How to Make Old Fashioned Butter

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Subtitles: Jose Mendoza | IG @worldagainstjose
PHOTO CREDITS
Yellow Butter: Music Man Loxton via Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0
Butter Churning in Sumer: Zunkir, CC BY-SA 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
Ghee: By Neha Sonal - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
Bog Butter: By Bazonka - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
Bog Butter 2 - Cavan County Museum
#tastinghistory #butter

Пікірлер: 3 700

  • @TastingHistory
    @TastingHistory7 ай бұрын

    I chose to use raw cream for this episode as it is the main thing that makes recipe “historical”. When making modern butter, I always used Pasteurized cream. The process has saved countless lives and I think it might be a good topic for a video!

  • @mylesjude233

    @mylesjude233

    7 ай бұрын

    Sounds like a good idea indeed. Just finished the video and as I always say, great job ❤

  • @mamadragon2581

    @mamadragon2581

    7 ай бұрын

    It would be a good topic. We take our food safety for granted these days, it would be good to have a reminder of how good we have it compared to our forebears.

  • @mylesjude233

    @mylesjude233

    7 ай бұрын

    Also, if you could find an old recipe for it, maybe you could do a video on the history of ghee (clarified butter) 😊

  • @maogger1

    @maogger1

    7 ай бұрын

    Fun fact: one of the risks of consuming raw dairy is contracting tuberculosis of the bones

  • @uppityglivestockian

    @uppityglivestockian

    7 ай бұрын

    Agree Miller. Sweet butter tastes brighter than salted, but salted tastes more unctuous than sweet. Perhaps mention some of the storage containers used over the generations, such as the butter bell, and the seemingly more recent phenomenon of spreadable butter, which is very easy to DIY while controlling the quality of the ingredients. Many store brands include water, which makes toast soggy. I look forward to you sprinkling in even more of your acting / comedic takes like you used to. Paz y salud.

  • @hillbillyhistorian1863
    @hillbillyhistorian18637 ай бұрын

    Now you just need to find a peat bog and leave it there for about 2,000 years, and you can finally construct the FORBIDDEN GRILLED CHEESE SANDWICH!

  • @REDDAWNproject

    @REDDAWNproject

    7 ай бұрын

    Hardtack for the bread

  • @SakuraVarietyChannel

    @SakuraVarietyChannel

    7 ай бұрын

    @@REDDAWNprojectclack clack

  • @Jertude1981

    @Jertude1981

    7 ай бұрын

    And the bread will be made with hardtack!

  • @hillbillyhistorian1863

    @hillbillyhistorian1863

    7 ай бұрын

    Panis Quadratum Medieval cheese Bog butter

  • @trustytrest

    @trustytrest

    7 ай бұрын

    who says its forbidden

  • @sarwelhlaalu3926
    @sarwelhlaalu39267 ай бұрын

    Fun fact about butter: In Medieval times, butter was used to pack breakable items like glass and crockery. The items were packed in crates and warm, liquid butter poured over them. Once the butter solidified again, the items could not move in the crate and where thus safe from breaking. This practice is the origin of the German idiom "alles in Butter" (literally: "Everything in butter"), meaning "everything is allright".

  • @Graf-Fischgen-von-Fischgesicht

    @Graf-Fischgen-von-Fischgesicht

    5 ай бұрын

    I have never heard of alles in Butter. Is it maybe just used in some parts of germany?

  • @sarwelhlaalu3926

    @sarwelhlaalu3926

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Graf-Fischgen-von-Fischgesicht Not to my knowledge. It is an older idiom, though, so people under 30 or 40 may not know it.

  • @nikiTricoteuse

    @nikiTricoteuse

    4 ай бұрын

    That's a bit genius. Probably worked best in winter though - it would be a bit of a tragedy in 30⁰ heat. I wonder if there was butter that was kept for the purposes of shipping -spoilt in some way perhaps or if it was just so cheap.

  • @sanablue

    @sanablue

    4 ай бұрын

    This is so interesting! I knew the saying but I never knew where it actually came from, so this was very much a "oh that makes so much sense" moment for me! (under 30 btw and I know for a fact that several of my younger friends know it too. although I can imagine the younger generations genuinely not knowing it anymore).

