
How Many Calories in Kefir?
I Make Kefir - What's Your superpower?
Milk Sugars in Kefir
Kefir Benefits

Label Confusion

To make fermented foods (such as yogurt, kefir, and other fermented foods) the milk is inoculated with the lactic acid bacteria. These bacteria use up almost all the milk sugar called “lactose” and convert it into lactic acid. It is this lactic acid that curds the milk and gives that sour taste to the product. So the milk sugars that the government thinks are still in the product are actually gone. It’s been converted by these lactose-loving bacteria. Since these bacteria have “eaten” most of the milk sugar by the time you buy it (or make it yourself) there are not many carbohydrates left. It is the lactic acid that is counted as carbohydrates.
Therefore, you can eat up to a cup of plain yogurt, buttermilk, or kefir and only count 2-4 grams of carbohydrates. Dr. Jack Goldberg of Go-Diet has measured this in his own laboratory. Kefir is 99% lactose-free, which means all the milk sugars, or lactose, are mostly gone and this is why so many lactose-intolerant people don’t have a problem with kefir. One cup of yogurt will contain about 4 grams of carbohydrates. Kefir has about 1 since there are more bacteria in kefir to eat up the lactose.
Microbes Eat The Sugars

Goat Milk Has 47% Of The Vitamin A You Need

Non-Dairy Kefir

Kefir Calories
The wonderful thing about kefir is how easy it is for your body to digest it. Thanks to the help of its beneficial microbes, kefir is predigested and allows the body to speed the nutrients to the cells that need it for repair, growth, and detoxification.
Here is a breakdown of the calories in different types of milk kefir.
Listen To My Podcast
Kefir can be made with many different kinds of milk, be it non-dairy or dairy milk. It differs in calories and nutritional differences depending on which type of milk you use and how long you ferment it. There is much confusion about the carbohydrate content on the packages of fermented food products and I can help you figure this out. Check out the podcast to learn more.
References I talked about:
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