While dinner was cooking my wife and oldest daughter started talking about butter. I have only made butter a few times before, including once in a mason jar. My oldest, having recently started taking interest in amateur photography, proposed I make some butter and she would document the process in photo. That being said, I should give partial authorship, and total photo credit, to my daughter Cameron.
| My Daughter, Cameron |
Basic sweet cream butter is fairly simple and straightforward to make. All you really need is a whisk and a bowl but you will see by the pictures I started with a stick whisk but then quickly realized that I needed the power of the stand mixer to get the job done. I also used some cheesecloth to help wash the butter and to shape it.
Depending on factors such as butterfat content, types of and proportion of butterfat and other variables, you should expect to yield about 50% butter and 50% buttermilk (an awesome byproduct of butter making but nothing like the cultured buttermilk you are used to buying) when you are finished.
| Tools for the job; Heavy cream, bowl, whisk, cheesecloth...and salt. |
| Some butter recipes call for a chilled bowl and room temperature cream or a room temp bowl and chilled cream. It doesn't really matter. Bowl meet cream. |
| Start by whisking the cream slowly so as not to make a mess. |
| Very quickly air will be mixed with the cream and will begin to increase dramatically in volume. |
| A great deal of whisking is needed. |
| more whisking... |
| At this point the cream is taking on stiff peaks. Just like whipped cream only we will keep whisking until the buttermilk and butterfat separate. |
| keep whisking. This phase will feel like it is taking longer than it should. |
| Close up view of the butterfat granules beginning to pull out of the buttermilk. |
| ...another... |
| Here you will see that the butter is starting to pull completely into the whisk. Once most of the butter as collected into the whisk you will be ready for the next step. |
| Close up of the butter completely separated from the cream. You can see the buttermilk coming off the butter as the whisk is pulled from the bowl. |
| Pull the butter from the whisk and gently separate the butter in a shallow dish. Sprinkle the butter with a little kosher salt. |
| Prepare a large piece of cheesecloth, 3 or 4 layers thick. Place the butter into the cheesecloth and wrap it around the butter. |
| Rinsed butter. At this point, the butter is technically finished. |
| I take another piece of cheesecloth, doubled up, to help form the butter into a log. |
| After the general size of the log is formed, tie off one end of the cheesecloth with butcher's twine. |
| With one end tied, twist the butter tight against the knot so that you have a tight, compact log. |
| Completed butter log! I like to age the butter in the fridge for a couple days before use. |
Now that you have seen, in pictures, how to make butter at home, give it a shot.
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2 comments:
This looks great! I will have to try this. I may had some herbs to it as well. Thanks for posting!
I have been following your blog since it was in the Springfield, IL newspaper. I really enjoy your how you intertwine the nuts and bolts of cooking with experiences in real life as well as your personal story. Very interesting read.
Jason
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