  • @muadddib

    @muadddib

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@Graf-Fischgen-von-FischgesichtIn west germany (actual west, not BRD "West") at least its a normal idiom

  • @jldisme
    @jldisme7 ай бұрын

    A hilarious rancid butter in hair story: when I was a one-year-old, I almost looked like I was bald because my hair was sparse and very fine. My mother heard that putting butter in the hair would make it grow thicker. We lived in the tidewater Virginia area, and it was in August. The butter went rancid very quickly, and my mother felt terrible about it. I have extremely thick, wavy hair. And I have always been crazy for butter! When I was 30 months old, my mom discovered me in the kitchen eating a stick of butter with big bites. I still am likely to sneak a bite here and there. Make of that what you will...

  • @mercwiththemouthsnewphone6798

    @mercwiththemouthsnewphone6798

    6 ай бұрын

    Well since you said "make of that what you will" I'm gonna say this, and if it offends you I'm sorry, but: *Fat*

  • @caimansaurus5564

    @caimansaurus5564

    6 ай бұрын

    The butter went to your head.

  • @jldisme

    @jldisme

    6 ай бұрын

    Yup@@caimansaurus5564

  • @thenovicenovelist

    @thenovicenovelist

    6 ай бұрын

    I'm from the complete opposite side of the state in SWVA (Help!). I used to eat stick butter when I was a kid. Also, Virginia seems to have some interesting folk remedies. Supposedly, my biological grandma from Virginia was told that she could get larger breasts if she rubbed... chicken excrement on them😬😲😮😳. Long story short, that myth was busted.

  • @jldisme

    @jldisme

    6 ай бұрын

    @@thenovicenovelist I'm from West Virginia, not Virginia. :)

  • @sevensongs
    @sevensongs7 ай бұрын

    The tall butter churn actually only takes 30 minutes or so if you take turns with excited children! I used to work at a historical museum, and it's amazing how fast it can happen when that's all the kids want. 😂

  • @slwrabbits

    @slwrabbits

    7 ай бұрын

    Energetic children are absolutely the key to a number of repetitive kitchen tasks.

  • @MrYfrank14

    @MrYfrank14

    7 ай бұрын

    Finally! Hyper active childern can have a purpose instead of drugging them like they are a disease.

  • @MossyMozart

    @MossyMozart

    7 ай бұрын

    @@MrYfrank14 - it depends on the degree of the hyper state, don't you think?

  • @xessenceofinsanityx

    @xessenceofinsanityx

    7 ай бұрын

    That's adorable!

  • @MrYfrank14

    @MrYfrank14

    7 ай бұрын

    @@MossyMozart - perhaps. But every hyperactive child I have seen was called " a boy" back in my day. We didn't drug them . Everyone survived.

  • @msoda8516
    @msoda85167 ай бұрын

    When I was in elementary school I had a teacher who would tie food to history lessons when learning about pioneers she had us all learn how they made butter by passing around the butter churn jar until it became butter. We then got to eat the butter we made on bread she had baked at home. It’s one of my favorites memories from elementary school. I credit that teach with starting my love of history by making it come alive rather then just facts on a page.

  • @beantheirishsetter

    @beantheirishsetter

    7 ай бұрын

    I had a teacher who did the same thing, kinda. She gave us a baby food jar and with cream. We shook it until it became butter. We made Johnny cakes, and she brought in 3 sisters stew and we had a little 5th grade feast!

  • @devontesavage2738

    @devontesavage2738

    7 ай бұрын

    My science teacher did the same thing in 5th grade. She made banana bread and we got to make our own butter. Memories.

  • @furrycircuitry2378

    @furrycircuitry2378

    7 ай бұрын

    A core memory is in highschool where our history teacher Mr.Booker made us pancakes so sad he left before we graduated he was well loved by all the students who set foot in his class I hope he's doing well now

  • @cam4636

    @cam4636

    7 ай бұрын

    We had a similar lesson, everyone was split into groups and each group shook cream in a jar with marbles to churn it. Then everyone's "butter" went into a bowl and got salted, and we spread it on bread. I can't recommend salted whipped cream on bread.

