Let me show you how surprisingly simple and yes old-fashioned it is to make butter. Even though, I will show how to use a butter churner, I will also give you more modern and electric alternatives.
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Watch the video here:
Why make your own butter?
Of course, you can just go to the store and pick up your butter there. Since I like to use the best butter I can afford, I am looking for European-style butter. Ideally, from pasture-raised cows. That can get pricey.
“European-style” butter just means that the butter had been churned longer to achieve a minimum 82% butterfat. Therefore, the butter is creamier with a better butter taste.
Also, I like to promote good dairy practices by buying dairy products from cows that live in a pasture eating grass (their natural diet) rather than living tied up in a stall eating corn-based food.
Knowing all this, we get to make choices. I believe in buying the highest quality food that we can afford. Here is a great article that goes a bit deeper in to that. By making my own food, and yes butter, too, I know exactly what’s in my family’s food.
Ultimately, I truly believe that homemade just tastes better than store-bought. I feel more connected to the food when I made it and know exactly what’s in it. Even though you can’t “measure” it, I am sure your family will feel and taste the love you poured into making your food!
What equipment to use
The first reference to butter is from about 2000 B.C. People knew how to make it without modern conveniences. The use of a butter churn dates back to 600 A.D. A butter churn just plain works!
For this post, I am using an old-fashioned butter churn or butter churner that I found in my grandparents’ attic. I actually enjoy using it! It has gone on school field trips with my kids.
If you don’t own a butter churner or don’t want to invest in one, you can still make butter in your own kitchen: you can use a hand mixer (least practical), a stand mixer such as a Kitchen Aid, a food processor, or even a Vitamix. My blogging friend Brie has a wonderfully detailed article and video on that.
The ingredients
All you really need is cream! It’s that simple! You can use any whipping cream (half and half will not work). Again, the better quality your cream is, the better your homemade butter will be.
In order to bring a slightly tangy, “cultured” taste to my butter I added some sour cream to my sweet cream. I used about 2 TSBP of sour cream for 2 pints of whipping cream. However, this is not necessary and completely optional!
How to make butter
All you do is pour your cream into your old-fashioned butter churner. Then you just crank away. The butter churner will first turn your cream into whipped cream.
Eventually, the fat will separate from the liquid (the buttermilk). This looks like little clouds.
Just keep on churning. Finally, you will notice that there is liquid at the bottom of your container and the yellow butter separate from that.
This whole process can take about 20 – 30 minutes. Using room temperature cream makes butter faster than using cold cream. Now, that is quite some time cranking away. Our ancestors were doing a lot of physical work to prepare their foods. I personally enjoy the work. You could also have your kids or other family members help you out and taking turns – especially the ones with too much energy. If you don’t enjoy the hand-churning or are short on time, check out this article and video.
Now, that you have the liquid (buttermilk) separated from the fat (the butter), you will pour off the liquid. You can drink it or use in recipes such as pancakes or waffles.
Washing your butter
This step is important. You want to wash out any remaining buttermilk from your butter as that will make your butter spoil faster. Simply put the butter in a colander over a large bowl and add filtered water. Work and squeeze the butter until the rinsing water is clear.
Squeezing the butter
You can use your hands or a fine cheese cloth or tea towel for this. The goal is to squeeze out as much liquid from the butter as you can. This will make your butter creamier, taste better, and last longer.
Your butter
For this recipe, I used 2 pints of cream and about 2 TBSP of sour cream. That gives me about 1 pound of butter.
You can simply shape it with your hands. Traditionally, people used butter paddles both for pressing out more liquid and for shaping the butter.
To make your butter very pretty you can use a butter mold. These are still commonplace in Europe (I found mine in a country store in Austria) but you can also find them online.
How to use a mold: soak the butter mold in water for about 30 mins. The butter should be at room temperature (soft) when you press it into the mold. Tap your mold on a hard surface to remove your butter. Voilà! Very pretty butter!
Depending on your preferences, you might like to add a bit of salt to your butter. For the 2 pints, you could start with 1/2 tsp and increase the amount if you like.
You can add other flavors such as herbs or spices to your butter. Personally, we love it plain! Nothing better than to slather it on homemade bread fresh from the oven!
The color
You might notice that store-bought butter can be almost white or a bit more yellow. Cows that only eat grass naturally have more beta-carotene, a pigment that adds color, and which is converted into Vitamin A in our bodies. Butter from cows that eat a corn-based diet is lacking in beta-carotene. Thus, often a colorant is added (check your store-bought butter).
If you are using high-quality cream you will notice that your butter will have a beautiful yellow color!
What about the cost?
