FA Fuji Apple, FA Oba Oba, and distilled water are all known to have been used. Hope that helps.

1 points
 
by Sylvieeover 5 years ago

buy some koolada if don’t have, excellent for ridding of the dryness in some mixes/ejuices. you lightly dip a toothpick into tfa koolada and stir it into your mix. if large mix (over 30ml or so) add a drop in it. koolada gives your vape that cold moist feel, perfect for a yogurt mix :) don’t use too much though or you will end up with a really ice like vape.

1 points
 
by hantu0over 5 years ago

A little saline may help make the blueberries come across as juicier, too. Doesn't take more than a few drops.

1 points
 
by Lord-Graysonover 5 years ago

So you may understand my humor and think I’m not a “dickhead”

I can’t stop thinking of this line from Bill Hicks stand up now because of this post:

Release the goddam files. Who else was on that grassy Golgotha that day?

If you’d like the alternate reading in its entirety:

bill hicks: Love all the people

-1 points
 
by Lord-Graysonover 5 years ago

Quite the claim: “commercial level”

So does that mean you added CAP super sweet @3%?

1 points
 
by vinniejangroover 5 years ago

That was kind of a dickheadish comment for no reason. What I ment by my comment is that I believe there will be appeal to the recipe outside or a small circle of people.

1 points
 
by EdibleMalfunctionover 5 years agoI found my thrill on Blueberry Hill

What's the recipe?

1 points
 
by ceedee99ukover 5 years ago

There's only a couple of us in here - you can tell us and nobody else will know...

;-)

1 points
 
by Lord-Graysonover 5 years ago

Just some sarcasm/ joke, because you’re playing hard to get. What’s the recipe?

1 points
 
by Lord-Graysonover 5 years ago

If it’s better than BREEK I will applaud you. Until we see your cards there’s no way of knowing.

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