  • @karenkieffer3684

    @karenkieffer3684

    7 ай бұрын

    My first grade teacher showed us how to make butter with an electric hand mixer ... fun!

  • @terri348
    @terri3484 ай бұрын

    My sister was trying to make whip cream, but she processed it too long and made butter. So, for Christmas, she made small loaves of bread, homemade jam, and home made butter. All 3 in a basket( each basket from dollar store) and gave as gifts. BEST Christmas present ever!

  • @tachiebillano6244
    @tachiebillano62447 ай бұрын

    Laura Ingalls Wilder devoted a section of her "Little House in the Big Woods" (the first of her "Little House in the Prairie" series) to how her mother Caroline would make butter, from start to finish. Look it up and it's pretty detailed. Includes how Caroline would color the butter with carrots, to give it extra sweetness and yellow that the milk may have lacked. (And added salt as needed.) It's a great description of how rural Americans in the 19th c. made it.

  • @EraidFreefire

    @EraidFreefire

    3 ай бұрын

    I was wondering why he didn't mention this book! I immediately thought of Little House on the Pararie

  • @SunnyMorningPancakes

    @SunnyMorningPancakes

    2 ай бұрын

    I think it was in the winter months when she added the carrot juice because there was no grass for the cow to graze on. I love all of the food preparation sections from the Little House books. Even the description of popcorn as a luxurious Christmas treat.

  • @MsCassidy23

    @MsCassidy23

    2 ай бұрын

    I loved the idea of the rocking horse butter churn in Little Farmer Boy. It's exciting to have it just rocking back and forth over lifting the butter churner repeatedly.

  • @MsCassidy23

    @MsCassidy23

    2 ай бұрын

    @@SunnyMorningPancakes It always makes me hungry when I read these books. The sewing ad crafting sections were also what got me into dollmaking.

  • @mr-x7689

    @mr-x7689

    13 күн бұрын

    That's how old trades and skills survive, the lack of interests from the young.

  • @JackRabidDrag
    @JackRabidDrag7 ай бұрын

    My mom loves to tell a story about me as a toddler where she found me in the fridge, stick of butter in hand, just munching on it like a candy bar. Nearly 3 decades later, I gotta say... the urge is still there. Loved this video!

  • @davidtee5367

    @davidtee5367

    7 ай бұрын

    one of my little brothers was the pickiest eater growing up, but would always eat the butter off his bread and ask for more butter to be put on it. i also saw him just munching on a stick of the stuff too. my hypothesis was 'he's not getting enough calories, and butter is basically raw calories, ergo his body would love the stuff'

  • @Wolfsbane1974

    @Wolfsbane1974

    7 ай бұрын

    Literally the same with me. My mother caught me snarfing down an entire stick of butter. But the opposite happened to me. Growing up and even today 5 decades later, I can only stand butter if the recipe absolutely needs it.

  • @CheshireTheMaid

    @CheshireTheMaid

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@davidtee5367I mean, that's why my aunt used to eat the tips of burnt matches.

  • @TheLeslieMichelle

    @TheLeslieMichelle

    7 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing the link, I can't wait to start churning...I always wanted to learn to do this as a cooking skill. I

  • @Jewelsmith

    @Jewelsmith

    7 ай бұрын

    My mom said that when I was little, she would catch me taking bites out of the butter in the fridge, and when she asked me why, I told her, "It's my candy bar."

  • @lrstudio3221
    @lrstudio32217 ай бұрын

    Such a wonderful episode! We can all relate to butter. 😄 I grew up on a farm and we had a single milk cow (Molly). During early spring when all of the wild green onions would sprout up in the pasture, Molly would just gorge herself on these. She loved them! While this made her happy, it made for terrible milk. It became undrinkable. BUT, it made for wonderfully flavored butter that was excellent on a baked potato or in mashed potatoes. My mother would label it as green onion butter in the fridge lest we accidentally put it on toast with jam. 😄

  • @MossyMozart

    @MossyMozart

    7 ай бұрын

    @lrstudio3221 - Yes - it is a really smooooth episode. I could watch nothing butter than this video. I'm melting!