Well, it depends. It depends on your ingredients and where you live. However, I believe that if you bought butter in the store that was made from equivalent ingredients that you are using to make your butter, making your own will be cheaper. But is there a price tag on the satisfaction of making an everyday ingredient with your own hands?
How Amish Butter Is Made. Amish-style butter is churned cream with a higher dairy fat content than American butter. Instead of being shaped into four-ounce sticks, it typically comes in a one- or two-pound rolled log or wheel, shaped like goat cheese or wax-coated Gouda.
If you start with cream at 65 °F and churn at a speed of about 120-150 RPM, the total time of making butter (including draining buttermilk and molding butter) is about 20-25 minutes. There are many ways to make your own butter, but we find the simplest and most effective way is to use a hand-powered butter churn.
A butter churn is a device that would be used to make butter. People would fill the butter churn with heavy cream from cows. Then they would push up and down on the butter churn until the heavy cream separated into butter and buttermilk.
How to do it: Pour cream into the work bowl of your food processor equipped with the metal blade. Process until you see and hear liquid splattering the sides of the bowl. Stop the processor; if you see two discrete entities — butter and buttermilk — you're done.
Butter is basically the fattiest part of milk. To make it, pioneers would let milk settle after they milked a cow. The cream would rise to the top, and they would skim it off. Then, they would pour the cream into a wooden butter churn, where they would repeatedly move a plunger up and down.
Always buy heavy cream or whipping cream for churning butter. Any brand will do. You need the higher fat content. Heavy cream is approximately 40% butterfat and 60% milk solids and water.
Add a bit of salt to the cream before shaking or mixing (up to 1/4 teaspoon salt per 1 cup cream). Once your butter is churned you can also add in herbs, honey, and other flavorings for some gourmet butter options.
In the 1700s, the most common method of making butter was to keep milk in an earthenware container until the cream separated and floated to the top. When the cream was set, it was scooped off with a plate or timber disc. A splash churn was used to convert the cream into butter.
Taste of Home says the main reason for this is its higher butterfat content when compared to other styles. Typically Amish butter is made with at least 84% butterfat, placing it above American-style butter at 80% and European- and Irish-style butters at 82%.
Amish butter can be kept, wrapped in its original packaging, for about one month in the fridge. To freeze Amish butter, place it in a freezer bag with the air pressed out. You can keep Amish butter frozen for up to one year.
Most frequently made from cow's milk, butter can also be manufactured from the milk of other mammals, including sheep, goats, buffalo, and yaks. It is made by churning milk or cream to separate the fat globules from the buttermilk.
If its too warm, the butter will be very soft and will be more difficult to rinse and knead later on. If too cold, the fat will have difficulty consolidating. You can start with fresh sweet cream or culture your own cream for more flavor.
Put cream in a stand mixer. Start by adding 6 cups of chilled heavy cream to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with whisk attachment or a blender or food processor. ...
It likely began as an accident: some chilled milk shaken around in a sack on the back of an animal on a bumpy trail. But it quickly became a staple for people who lived near herds of ruminants — cows, goats, sheep, reindeer, camels, water buffalo.
Butter is as old as Western civilization. In ancient Rome, it was medicinal--swallowed for coughs or spread on aching joints. In India, Hindus have been offering Lord Krishna tins full of ghee —luscious, clarified butter —for at least 3,000 years.
For early settlers, the butter making process began with milking the cow. This fresh milk was left to stand overnight, allowing it to separate into milk (below) and cream (on top). The cream could be used to make butter, and the milk could be used for cheese.
Homemade butter's shelf life depends on how thoroughly you extract the buttermilk. If a substantial amount of buttermilk remains, it will sour within a week, otherwise homemade butter can keep for up to 2-3 weeks in the fridge.
Bottom line: Homemade organic butter isn't much cheaper than store-bought butter, and we couldn't discern a difference in taste. The real fun is adding flavors to butter, but this works better with store-bought butter because it has a longer shelf life.
By the late 1800s, the hand-cranked swing churn had nearly replaced the butter churn and dash. Regardless of the method, churning should take 40-50 minutes of constant motion to transform the sweet cream into solid butter.
Melt butter in 1-quart saucepan over low heat, without stirring, 10-15 minutes or until melted and solids separate from fat. Remove from heat; let stand 5 minutes. Skim off foam. Slowly pour off clear yellow liquid, leaving behind the residue of milk solids that has settled to bottom of pan.
It is possible to overmix the butter and sugar. If you overmix, however, the butter will separate out of the mixture and it will be grainy and soupy, so be sure to stop once your butter becomes light and fluffy.
