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| Historic (rec.food.historic) Discussing and discovering how food was made and prepared way back when--From ancient times down until (& possibly including or even going slightly beyond) the times when industrial revolution began to change our lives. |
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"Jenn Ridley" wrote in message ... (GMAJaskol) wrote: the funny part is, if youv'e made your own butter is almost white. Depends on the cow, and the cow's diet. jenn -- Jenn Ridley : Absolutely correct Jenn. Butter is very dependent on the individual cows, their diet, their breed, the butter making process used, and the type and quality of milk used. Of these, for color, the diet is the most important. The same herd of cattle can produce different color shades of butter depending on what they are eating seasonally. In most large commercial operations, especially in the U.S., many thousands of cows are fed a boring steady diet of feed to produce a homogeneous product. Even butter is often colored to make it more yellow. In the U.S. butter is almost always lower in butterfat than European butters - the effect on taste is big. Just for those who may not be aware, butter is available in 4 different broad types. 1. Salted sweet [fresh] cream butter. This is the most common in the U.S. 2. Unsalted sweet [fresh] cream butter. 3. Salted soured cream butter. 4. Unsalted soured cream butter. Soured cream butters are difficult to find in the U.S. The flavor is more intense and is another one of those things that is up to individual taste. For Americans, Irish butter is widely available in both sweet and soured varieties with the soured cream being a little more common. Both have higher butterfat content than most U.S. butters. French imports of sweet cream butter (even higher in butterfat) are also available but not as easily found. There are a few American butters, most especially Pelugra, that aspire to attain European quality, but, in my opinion, fall short. There are exceptions! I had butter from a dairy in the Seattle area that had outstanding high-fat, lightly salted, sweet-cream butter. Unfortunately I have forgotten the name of the dairy. I am sure that some Sea-Tac resident can supply the info. I have already gone on too long, but just one more thing. The ideas that salt in butter are 1) to cover the taste of bad butter and 2) to preserve butter are incorrect. The first is just not correct at all and never has been. The second was correct in the past but is no longer necessary. It is a matter of taste now. The same thing goes for sweet cream and soured cream butters. In the past, soured cream butter was often the only option. Now it is a matter of taste. Charlie |
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I can attest to the idea that butter has varying flavors from season to
season: I live in Cow Heaven on the north coast of California---a place of wide green pastures and tiny daisies where the cows have fed for more than a century to make high butterfat content milk. I sometimes make my own butter from local cream (shaken in a mayonnaise jar) The butter from that milk certainly does taste like the local fields, and it changes with the seasons. phbp |
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