Wednesday 23 January 2013

Cultured Butter

Earlier this week I posted the process of making homemade butter.
I would like to add the option of making cultured butter which I really like.

It's virtually the same process, the only difference is you culture the cream for 24 hours before you make the butter.


What makes cultured butter different from regular butter?
  • Cultured butter is sometimes called European butter because it is common there and newer to US and Canada.
  • It contains probiotics from the cultures which is a nice little boost nutritionally.
  • The culture breaks down the lactose in the cream making it easier to digest.
  • Culturing creates the optimum ration of omega 3 to omega 6.
  • Cultured butter has a more complex flavour. It's tangy and, well... buttery. Some butters add chemicals that they call "natural flavour" to try to replicate the classic cultured butter flavour.
Recipe

organic cream
culture (I use kefir grains)

Method


1. Pour the cream into a mason jar and add kefir grains to culture the cream. Top with a coffee filter held on with elastic band. Leave for 24 hours.


You can see the lumps of grains at the top in this cream.

If its very warm in your kitchen it could be ready sooner, even 8 hours.


2. Pour the cultured cream into a plastic strainer over a bowl to remove the grains. Keep the grains to do your next culture.

Note: Never use metal near your kefir grains. The vibration from the metal can harm the bacteria. Plastic strainer and utensils are a must.


Here are my grains in a clean jar, all ready to culture a new batch of milk for kefir, and my cultured cream in the bowl.


 3. Mix cream in a blender, mixer, or food processor.


Keep mixing, stopping to scrape down sides (or with a Vitamix, use the tamper). At first you will make whipped cream, then it will become very stiff whipped cream, then it will break into pea sized lumps in a milky liquid.

Keep mixing. Eventually the pea sized lumps will stick together in one big ball floating in buttermilk.

4. Pour the buttermilk out. Keep it in a jar in the fridge until ready to use. (A great addition to biscuits or pancakes.)


5. Transfer the butter that is left (after pouring the buttermilk off) into a bowl and wash the butter.

Washing the butter is exactly how it sounds. Pour filtered water into the bowl and use a spatula to move the butter around in the water. Drain the cloudy water and repeat 2, 3, or more times until the water is clear.

Note: Filtered water is needed as chlorinated water will kill the good bacteria from the culture.

Basically you want to push the butter onto the side of your dish, folding and pushing to SQUEEZE out any remaining buttermilk.

Why bother squeezing out the last of the buttermilk? Your butter will spoil quickly if there is buttermilk present. Getting it all out helps it keep longer. (Although cultured butter should keep longer than non-cultured.)

Optional: At this point you can stir in a small amount of sea salt to taste (I didn't salt mine.)


6.  Scrape the lump of butter out of the bowl and onto cheese cloth or a clean dish towel. Twist it up and squeeze gently to remove any last bit of water.


Put it in an air tight container (I have a locking lid for this glass dish) and it will be good for about a week on the counter or 2 in the fridge. It can also be put in the freezer for many months.

Tip: Buy your cream in the spring and early summer when the grass is fresh (that the cows graze on) and the nutrient quality of the cream is highest. Make lots of butter and store it in the freezer.

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