Homemade Mayonnaise
Now, my grandparents always liked Miracle Whip Salad Dressing. I hated to have sandwiches at their house because this feast consisted of Wonder White bread, pimento loaf deli meat, American cheese, and Miracle Whip.
1 room temperature egg
1 room temperature egg yolk
1 tsp Dijon mustard
1 1/2 tbls lemon juice, fresh or bottled
1 tbls whey (either make yogurt or buy organic yogurt at the store)
3/4 – 1 cup extra virgin olive oil
dab of salt
1. Separate your egg yolk. I use this handy-dandy egg separator from Pampered Chef.
2. Throw, dump or toss your room temperature whole egg, egg yolk, salt, lemon juice, mustard and whey into your food processor, Vita Mix or blender.
Please make sure to put the lid on your blender container. Eggs make good hair mousse, but I wouldn’t recommend adding mustard to your hair.
3. Mix, beat, or whip ingredients until they are well blended. (Sounds rather violent, doesn’t it?)
4. Add olive oil drop by drop while the blender motor is running, torturing the eggs to achieve the desired consistency you want. I don’t always follow this painfully slow process, due to three children hanging on my leg. I have been known to dump most of the olive oil in at once, but it doesn’t become thick as easily. Please note that homemade mayonnaise will be slightly more runny than imitation, non-nutritional mayonnaise.
Sorry. I am being harsh. And I have a confession to make–I have both store bought mayonnaise and homemade mayonnaise in my fridge!
Sounds yummy! thanks granola mom. I've been looking for an easy homemade mayo recipe. I'll have to try to transition my hubby to this idea over time. Perhaps when he starts to see the cost savings he'll jump on board.
This is the first time I've seen a home made mayo recipe. It sounds good and so easy to make. Thank you for sharing!
Thanks for the recipe! I love mayo and can't stand that miracle whip stuff (yuck!)
I'm probably the opposite. I can't stand mayo, but love Miracle Whip – and just plain vinegar….
Oooooo, Granola Mom! I hope that this works for me. I have been wanting to get us away from store bought condiments.
Thanks and blessings,
Robin
Homemade mayo is not runny if you make it following a traditional preparation, which would not include whey. Mine gets very thick. I think you might have better luck if you added the whey at the end, after it is properly emulsified. (Although I haven’t tried this myself as I just stick with eggs and oil.)
This may seem like a silly question, but I used the whey from my Fage yogurt (I don’t have organic here). Do you think that will lacto-ferment?
Some but that’s not a bad thing, really.