  • @thedirtprincess3293

    @thedirtprincess3293

    7 ай бұрын

    The original herbed butter!!!!

  • @SewardWriter

    @SewardWriter

    7 ай бұрын

    Smart Molly! 💖

  • @saraa3418

    @saraa3418

    7 ай бұрын

    My mother grew up in the time of local dairies and milk men and she says the taste would change throughout the year as the diets of the cows changed and in the spring, the milk often had a slight garlic taste. Molly wasn't alone in her preference!

  • @tomjones2202

    @tomjones2202

    7 ай бұрын

    Remember the bitter weeds? Yellow tops? Those made the milk horrible as well..

  • @nwredneck390
    @nwredneck3907 ай бұрын

    Growing up on a ranch in western Nebraska, we had a milk cow. As kids, we had to milk her every morning, and sometimes evenings too, depending on how much she was giving, or if she had a calf with her at the time. We made a lot of butter off of the cream from that. It also made the best caramels you will ever taste!

  • @lisahinton9682

    @lisahinton9682

    5 ай бұрын

    @nwredneck390 I've never heard of a cow who gives caramels! Fascinating.

  • @ShanellandShalom

    @ShanellandShalom

    2 ай бұрын

    Sounds divine ❤

  • @uncletacosupreme7023
    @uncletacosupreme70235 ай бұрын

    Your empression of Julie Childs is on point. I cant count the number of times my dad and I laughed about her. At the same time she changed the kitchen game for all generations. Im so glad we have her recorded for all time.

  • @marianhrubypumper4092
    @marianhrubypumper40927 ай бұрын

    I remember my mother making butter from our “top cream” in just the way you describe. We salted our butter. As an adult I made gee. I was born 77 years ago when we made our own soap from ashes and fat and of course our own milk,butter, butter milk, cream, soft and hard cheese. Thank you for bringing back this “lost lore”

  • @SeliahK

    @SeliahK

    7 ай бұрын

    For what it's worth, I'm 44, and I do all of what you describe in my kitchen. And I've made sure my daughter learned how to as well. It's a survival thing for us. Groceries are really expensive and it's cheaper for me to just buy the cream top milk and use that cream for things. LOL.

  • @sweetlorikeet

    @sweetlorikeet

    7 ай бұрын

    Ghee is excellent, truly a brilliant way to make butter last longer without refridgeration. Great to cook with, too. I make popcorn with ghee, it gives amazing flavour without smoking the kitchen out.

  • @annbower6278

    @annbower6278

    7 ай бұрын

    My Newfie great granny was the same as she lived in a small outport in Newfoundland, she made butter from freshly milked cows. There was no shopping centre from the time when she was a small girl & she was born in the 1890's. She had made her cloth woven from sheared sheep wool onto her spinning wheels (she had 2, a small & large 1) & loom.

  • @pinchevulpes

    @pinchevulpes

    7 ай бұрын

    The pioneers used to ride these babies for miles

  • @evermorestation

    @evermorestation

    7 ай бұрын

    We use the top cream to make natural yoghurt! It's nice and tart, you get a lot of whey, and I can never ever have flavoured/artificial yoghurt because this is what I grew up eating.

  • @InspectorGadget923
    @InspectorGadget9237 ай бұрын

    This is the whey.

  • @christophersnedeker

    @christophersnedeker

    Ай бұрын

    That's cheese making

  • @Lunabaeee
    @Lunabaeee6 ай бұрын

    This reminds me of how we made butter as a kid but what we did was just put the cream (fresh from our cows) straight into a mason jar, about 3/5ths full and seal the lid with a little plastic wrap, and then we just shook it but not in a violent back and forth motion, it was more of like a rowing motion where you'd dip the lid end down and then sort of scoop it up. Anyways you do this for like 15-20 minutes and one hell of an arm workout later you'd have a smooth ball of butter in the jar (depending on how good your motion was, if you just went violently back and forth it would all be little clumps that would have to be strained). We boys used to have contests of who could make butter the fastest and still in a smooth ball. Lots of memories and basically no equipment other than a mason jar and some elbow grease! Thanks for the video, many fond memories.

