Homemade Cow Butter?

Using fresh cream will give you a "Sweet Cream" Butter, Using two day old (at approx 50 degree F) or cream that has almost soured, is "aged cream butter", it makes more butter for your buck.
It should take the same time to curdle as it will your skimmed milk if you are going to make cottage cheese. My mom always used as heavy pot as possible, with very low heat and used her hand to stir the milk until it produced curds and whey. This is the rubbery cottage cheese. After she would strain the curds, breaking up the big peices, she added a dot of butter, salt and pepper tossing until well mixed, setting it in the cold refridgerator. (did you realize that the tiny strained particles from cottage cheese are what is made into ricotta cheese.
Also all homemade cottage cheese is fat free. The fat is washed away when rinsed! The commercial makers of cottage cheese add cream to it to moist!
The milk left over from the butter is the true form of "butter milk", unlike the "sour" milk you buy in the store they call butter milk. The fat content of the cream is now a solid, turned yellow. My family used a wooden board (butter board) and after your butter has turned yellow and you are done whipping it, remove it to the board, add salt (and other flavors if you like) and kneed it and warming it ever so slightly, then its ready to place in the mold or container of your choice.
big_smile.png
 
I use heavy cream from the store...but have pondered using the organic milk from the farm where I sell my eggs. So the cream rises to the surface and you skim and beat till it turns to butter? I use my kitchen aid mixer when using the heavy cream from the store...pour off the buttermilk and add spices etc. LOVE my garlic butter spread...I have not made any in awhile.

OK...getting the canning, butter making, berry picking, vegetable gardening BUG...I wasn't going to do that this summer!!

MISS my raspberry jelly...

wee.gif
 
We make butter every week. We have a small herd of registered Jersey cows and make yougurt, cheese, butter, etc. We have the Easy Butter churn and churn up to 2 gallons of cream in 10 minutes or less. This normally gives a yield of 4 plus pounds of butter. Our recipe is 1/2 teaspoon of sea salt per pound of butter. (we like salted butter) If you go to our farm youtube account you can see the churn in use and contact us if you'd like one. Our youtube account is trinityoaksfarm and there are 2 videos showing the Easy Butter churn that we make.

Here are the two links:




Blessings,

Chris
 
Last edited:
i hate when that happens
tongue.png




i hate that you have to buy shares nowadays. miss the days when we could go to the dairy down the road and buy 5 gallons
hmm.png
 
Last edited:

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom