Homemade Country-Style Butter
makes 6 ounces
Recipe from Jennifer McLagan
The simple act of making butter will give you insight into the magical transformation of cream into butter and show you just how good fresh butter can taste.
Read more about this recipe in Fat: An Appreciation of a Misunderstood Ingredient, With Recipes
ingredients
2 cups good-quality, high-fat whipping cream
1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt (optional)
timer
prep: 25 minutes
total: 25 minutes
tools
instant read thermometer
stand mixer with whisk attachment
fine-mesh sieve
dough scraper
instructions
1. Pour the cream into a bowl of a stand mixer and let it warm up to about 60F. Using the whisk attachment, whip the cream on medium-low speed. The cream will thicken, become stiff, and then start to break down. After 7 to 15 minutes, depending on the cream, it will separate into a milky liquid and globules of fat, and the latter will collect on the whisk. Stop whisking.
2. Remove the pieces of butter from the whisk and place them in a fine-mesh sieve. Strain the liquid from the bowl through the sieve. This liquid is true buttermilk, and you can drink it. Rinse the pieces of butter under cold running water until the water runs clear. This rinses off the remaining whey, which could turn the butter rancid.
3. Using your hands, squeeze the butter hard to remove excess water. Place it on a work surface and knead it with your hands and a dough scraper to remove any remaining water.
4. If you prefer salted butter, work the salt into the soft butter with your hands. Using your hands, shape the butter as you like, wrap it well, and refrigerate. The butter will keep for up to 1 week.
Reprinted with permission from Fat: An Appreciation of a Misunderstood Ingredient, With Recipes by Jennifer McLagan (Ten Speed Press 2008).
















Comments
Rebecca Says: October 29, 2008 at 03:01 PM
It's so much fun to make your own homemade butter. I tried using an immersion stick blender, but it gave up somewhere a little past "whipped cream" stage. I ended up finishing the butter by hand with a whisk! Watching it transform into butter is fascinating; great instructions here. The only suggestion I have is that 1/2 tsp. might be too much salt; I found the butter delicious, but saltier than the butter I buy in the store.