蜜桃恋人

How to Make Oat Milk: Lactose-Free, Easy, Creamy!

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Easy Oat Milk Recipe

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Feelin鈥 your oats? Eating your oats? (Yes! They鈥檙e good for you!) But what about drinking your oats? That鈥檚 right! With just oats and water, you can make your own lactose-free, easy, creamy, DIY oat milk! What are you waiting for?

鈥淥at milk鈥* joins any number of plant-based beverages as part of a trend that鈥檚 gone mainstream. Even conventional supermarkets now offer a wide variety of plant 鈥渕ilks*鈥: soy, rice, almond, hazelnut, flax, hemp, cashew, coconut, even black bean and pea. If you haven鈥檛 tried oat milk with your cereal, I encourage you to try it!

If you don鈥檛 like oats, stop here.

Why would you want to drink your oats?

  1. Folks with lactose-intolerance, vegans, or people who don鈥檛 like the taste of dairy milk may be looking for a milk alternative. Oat milk has no dairy.
     
  2. Oats can lower cholesterol and blood glucose levels and a good substitute beverage for people with gluten-intolerance (Check labels for gluten-free oats. Oats themselves don鈥檛 contain gluten, but may be processed in facilities that also process wheat.)  Very few people have oat allergies or trouble digesting them (unlike nuts).
     
  3. Oat milk is thick and creamy and won鈥檛 curdle when added to hot coffee, tea, or sauces.  (Note: It doesn鈥檛 froth like dairy milks.)
     
  4. Because growing oats requires much less water, land, and other resources than dairy milk (and many other plant-based beverages), it鈥檚 perceived as more ecologically sound and sustainable. The concept is: drink directly from oats instead of first feeding oats to a cow and letting the cow process them into milk. One brand, Oatly, said oat milk 鈥済enerates 80% lower greenhouse emissions than cow鈥檚 milk. Land use is also about 80% lower.鈥
     
  5. It鈥檚 super-fast and easy to make; useful if you run out of dairy milk. Whenever you would use dairy milk, oat milk can be used exactly the same amounts.
     
  6. Oat milk is delicious. Of couse, if you do NOT like oats, you probably won鈥檛 like oat milk. 
     

Oat Drink and Health

If you are lactose-intolerant, are you still getting the health of dairy milk? It depends what you鈥檙e seeking. See chart below.

Oat milk does not provide the same level of protein, calcium, protein, and Vitamins A and D you鈥檇 get from dairy milk.

So, many oat milk beverages are enriched with more vitamins (D, riboflavin, B12) and calcium. Oat milk provides a nice balance of protein, carbs, fiber, and healthy fats.

Oat milk contains less sugar, less unhealthy unsaturated fats, and fewer calories that cow鈥檚 milk.

However, not all commercial oat milk products are the same; check to see if new brands have sweeteners, saturated vegetable oil, thickeners, flavorings (vanilla), stabilizers, or preservatives. Look for oatmilks that have no added sugars. The oats have natural sweetness. Also, be sure any oils added are minimal and are high in unsaturated fat (eq, 1.5% rapeseed).

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If you want to make your own oat milk, it鈥檚 easy. Read on.

Basic Recipe for Oat Milk

  1. Combine one part dry (not cooked) old-fashioned oatmeal or oat groats with 2 parts water.
  2. Cover and let stand overnight. 
  3. Strain through a fine sieve or cheesecloth to remove as much liquid as possible.
  4. Refrigerate and use within a few days.

Oat milk may separate in the refrigerator. Just shake it up well before using.

Don鈥檛 waste the solids left behind. Incorporate them into breads, cookies, pancakes, meatloaves, casseroles鈥攁nywhere you鈥檇 use rolled oats as an ingredient.

Quicker version

Use this version if you run out of milk and need some right away

  1. Combine oats and water as above. Let sit for 20-30 minutes.
  2. Blend at high speed for two or three minutes.
  3. Strain well and refrigerate liquid or use right away.

Oat Milk Uses

Oat milk has a neutral, slightly oat-y flavor. Many children and adults like to drink it as is. But you can also:

  • Pour it over cereal.
  • Make it with strong, cold coffee or espresso instead of water for a summer drink. 
  • Lighten coffee or tea. Add it to hot coffee, tea, or chai, but be forewarned: heating oat milk itself will turn it thick and slimy (see #3 below).
  • Thicken gravies and sauces. Add it a little at a time until you find the right consistency.
  • Make chocolate 鈥渕ilk鈥 by adding cocoa powder, a few drops of vanilla, and a touch of sweetener.
  • Use it to make smoothies.
  • se it as a substitute for milk in baked goods, casseroles, custards, pie fillings, and quiches. 

You can find recipes online that use oat milk to make yogurt, kefir, and even鈥hat鈥檚 right, ice cream. Bon appetit!

*Pushback from the dairy industry has created a still-unsettled legal matter (currently resting with the federal Food & Drug Administration) over whether plant-based beverages may label themselves 鈥渕ilk.鈥 (Many oat milk brands call themselves 鈥淥at Drink鈥 or 鈥淥at Beverage鈥 anyways.)

See Health Benefits of Oats and Oatmeal!
 

About The Author

Margaret Boyles

Margaret Boyles is a longtime contributor to The Old Farmer鈥檚 蜜桃恋人. She wrote for UNH Cooperative Extension, managed NH Outside, and contributes to various media covering environmental and human health issues. Read More from Margaret Boyles
 

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