Recipes

Salted Butter

by James Strawbridge from The Artisan Kitchen: The science, practice and possibilities

Easy

Makes 4 x 250g (9oz) pats of butter

Learn to make your own rich, creamy salted butter with this easy-to-follow recipe.

Discover more delicious Freezer Friendly recipes

Get ahead with freezer meals, snacks and desserts

From the book

The Artisan Kitchen

James Strawbridge

The Artisan Kitchen: The science, practice and possibilities

Master age-old cookery skills at home, from sourdough making to preserves

Featuring easy-to-follow instructions and illustrated step-by-step guides

Revolutionise your kitchen skill set and become more self-sufficient

Buy From

Introduction

Butter is a vital ingredient in so much cooking and is, in fact, extremely quick, easy, and fun to make. The key to fantastic butter is to churn your cream for long enough to get all the buttermilk out and then take your time washing and drying it properly. Remember to have fun shaping your butter and adding your personal maker’s mark to the finished pat.

Tags

Ingredients

2.5 litres (4 pints)double cream
2 tbsplive natural yogurt
2 tbspfine sea salt

Essential kit

You will need: an electric whisk, sieve, muslin or cheesecloth and wooden butter bats or spatulas.

Method

Pour the cream into a clean, sterilized bowl. Add the live yogurt and stir. Leave at room temperature for 6–12 hours for the cream to ripen.

Beat the ripened cream with an electric whisk for 4–5 minutes until it forms soft peaks. Keep going until the cream gets stiffer and eventually turns pale yellow in colour and looks more like scrambled eggs.

After 2–3 minutes more, small globules of butter will form, surrounded by milk foam bubbles. Add 1 tablespoon of cold, clean water when the mixture looks like a firm mass of butter globules, and carry on whisking for 1 minute on a low speed. Strain the butter through a sieve lined with muslin or cheesecloth, then pour o the buttermilk and retain for use in other recipes.

Next, squeeze the butter on a wooden board and press dry with a cold sheet of muslin or cheesecloth. Rinse and ring out the cloth regularly until the water pressed from the butter runs clear rather than cloudy. Keep working until the butter is clean and dry. Add the 2 tablespoons of salt to the butter (or at least 2 per cent of the butter’s weight in salt), sprinkling a little at a time from a height for good coverage, then folding it in with your hands. This is primarily to preserve it for longer but will also add flavour. Fold the salt in thoroughly.

Divide the mixture into 4 and use grooved butter bats or wooden spatulas to press into blocks – the bats need to be cold and wet, so dip them in icy water first. Push down firmly to drive out any air bubbles.

Shape into 4 pats or rolls, or use moulds. Groove or stamp the surface to decorate and wrap in baking parchment. Alternatively, squash the butter into sterilized containers with lids. Butter can be frozen for up to 3 months and used straight from the freezer. If stored in the fridge, eat within 3 weeks.

Expert tips: I use double cream for butter for the highest fat content possible; over 40 per cent is ideal. If the cream is at the right temperature – about 20°C (68°F) – the butter will “come” (the term for when it changes from cream to butter) in a matter of minutes. Too cold and you will be churning for longer and the butter will be harder to work with.

If using a butter mould, ram the butter in hard to push out any air bubbles. If you buy or make your own butter stamp for decoration, remember to dip it in cold water before pressing to stop it sticking.

Reviews

Have you tried this recipe? Let us know how it went by leaving a comment below.

Cancel reply

Your review

Name *

Our team will respond to any queries as soon as we can - this may take longer over weekends. You do not need to resubmit your comment.

Please note: Moderation is enabled and may delay your comment being posted. There is no need to resubmit your comment. By posting a comment you are agreeing to the website Terms of Use .

Be the first to leave a review

Ingredients
Method

More Recipes from The Artisan Kitchen

View all

Seeded Sourdough

by James Strawbridge from The Artisan Kitchen

Rainbow Chard Kimchi

by James Strawbridge from The Artisan Kitchen

More Something for the weekend Recipes

View all

Kerala Beef Stew

by Xavier Bramble from Stews: One-Pot Comfort Food From Around The World

Ital Stew

by Xavier Bramble from Stews: One-Pot Comfort Food From Around The World

More Freezer Friendly Recipes

View all

The Batch Lady’s Sausage and Cranberry Breakfast Muffin Rolls

by The Batch Lady from The Batch Lady Saves Christmas

The Batch Lady’s Roast Turkey

by The Batch Lady from The Batch Lady Saves Christmas

Get our latest recipes, features, book news and ebook deals straight to your inbox every week