Nothing more dangerous than a bored woman, a half litre of whipping cream and a Cuisinart.
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| It was on sale. |
I've seen eight-year-olds shake cream into butter, so I thought it might be something I could manage. There is a small problem with shaking things when you get past a certain age, however, so I decided this might be a job for my trusty Cuisinart. My machine is ancient and the only blades I have left are a metal one and a plastic one. I decided to use the plastic one as it seemed closer in intent to a nubile milk maid armed with a butter churn.
Well, within 3 seconds I had beautiful whipped cream. I stared into it's glossiness and considered pavlova instead. But NO! I was on a mission. I covered it up, turned that baby on and waited (see: poured tea and added a splash of milk). Tea poured, there was this god-awful sound from my Cuisinart and I pulled the plug from the wall. This is what I saw:
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| What? Hey! |
At this point, I thought it might be time to do some reading. I'm glad I did. Apparently, if you do not get all the liquid out of the butter, it can go rancid very fast. So I poured out the liquid (buttermilk! and I thought it only came in 1L containers at the supermarket) and, well, washed my butter.
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| Buttermilk. Might have to make biscuits. |
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| The Great Unwashed |
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| Washing the butter (but not the sink) |
I got the last of the water out by pressing the butter between two sheets of parchment paper.
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| Your own butter requires a pretty bowl, too. |
Check out: New England Cheesemaking Supply Company for a really interesting read about all things butter.






I love this post!
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