Butter is really easy to make. I've made butter before....in kindergarten. I thought it was the most awesome thing, making butter and putting it on saltine crackers. I don't remember if we used an actual churn but the devices used to churn butter range from incredibly simple to modern day mixers and food processors. But it all begins with the cream.
My heavy whipping cream came from the wonderful local dairy, Shatto Farms. Now put that cream in a stand mixer or food processor (or anything that blends the cream) and turn it on.
The cream is going to go through various stages of whipping. In the stand mixer it took about 5 minutes to get to the point where the liquid started separating from the solids. You want to drain that liquid through a strainer, thus making buttermilk. Once you've strained the liquid you need to wash your butter in cold water until the wash water runs clear.
Once it reached that stage, I put it back in the mixer and added a little salt and whipped to a nice smooth consistency.
Now it's ready to fry a farm fresh egg or slathered onto a freshly baked loaf of bread.
But really, it's destined to go on my favorite salty snack because nothing kicks my butt out of the food doldrums more than a bowl of hot, buttered popcorn.
12 comments:
The Engineer says popcorn was invented to best deliver butter and salt.
The man is RIGHT!
First, you had me at buttermilk (I'm enough of an afficionado that I keep some in the fridge at all times. Homemade? YUM)
Second, that is gorgeous buttah, and
Third, CONGRATS ON EATING POPCORN!!
That last photo is AWESOME!
Glad to hear your teeth are back in popcorn action.
That top picture needs a banjo on the porch.
Dani, feel free to re-enact that first photo with a banjo. YOU do have the chickens.
Nothing is better than sweet cream butter, preferably European-style. I can eat it with a spoon. At any rate, was this ultra-pasteurized cream? Ultra-pasteurized is the bane of my baking existence but it seem impossible to find it otherwise these days.
No, I don't think it was however I'm planning a trip to that particular dairy and will see if they offer it for sale. The butter, as is, is good stuff.
ah...loverly.
I had an aunt that made butter in a glass jar. She rocked in a chair, on the front porch, as she shook the cream into butter. Her name was Bonnie.
And your pictures are, of course, loverly.
Actually Melissa, that's one of the many methods suggested for making butter, a jar, a lid and a marble. I, unlike your Aunt Bonnie, have no patience for 30 minutes of jar shaking but then she probably wouldn't enjoy sorting hundreds of business emails. So there we are, women of our times.
Weird. We were just talking about making butter today at work. I said I made it in the 1st grade and that was the last time I thought about it... until today. Would you do it again?
Oh heck yeah, Boxer, it's really easy and has a lovely delicate flavor.
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