HOW TO MAKE BUTTER - THREE DIFFERENT WAYS!

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Have you wanted to make your own butter? Here are three easy methods to make it at home!
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Having fresh, homemade cultured butter in your refrigerator is like a luxury. But it's also SO EASY to make! In today's video, Carolyn is demonstrating three different ways to churn cream into homemade butter.

She also shares some important tips to make sure your butter turns out great EVERY time! Including the importance of washing and salting your butter, plus how to do it!

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#butter #homemadebutter #culturedbutter #rawcream
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In today’s world we need more Carolyn’s and less Kardashians! I love how much I learn from your videos. Thank you for sharing your knowledge!

morganc
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When I was little, the milk man came via horse-drawn carriage. Raw milk with cream on the top. The horse knew the route & timing of deliveries. If the milk man got chatty at any house, the horse would move to the next without him. LOL
My nan had a motorized jar for butter making.

aryan
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My grandmother milked her cow every morning and evening. A bit after the morning milking ( she cooked breakfast for the hands)she gathered the cream from the night before and the morning ( separating it from the milk) and made butter in her wooden churn, she usually added some salt according to how much cream she had, and it didn’t seem like it took very long at all to make, then she washed the butter in cool water, put it and the “buttermilk” in the fridge to cool. This was an every day event, even before church on Sunday. She canned her family’s vegetables and fruits, dried what was feasible, kept chickens in heavily salted butter in the 34degree water in the spring house, it stayed good all through till the following early summer and was delicious. My grandfather slaughtered and butchered hogs and steers in the fall. Salting followed by smoking for the pork, while ageing the beef for 10 days before cutting it and freezing (he got a freezer in 1957, before that he dried all the beef that we couldn’t use fresh.)
When I was a young wife I was making whipped cream when my mixer died. I decided my blender should work just fine for it. I got instant butter! I hadn’t put any sugar in yet, so I mixed a bit of salt in and it was great! 2 seconds in the blender and butter! I was amazed, and immediately thought how great it would have seemed to my grandmother!

earlinejackson
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Once as a teen I made butter when my mother was gone. I took a large plastic gallon jug of cream and tied it securely to our wringer washer agitator. Put clean cold water and a bag of ice in the tub just to level of cream. Made sure the lid was on securely and ABOVE the water line, then turned it on. After about 30 minutes it was solid and beautiful. My mother was shocked but when I showed her what I’d done exactly she laughed and hugged me.

livinglife
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The appreciation for our great, great grandparents who toiled every day doing these things.

sharon
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My grandma used to make butter with a ceramic crock and a wooden dasher. She'd do far more washings until the water was crystal clear. Then, she'd roll it out super thin and sprinkle far more salt than you used. I asked her once about all that salt. She said salt was the most important part because it got all of the water out. From there, she kneaded the butter for what seemed like hours to me (as a small child). I remember being amazed at how much liquid poured out. When she was done, the butter was twice to three times the yellow of margarine or butter you see in the store...almost a canary yellow. It was the best stuff! And, nothing beat the biscuits and cornbread cooked with that buttermilk!

KenJohnsonUSA
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Making butter was my Saturday chore when we went back to the land as kids in the early 70’s. My Dad rigged one of the big blue water barrels into an old side mounted barrel churn that had an up/down bar handle. It was in the dirt basement and I had my transistor radio playing so that I couldn’t hear the mice. We had a retired purebred Guernsey…that’s a lot of milk and cream for a family of 4. I was thinking last night that Dad would have loved channels like yours. When he died the thing I really wanted was the copy if The Have More Plan. I loved going through that book with him.❤

cwbrownCaroline
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Growing up on a dairy farm we always made our own butter. Most of the milk cows were holsteins for volume but we also kept a few jerseys for cream. The holsteins were machine milked but we hand milked the jerseys and poured the pail into a De'laval hand crank cream separator. Sadly these ingenious machines are mostly gathering rust as lawn art nowadays. The cream was then hand churned in a butter crock, salted to taste. In summer we kept it in a milk can lowered into a hand dug 20 ft. well to keep it cool. New potatoes ( yes in Canada we spell it with an e ) right out of the garden or fresh baked bread with home made butter are some of my best childhood memories

thomvogan
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My father talked about their cow's milk being so fatty, you had to cut off the natural seal of butter off the top to get to the cream and milk. Thank you for sharing this video. It is making me consider getting the old butter churn repaired. Yes, we still have it.

BrieyaSilverweb
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I made butter from regular cold store bought cream. It took forever to churn in a jar and the flavor was meh. Then I followed your advice for culturing and keeping at room temperature and culturing it (I used a little live culture sour cream I had). It took less than 10 minutes to churn and the flavor was amazing. I'm going to try raw cream next.

kathismatastic
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Mmm, I love putting the buttermilk from making butter into my mashed potatoes. Yummy!

catacomb_catholic
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Thank you! I got a gallon of beautiful raw milk, skimmed the cream off and ended up with 2 pints! It’s sitting in the counter coming up to temp. My first try at homemade butter will happen in just a bit. I’m 61 yrs old, teaching old dogs new tricks isn’t very hard. Thank you again, you’re a wonderful teacher. 🌺

robingirven
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My dad was a good ole farm boy & he always called skim milk "blue john" because it had a bluish tint. He grew up during the Great Depression on that farm. He was a little peculiar about butter... he didn't like butter because it could be made at home. He liked margarine because it had to be bought at the grocery store, making it seem special to him. One of his favorite treats was to crumble a slice of cornbread into a cold glass of buttermilk & eat it with a spoon.

jle
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I’ve been making butter for years with my KitchenAid mixer, your little tips today totally sped up the process, thank you

thehappyhenhobbyfarm
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Thank you for the little details. This really makes a difference. So many videos rush the process and take shortcuts. A 30 minute video well worth watching! Blessings to your homestead.

mysticmeadow
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When we were kids, we had my grand mother’s butter churn that was a big crock with a wooden handle. We would take turns churning butter. Mom had grammas wooden butter stamps too so sometimes she’d press it with pretty patterns in the butter.

angelacameron
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I cultured my cream by leaving it on the counter overnight. next morning, we jarred it, it took about 10 shakes before we had butter!. And it was SO tasty! Had to wait until the bread was done baking before we devoured it!

VelvetDraginfly
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Helped my Momma churn butter 60 years ago. Our family (10 kids) loved clabbered milk also. Fresh butter and buttermilk are wonderful. Thank you so much.

fannieallen
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cleaning a wire whisk of whipped cream or pre-butter is easy! You have a ready made tool for that, it's called a tongue 😁

keetrandling
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When I pour off my buttermilk from a shaker jar, I repeat the shaking for a couple more minutes and pour off more buttermilk. You will know when to stop shaking. I then pour cool water into the jar and continue to shake. This is my process of kneading, This helps keep the kids working also. Remember, once you add water to the butter, the milk you generate does not go into the buttermilk jar. You are also not using as much water. Great video. Also, remember you can add flavors to the butter when it is still workable. What flavors? Experiment, at the Iowa State Fair, I made everything from Chocolate butter, Root beer butter, Lemon, Onion, Shichimi and others. Once again, great video.

dennisallen