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Well, most of my customers like their soy drinks at around 70 C. I'm not sure what that is in American off hand but I think that's 160 F.
The thing is, every soy product seems to act differently. I've also seen differences from batch to batch a lot more than with milk.
I'd like to get the answer to this one too!
Perhaps an experiment is in order. Steam a pitcher, pouring off a few ounces every 10 degrees... going well above what you'd normally steam to. Take a little sip of each one and see how things change with temp. Then let us know what you find :). I'll do this Monday if I remember.
Thanks everyone for your input...i still havent figured out the answer to the original question but have started to make our soy drinks a bit cooler than our dairy milk drinks. Thanks again!
What soy are you using? Silk goes to 145 for me. Above that, it's toast.
I can take Pacific up to the 155 (moo juice) range without negatively effecting flavors.
Sue Harnly said:
Thanks everyone for your input...i still havent figured out the answer to the original question but have started to make our soy drinks a bit cooler than our dairy milk drinks. Thanks again!
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