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How To Make Your Own Butter | Bon Appetit


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How To Make Your Own Butter |  Bon Appetit
Methods to , How To Make Your Own Butter | Bon Appétit , , bzgRUDI4YBU , https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bzgRUDI4YBU , https://i.ytimg.com/vi/bzgRUDI4YBU/hqdefault.jpg , 320594 , 5.00 , Store-bought butter is available in all types, shapes, and sizes however there's one thing unmistakably satisfying (and scrumptious) about ... , 1649347207 , 2022-04-07 18:00:07 , 00:08:48 , UCbpMy0Fg74eXXkvxJrtEn3w , Bon Appétit , 6119 , , [vid_tags] , https://www.youtubepp.com/watch?v=bzgRUDI4YBU , [ad_2] , [ad_1] , https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bzgRUDI4YBU, #Butter #Bon #Appetit [publish_date]
#Butter #Bon #Appetit
Retailer-bought butter comes in every kind, shapes, and sizes however there's something unmistakably satisfying (and scrumptious) about ...
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29 thoughts on “

  1. I thought it was funny when she said food scientists I was like you mean a chef? but then I was impressed by the scientific knowledge included in the video. I take it back.

  2. so how did you turn the milk into cream? you started off saying you needed milk but then cultured cream with butter milk and forgot step about what to do with the milk

  3. I saw that paper title and I must say thank you, Arielle! 12 fascinating pages of dialectic analysis of food culture… I love when my interests overlap!

  4. This was scarcely… unhelpful if you wanted to follow this to make your own butter. The reason I say so is because it wasn't made clear what she used. She first showed us a bottle of heavy cream, then proceeds to say fresh raw cream. Raw cream AND heavy cream are two completely different things, and I have no idea which she used (but I have not seen heavy cream that thick before). Next up, the 'fermentation' process. She proceeds to say "give a warm nap", and "the longer the fermentation goes". So, WTF is that supposed to mean? At what temperature? And for how long? Different produce have a different range of temperature for their fermentation process. Stating 'warm' is simply inadequate as warm could be anything between 18 C to 40 ++ C. And don't even get me started on the duration of the entire fermentation process, as I can't even fathom how 'long' is considered long in their minds. We (viewers) aren't professionals, so what might seem to be a common knowledge to them might not be so for the rest of the viewers.

  5. Growing up a farmboy, I hand churned pounds of butter out by shaking gallon jars of cream. Miss both the butter and buttermilk that resulted. Thanks for this video, I want to give it a try your way… with a mixer!

  6. Fun fact: Some wines undergo a secondary lactic acid fermentation and create diacetyl — this leads to the "buttery" character in some chardonnays, for example.

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