Almond Milk

Clean, creamy, and free of everything that’s in the store-bought version.

Soak overnight, blend, strain. That’s it. Keep it plain or add vanilla, a date, or a pinch of cinnamon. Once you make it fresh it’s hard to go back.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup raw almonds, soaked overnight
  • 4 cups filtered water
  • 1 Medjool date for sweetness (optional)
  • a splash of vanilla extract (optional)
  • a pinch of sea salt

You’ll need a nut milk bag or fine mesh strainer and a glass jar for storage.

Method

  1. Soak almonds in water for at least 8 hours or overnight. This softens them and improves the texture.
  2. Drain and rinse. Discard the soaking water.
  3. Add soaked almonds, 4 cups fresh filtered water, date if using, vanilla, and salt to a high-speed blender. Blend 45–60 seconds until smooth.
  4. Pour through a nut milk bag or fine mesh strainer into a bowl. Press or squeeze to extract as much liquid as possible.
  5. Transfer to a glass jar and refrigerate. Keeps 3–4 days. Shake before using.

Build It Your Way

  • add a spoonful of cacao powder before blending for chocolate almond milk
  • use 3 cups water instead of 4 for a richer, creamier texture
  • sweeten with honey instead of a date — dissolve it in a splash of warm water first so it blends evenly
  • a pinch of cinnamon adds warmth without sweetness
  • use in coffee, smoothies, overnight oats, or baking

Adjust to your taste. Use what you have.

Swaps & Notes

  • The pulp left in the bag is useful — spread on a baking sheet and dry in a low oven, then use in smoothies or as almond flour.
  • A Weck jar works well for storage. Wide mouth makes it easy to shake and pour.
  • No nut milk bag — a fine mesh strainer lined with cheesecloth works just as well.
  • The date blends smooth and disappears into the milk — no grittiness if you’re using a high-speed blender.
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