Did you know your butter was dirty? It isn't, per se, the washing of the butter is meant to clean the remaining buttermilk out of the butter to help with preservation of the butter. The more buttermilk you are able to take out of the butter, the less chance the butter has of going rancid.
This type of churn was a barrel turned onto its side with a crank attached. The crank either turned a paddle device inside the churn, as in the paddle churn, or turned the whole barrel either horizontally or vertically, depending on its construction. Agitation of the cream in this manner converted the milk to butter.
If a dairy cow traveled with the family, its milk was collected and put in a churn attached to the wagon so that the rocking motion of the wagon would turn it to butter. Breakfast leftovers were packed up and the pioneers were on the trail while it was still early morning.
Bordier. France's Bordier is often considered by many in the culinary world to be among the best butter brands on the market. This is because of Bordier's determination to return to traditional methods, where the butter is kneaded by hand on a wooden table instead of being processed with factory equipment.
The butter with the equal-lowest percentage of milk fat – Kerrygold Pure Irish Salted Butter, 80% – was the one that took out the top spot in our test, both overall and for taste alone.
When the two butters were measured up against each other in their pure, un-accessorized form, the Amish one was the clear winner. It tasted complex, rich, slightly tangy, and incredibly creamy. It was flavorful, a bit salty, and would easily enhance baked goods.
According to the USDA, butter is safe at room temperature. But if it's left out for several days at room temperature, it can turn rancid causing off flavors. The USDA does not recommend leaving it out more than one to two days.
Water that is too warm will turn your butter to a mushy mess, and water that's too cold will cause the butter to harden and make it difficult to work with.
Making your own butter doesn't require you to churn butter like it's the 1800s. In fact, in terms of ingredients, you only need heavy cream, salt and ice water. That's right, only three ingredients are needed for this butter recipe.
Refrigerate the rest in an airtight container to ensure optimum freshness. Adding a little water seals out air, keeping butter soft, sweet and spreadable for up to 30 days. You might want to form your butter into blocks before you store it.
For every cup of softened butter add ¼ cup of whole milk and whip in your stand mixer with the whisk attachment for 2-3 minutes until light and fluffy. Store covered in the fridge until an hour before you want to serve, then let sit at room temperature.
Place the butterball into a bowl. Pour some of the ice water over the butter and, using a spatula to wash the butter, folding it over itself and pressing down to extract any extra buttermilk. Drain off the milky liquid and discard it; repeat this process until the liquid is clear, you may need to do this 4-5 times.
It is made by churning milk or cream to separate the fat globules from the buttermilk. Salt has been added to butter since antiquity to help to preserve it, particularly when being transported; salt may still play a preservation role but is less important today as the entire supply chain is usually refrigerated.
Butter is basically the fattiest part of milk. To make it, pioneers would let milk settle after they milked a cow. The cream would rise to the top, and they would skim it off. Then, they would pour the cream into a wooden butter churn, where they would repeatedly move a plunger up and down.
Roman writers recorded that the Celts made butter from cream in churns that consisted of hollow cylinders without handles. Cream was poured into the churn and agitated until it became butter. The Celts improved on the churn design over time.
Put cream in a stand mixer. Start by adding 6 cups of chilled heavy cream to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with whisk attachment or a blender or food processor. ...
It creates a wonderfully full-flavoured butter with many layers.” Butter is made by churning cream until the fat clumps together into butter and the remaining liquid, buttermilk, can be drained off. The Butter Vikings culture cream by adding lactic acid bacteria and leaving it for around three days before churning.
Method. To make butter put the cream into a kitchen aid with a whisk attachment. Whisk on high until the cream separates into butter and buttermilk, spoon into a sieve lined with muslin and strain off. Mix the butter with any of the above and season.
The naturally occurring plant pigment carotene is responsible for the yellow colour of Irish butter. The carotene content of butter depends largely on the animals diet. In Ireland, dairy cows are fed primarily a grass based diet, which is rich in carotene.
Because the remaining percentage in butter contains mostly water, it takes away the flavor and creaminess of the butter. Even though the butters can be used interchangeably, Irish butter has a higher fat and lower water count than American butter, so it has a better taste and makes it a better choice for baking.
The discoveries, which are called Bog Butter, can be thousands of years old. In 2009, a 77-pound, 3,000-year-old oak barrel of the stuff was found in County Kildare. In 2013, a turf cutter in County Offaly found a 100-pound, 5,000-year-old chunk.
Hobby: Flower arranging, Yo-yoing, Tai chi, Rowing, Macrame, Urban exploration, Knife making
Introduction: My name is Madonna Wisozk, I am a attractive, healthy, thoughtful, faithful, open, vivacious, zany person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.
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