  • @gabrieltraicoff254

    @gabrieltraicoff254

    3 ай бұрын

    Definitely just had a butter making race with my girlfriend last week making butter in a mason jar. It’s a blast!

  • @roflcopterIII
    @roflcopterIII7 ай бұрын

    My dad is from rural ireland. He used to go turf cutting as a kid and sometimes they'd find bog butter. His father actually found a bog body back in the 50s too.

  • @quacksayssquawk2899

    @quacksayssquawk2899

    2 ай бұрын

    Supposedly when my Great-Grandad was young, he ate some bog butter on a dare, and the taste was so bad that it put him off butter for the rest of his life

  • @thefriendlychap4132
    @thefriendlychap41327 ай бұрын

    Nothing beats home made butter.

  • @markstyles1246

    @markstyles1246

    7 ай бұрын

    I think you'll find everything beats the butter when making it at home. But some devices are better at the task.

  • @OtterEleven

    @OtterEleven

    7 ай бұрын

    @@markstyles1246 🤣

  • @MossyMozart

    @MossyMozart

    7 ай бұрын

    @thefriendlychap4132 - Homemade bread under it?

  • @RegebroRepairs

    @RegebroRepairs

    7 ай бұрын

    Oh, i bet the beurre demi sel from La petite laiterie we bought at the market in Paris beats your home made butter. I miss it.

  • @jhnshep

    @jhnshep

    7 ай бұрын

    nothing beats kerrygold

  • @elyseforseth8821
    @elyseforseth88217 ай бұрын

    I used to work as a historical interpreter in a living history village in Florida. The first time I made butter was outside during peak heat in the middle of Summer, and it was an incredibly smelly, greasy, and frustrating mess. We kept having to run inside to the air-conditioning and sit it in a bucket of ice to get it to do what we needed. Definitely makes you appreciate (most) modern amenities. I can't wait to watch this!

  • @Burlandivy

    @Burlandivy

    7 ай бұрын

    Historically most butter in europe and north america was made during the spring when pastures are at their best and recently calved cows produce the highest-fat-content milk. In spring the weather is cool enough to make butter and summer and autumn were for making cheese. Sometimes butter could be made again in autumn if the pastures were good.

  • @MrSteveGrey

    @MrSteveGrey

    7 ай бұрын

    I feel like an historical interpreter would know better than to make butter outside in summer...

  • @elyseforseth8821

    @elyseforseth8821

    7 ай бұрын

    @MrSteveGrey We did, but that was the program our Living History Coordinator wanted us to do that day as he has a surplus of milk for some reason.

  • @elyseforseth8821

    @elyseforseth8821

    7 ай бұрын

    @isaacpowell15 Yes, we explained that to our visitors and it was very apparent to them why it was that way.

  • @hal90001

    @hal90001

    7 ай бұрын

    Florida now smells bad because of all the fascists living there.

  • @marcblur9055
    @marcblur90557 ай бұрын

    If you make butter at home, make sure to have a sip of the buttermilk you pour off. It's really very pleasant and so much better than whatever masquerades as buttermilk that you get from the store. Real buttermilk is also great for pancakes and biscuits.

  • @Calibrumm
    @Calibrumm7 ай бұрын

    Pliny the Elder really just has a mouthful to say about literally anything and everything doesn't he. thats how I want to be remembered.

  • @fluffybunny5518
    @fluffybunny55187 ай бұрын

    Little tip on making your own butter: You don’t have to buy a hand-cranked butter churn. A regular jam glass will do the trick as well. I’m making home-made butter with those, but instead of a cranking motion you just shake that glass samba style while watching an episode of Tasting History with Max Miller. Personally, I prefer the shorter glasses with a wider lid diameter then the taller glasses with a smaller lid diameter. It is easier for me to get the butter out later through a larger diameter. I usually choose a 350 to 400g standard glass size they use here everywhere to sell confiture in it. Once eaten empty, clean the glass (after every use) properly with scolding hot water. After it cooled down, fill the glass up to 1/4 or 1/3 with cream. Personally, I like that ratio since there is enough space for the cream to really flop and smash around that glass when I shake it. I’ve done it with a half full glass as well, but it took a bit longer for it to turn into butter. If you want more butter, I would suggest to use a larger glass instead but keep the ratio below 1/2. It is that smashing against the glass bottom and the metal lid on the top which turns the cream into butter, and this needs space. Just make sure you have a glass that allows you to properly close the lid. Else it will get really buttery around you.

