Raw Homemade Almond Milk

Homemade Raw Almond Milk

Back when my husband and I tried the raw food diet for a month we wound up making a lot of food from scratch that we might have normally purchased at a store. One of those things was almond milk. At first making this sort of thing was truly intimidating, but once done we realized how easy it could be. Prep time is minutes, although twiddling your thumbs takes hours.

I was reminded of our foray into non-dairy milk making when I was on VeganYumYum a few weeks ago. She made her own soy milk, which, if you have ever done it, is both labor-intensive and time-consuming. She wasn't exactly happy with the end results, either.

Inspired by her post, I decided to start making milk again, and am I glad I did. This batch turned out wonderfully. It was creamy, mostly smooth (mostly!), and didn't even last a full week because we just couldn't help ourselves.

Raw Homemade Almond Milk

  • 1 cup raw almonds
  • 7 - 8 cups water
  • Agave nectar or another sweetener (optional)

Put your almonds into a good-sized bowl and fill the bowl up with water until they are covered well.

Almonds soaking in water

Cover with a towel and let sit in a cool place for about 24 - 48 hours (honestly, you could probably get away with less time, but I haven't tried it). Rinse the almonds once a day, and if you are soaking for more than one day cover the almonds with water again.

Once they are finished soaking they will have become plump.

Almonds done soaking

The difference is pretty amazing.

Almonds

Pour off the water from the almonds and rinse well. Place the rinsed almonds into a blender (we use a VitaMix, but any blender should work fine), add the 7 - 8 cups of water, and blend for a few minutes or until well blended. At this stage you can add a sweetener if you want, but I left it out myself. Since the milk can potentially be used in a variety of ways it seems that you may want to leave the sweetener out.

Almonds ready to blend

Blending almonds

When it is done blending it will look something like this...

Almond milk

...and it will have a lot of froth on top.

Almond milk froth

Strain the almond milk through a bag strainer (probably best), or through a fine sieve into your original bowl or another large container. We used to have a bag strainer, but found it hard to clean, so I used our small sieve.

Tea strainer

If I am going to be making this on a regular basis I need to get a good sized sieve.

Straining the almond milk

As you are straining it you will be getting a lot of almond meal. It is up to you if you want to conserve this or throw it out. You can do a variety of things with it - i.e. dehydrate it, turn it into a flour, mix it into some bread, etc.

Almond meal

After you have finished straining it, strain it again into your final pitcher or container. This will ensure that it is as smooth as possible. You can strain even further, but it is up to you.

The final result - about a half gallon of good and easy almond milk. Store in the refrigerator and try to use within a week. You will need to stir the almond milk every time you bring it out of the refrigerator to use since it does settle.

Homemade almond milk

In thinking about making your own milk there are a couple of things to consider. Firstly, it amazes me how many ingredients are in commercial vegan milks. There's usually a lot of sugar, not many ingredients I even recognize, and some are just plain unnecessary.

Secondly, the actual price of the product in the store compared to the price of making it at home is definitely less (of course this depends on how much you pay for almonds). If you pay $3.99 for 64 ounces of Silk Soymilk, then it is about $0.49/cup. If you pay $1.59 for rice milk, then it is about $0.40/cup. If you pay $5.79/pound for almonds, and of that use one cup of almonds to make eight cups of almond milk, then your price will come to about $0.27/cup or $1.09 for 4 cups (32 ounces) or $2.17 for eight cups (64 ounces).

Raw almonds

Bottom line, it's worth it.

If you are allergic to tree nuts you can make other milks in similar ways, like sunflower seed milk. I made that this past weekend and it wasn't quite as good as the almond milk, but it still turned out fine. Difference was the soaking time (about four hours).

Overall, this is a very easy, cost effective, and delicious way to get homemade vegan milk.

Looks good

This looks fantastic. I used to do this at home before using dates as a natural sweetener and it turned out really well. It has been years since I've done this and you've inspired me to start up again. You are right, the commercial stuff is so full of unnecessary stuff. Thanks. :c)

Submitted by Tracy (not verified) on July 22, 2008 - 2:11pm.
Do I dare?

Since going 100% raw, I turned my back completely on any kind of milk--even nut milks. This sounds so easy to make, I just might try it. I don't really know what I'll use it for since I don't eat cereal and it wouldn't combine well with fruit. Maybe just drink it?? We'll see...

Sounds like you came up with a winner to replace soy milk! That's a plus!

Submitted by Tommie (not verified) on June 14, 2008 - 7:00am.
Actually, this goes great

Actually, this goes great with fruit. Especially if you make smoothies. All the smoothie recipes that call for cow's milk or yogurt, I just substitute almond's milk, altering how much depending upon which fruit I'm using and how thick I want the smoothie to be.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on August 9, 2008 - 10:44pm.
Thank you!

This is so wonderful, I'm doing an exclusion diet and other almond milks all have added ingredients that are not allowed. This recipe is a total life saver :)

Submitted by Bijoux (not verified) on June 11, 2008 - 5:49pm.
Fantastic!

So glad you can use the recipe. I made another batch this weekend and I'm still enjoying it! :)

Submitted by Samantha on June 11, 2008 - 6:47pm.

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