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BeckyBoo

Butter making

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Just a quick note to say that Sainsburys are currently selling full cream 600ml for £1 a go - Tescos are the same I think. If you make butter with it £1 makes 320g of butter which makes it cheaper than Anchor, PLUS you get the butter milk. I thought the only thing you could use butter milk for was scones but I've just made rather a large rice pudding using nearly 2 pints of it and it's rather yummy!!

 

From fat Mrs Bertie!

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I converted a friend who came round last night too whilst I was in the midst of making a butter mountain - never mind shaking the bottle of cream, bung it in your food processor, whisk it til it splits - you'll know as it goes lumpy and creamy yellow and all the butter milk pours out. Squeeze as much butter milk as you can out of the solids, rinse under a cold tap squeezing even MORE butter milk out, then Bobs your bloomin' uncle! Add as much salt as you like and a teaspoon up to a tablespoon of olive oil if you want (I don't) and there you go. Butter! And the butter milk is delish too!

 

Mrs B

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Well I've just had a go :lol: Hopefully I've got all the buttermilk out of it :roll: Time will tell. It's currently chilling in the fridge. I'll let you know when I try it. Going to bake some bread in the morning and try it then :lol:

 

The squeezing is a bit of a game - do you use muslin to squeeze it through or something else?

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I just use my hands - I just scoop out all the solids, squeeze it like squeezing a sponge, rinse it squeeze it a bit more then add the salt. In my kitchen today it was still spreadable as it doesn't seem to go as hard as shop butter. I froze loads and also made some into garlic butter (if I make some to sell at the pub it goes INSTANTLY! Home made garlic butter is to die for)

 

Mrs B

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I just use my hands - I just scoop out all the solids, squeeze it like squeezing a sponge, rinse it squeeze it a bit more then add the salt. In my kitchen today it was still spreadable as it doesn't seem to go as hard as shop butter. I froze loads and also made some into garlic butter (if I make some to sell at the pub it goes INSTANTLY! Home made garlic butter is to die for)

 

Mrs B

 

I've done it the same as you, with my hands, so hopefully it works ok. I did it for quite a long time in the food processor so it was already in a big lump when I took it out. I drained the buttermilk off then whisked it again a couple of times so there was hardly anything to come out of it. There was something strangely satisfying about squeezing it :oops::lol: I might try and get hold of some muslin for next time though - I'm sure it would make it easier.

 

Definitely going to add some garlic to a block tomorrow when I bake the bread - I bet it is divine :lol:

 

Thanks for starting the thread Mrs B :clap: - you've got me doing something I never thought i would :lol: :lol:

 

Thought you might like to have a look:

 

DSC00055.jpg

 

It may be small, but it's perfectly formed :lol:. I managed to make about 200g with 2 x 300ml cartons of Double Cream.

 

Sorry about the huge pic, it is supposed to be small according to the Photobucket settings :roll:

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...

DSC00055.jpg

 

It may be small, but it's perfectly formed :lol:. I managed to make about 200g with 2 x 300ml cartons of Double Cream.

 

 

what a shame about the quantity, I thought I was going to make a huge saving there. I get the smartprice butter from Asda which is about 86p for 250g to make my lemon curd with so was going to make loads and freeze it.

 

I think I'll still have a go, just for fun :D

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Poet - I made 340g of butter from one 600ml £1 pot of cream which is cheaper than Anchor which is £1 for 250g in Sainsburys and I think it will be cheaper than the cheap Sainsburys butter which is 86p for 250g.

One trick is to make sure the cream is room temperature which helps it split quicker and for some reason I got more from fresh cream than from the one that had been in the fridge for a week which only gave about 300g

 

Mrs B

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That sounds interesting, wish I had seen it before I went shopping!

 

While on the topic of butter, can anyone tell me why unsalted butter always costs more than salted? I can't understand why a product with less in it costs more. Or maybe the salt helps to bulk it out?

 

Milly

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I wonder if it's because it has a shorter shelf life without the salt? If it has a shorter shelf life they might make less of it each time and therefore it would cost more!? Don't know really :?

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:lol: I HAD to make butter today because I found a tub of out of date cream in the fridge we'd forgotten all about over the Christmas period. Use by date 23rd December but when I took the lid off and had a sniff, it smelled and looked fine so I've made it into a nice big block of butter. Yum! Scones tomorrow, I think :wink:
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