  • @GopherCakeStuff

    @GopherCakeStuff

    7 ай бұрын

    We did that in our elementary class then visited a bread factory. Such a good and tasty week.

  • @beepboop9712

    @beepboop9712

    7 ай бұрын

    I did something like this when I was in 3rd grade, as part of a homeschooling lesson. I remember using carrots to help give it more of the classic yellow tint.

  • @be6715

    @be6715

    7 ай бұрын

    @@beepboop9712 Laura Ingalls Wilder mentions that Ma added some carrot juice to her butter to give it color.

  • @dianaash8077

    @dianaash8077

    7 ай бұрын

    Shaking it in a jar is how my mom taught me to make butter for a social studies class in 9th grade.......a very long time ago.

  • @gnarthdarkanen7464

    @gnarthdarkanen7464

    7 ай бұрын

    AWH HELL... Around here, the flea markets still have the occasional electric churn... It's usually an old pickle jar (yeah, up to the gallons, depending on size of family or batch)... with an electric fan motor on top of it, to spin the shaft instead of the hand-mixer type that Max showed in the video. I think I've still got an old one I bought for about $5 back in the 90's when my last one died... or... well... it kinda got killed... glass jars and jugs only take so much, but my brother's story was "The move killed it dead"... I think more folks in the last 10 years or so sell them as "Curios" though... Doesn't stop 'em from working... Of course... It ain't like you can't find a decent little electric fan motor, a dowel, and cut apart 3 or 4 spatulas (bamboo or rubber work) and cobble your own together out of a pickle jar or whatever else... just get a sturdy lid so it'll take drilling a hole through it for the dowel... Might want to shop around for an appropriate adhesive, but I've always done my repairs with J.B. Weld and given at least 2 days to cure "to be sure"... It's not like we're building a g** d*** Rembrandt or trying to do the work of a Lambo' or nothing... AND I'm not spending a half-hour chanting and cranking when I can just plug it in and come back in about the same time to check on it... It'll work itself out. ;o)

  • @CowgirlWren
    @CowgirlWren7 ай бұрын

    My grandmother, born in 1914 in Scandinavia, would use unsalted butter on her face every day as a moisturizer. In her 90's, she still had phenomenal looking skin!

  • @whydoineedanameiwillneverp7790

    @whydoineedanameiwillneverp7790

    6 ай бұрын

    Here in India, I have seen ghee (clarified butter) used as a face cream and lip balm by "ye olde folks" - and I always wondered if Europeans used butter the same way! Now I know. So thanks for sharing your grandma's story!

  • @springheeledjacques
    @springheeledjacques7 ай бұрын

    Having made amazing cultured butter a few times at home, I honestly recommend it so much over normal "sweet cream" butter. All you need to do is to make a crème fraîche: just add about 1 part cultured buttermilk or good-quality yogurt to 10-15 parts cream (about 2-3tbsp per pint), shake or stir it until fully combined, and let it sit in a closed container like a mason jar at room temperature for 12-24 hours, until it thickens. After that, just put the crème fraîche in the fridge until cold, and then follow the normal process for making butter. The culturing process gives it such a lovely, subtle flavor that's far superior to sweet-cream butter in my book, and as an added benefit, it also tends to last longer. Not that it's likely to need to.

  • @andrewsackville-west1609

    @andrewsackville-west1609

    4 ай бұрын

    I was hoping someone would mention cultured butter. I've never had it, but feel it's one of those things people overlook.

  • @dal7143

    @dal7143

    4 ай бұрын

    I gave homemade cultured butter as Christmas gifts one year. People loved it.

  • @heatherthomas7545
    @heatherthomas75457 ай бұрын

    I don't laugh out loud often, but when I do, it's at Max's perfect butter churning songs 😂

  • @estherfischer2188
    @estherfischer21887 ай бұрын

    For a time when all my kids (6 kids) were young, a litre of whipping cream was less expensive than a pound of butter, so being a poor, homeschooling family, I turned butter making into a history lesson and we made our own butter. Just used a large glass jar, took turns shaking it till the butter came, washed it, squeezed out the buttermilk (which made great pancakes or biscuits), salted it and we had our butter. I don't think any of the children regret those times now that they are grown.

  • @oatmealtruck7811

    @oatmealtruck7811

    7 ай бұрын

    That’s really lovely 😊 ❤

  • @beckyowens2586

    @beckyowens2586

    7 ай бұрын

    We lost one of our home incomes so for for Christmas last year I made a collection of flavored butters and gave everyone a loaf of sourdough. Turned out a lot cheaper than trying to buy flavored butters. I need a shield for my stand mixer though lol. Made a total mess with the first batch. I do not have kids or I totally would have put them to work lol.

  • @maruree

    @maruree

    7 ай бұрын

    Yeah! Not the same at all but in kindergarten we used to make butter the same way. I don't think any of the kids had the patience to shake all the way from cream to butter but I remember a clump of butter finally appearing inside the jar!

  • @tilasole3252

    @tilasole3252

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@marureeThat is how we made butter in elementary (?) school. Just shook a jar till it congealed basically. 😅

  • @jeanvignes

    @jeanvignes

    6 ай бұрын

    What a charming story. We did the same thing (four children) for similar reasons: less expensive, more tasty, and the entire process helped to occupy and tire-out my mother's "wild animals".

  • @donhull2440
    @donhull24407 ай бұрын

    Max, clarified butter is made by melting the butter at a relatively low temperature and separating it from the milk solids without letting the solids "brown". Ghee is made by heating the melted butter to a higher temperature so that the milk solids start to brown, then separating them from the melted butter. Slightly browning the milk solids gives ghee a slightly nutty flavor you don't get with clarified butter.

  • @MikaelaKMajorHistory

    @MikaelaKMajorHistory

    7 ай бұрын

    Great to know. Many sources consider both to be the same and only note the flavor differences

  • @anweshd84

    @anweshd84

    7 ай бұрын

    Glad you brought it up. I live in India and we make ghee at home, so seeing this distinction brought up is satisfying.

  • @odinfromcentr2

    @odinfromcentr2

    7 ай бұрын

    TIL.

  • @Mila-Rosa

    @Mila-Rosa

    7 ай бұрын

    Is browned butter basically ghee then?

  • @donhull2440

    @donhull2440

    7 ай бұрын

    @@Mila-Rosa The browning of meat or butter is the maillard reaction, which is the caramelization of proteins. The milk solids are only slightly browned for ghee . For browned butter you let the maillard reaction goes further for a stronger taste that is good for sauces for browned meats and some baked goods, but you can't let the cooking temperature get too high or the milk solids will burn, with a resulting in a bad taste. Regular butter burns and smokes at about 163-191 °C or 325-376 °F so it isn't very good for frying meat unless you want browned butter. Clarified butter and ghee are very good for frying since they have a high smoke temperature (about 252 °C or 486 °F) because the milk solids have been removed.

  • @patch3938
    @patch39387 ай бұрын

    Max, I don't normally comment but I had to this time. The quality of your videos is amazing. I've been watching your channel for a few years, and you've consistently always put out fun, educational, and funny videos. I love learning, and the way you teach is just... hard to describe. I don't find myself noticing the time slip by when I watch the videos, you were born to perform. Thank you so much for putting so much effort into these videos! I will always look forward to the next video.

  • @TastingHistory

    @TastingHistory

    7 ай бұрын

    Wow, so kind. Appreciate the support.

  • @patch3938

    @patch3938

    7 ай бұрын

    @@TastingHistory Always my friend!

  • @litamaxwell45
    @litamaxwell457 ай бұрын

    My great grandmother lived with us when I was a kid, and she said the one invention that really changed everything was the refrigerator. It was lovely to hear that echoed in your video.

  • @ferociousgustafson4040
    @ferociousgustafson40407 ай бұрын

    3 minutes in and this is my favourite episode. This show keeps getting better.

  • @axelhopfinger533

    @axelhopfinger533

    7 ай бұрын

    it certainly gets butter(er)!

  • @giraffesinc.2193

    @giraffesinc.2193

    7 ай бұрын

    It does! I thought this would be a boring episode (given the subject) but it is one of his best yet!

  • @jilletdelphine

    @jilletdelphine

    7 ай бұрын

    @@giraffesinc.2193you think butter is boring?

  • @axelhopfinger533

    @axelhopfinger533

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jilletdelphine Butter is serious business!

  • @c0mpu73rguy

    @c0mpu73rguy

    7 ай бұрын

    @@axelhopfinger533Darn it, someone else thought of that pun! XD

  • @rebeccahart1190
    @rebeccahart11907 ай бұрын

    Two words: Cultured butter. Historically, cream was kept until there was enough to churn. With little refrigeration, the cream would ferment. The better has active cultures in it and a much more complex flavor. Also, the fermentation would help to preserve it.

  • @borjesvensson8661

    @borjesvensson8661

    7 ай бұрын

    Not really ferment. It develops a yogurt like culture. It becomes "sourcream"

  • @sovietcanuckistanian

    @sovietcanuckistanian

    7 ай бұрын

    That is fermentation. It’s just from types of bacteria that produce lactic acid, which has a sour taste, instead of alcohol.

  • @raerohan4241

    @raerohan4241

    7 ай бұрын

    I've known about that for a long time, but I've been too afraid to try it (we collect cream by skimming it off of milk instead of buying it - it's quite expensive here). So far I've only made sweet cream butter, often salted. Maybe I'll give it a try with a small amount of cream, but we're not used to it so it might just end up going to waste.

  • @darnokthemage170

    @darnokthemage170

    7 ай бұрын

    A great use of somewhat sour cream!

  • @rebeccahart1190

    @rebeccahart1190

    7 ай бұрын

    @@raerohan4241 there are directions on the Internet on how to make cultured butter at home. Raw milk has the bacteria needed to ferment it. You can purchase buttermilk culture. Even yogurt with active culture can give it to you.

  • @Parcha64
    @Parcha647 ай бұрын

    I love the hand crank! We just shake the mason jar until the buttermilk literally falls out. It's pretty fun to feel the moment you've made butter and we get a good arm workout too!

  • @balesjo
    @balesjo6 ай бұрын

    I have fond memories of helping my maternal grandmother churn fresh raw cows milk to produce butter, then packing in a wooding butter mold to make a large block pf butter. She used a traditional stoneware churn as well as a large hand-cranked churn. Then she saved the buttermilk for my grandfather.

  • @user-xv2sr5jo4l
    @user-xv2sr5jo4l7 ай бұрын

    I grew up very poor and real butter was something we only had on holidays. Even to this day my favorite indulgence is just a slice of good quality bread (toasted or not) with a bit of quality butter spread over it. It's crazy to think that and realize how easy butter is to make! 😆 Thanks to my ADHD, I have an extra quart of heavy cream in my fridge that I was wondering what to do with. Then this episode came out! Guess I know what I'm doing with it now! 😊

  • @SetuwoKecik

    @SetuwoKecik

    7 ай бұрын

    Its really interesting that geography really affects what people considers as cheap or expensive ingredients. In my country, butter is considered as high tier ingredients, especially unsalted ones, so its mostly just used for cakes and toast (which is not a food people eats regularly in my country), or simply replaced it with margarine, which is cheaper. Vegetable oils like palm oil or coconut oil, however, are even cheaper.

  • @hongo3870

    @hongo3870

    7 ай бұрын

    What does Adhd have to do with heavy whipping cream again?

  • @user-xv2sr5jo4l

    @user-xv2sr5jo4l

    7 ай бұрын

    @@hongo3870 Having ADHD means I do stupid stuff like spend an hour going through my kitchen and making up a grocery list of things I need to buy, only to forget that list at home and find myself standing in front the dairy case wracking my brain to remember if I have heavy cream at home already and ultimately buying another quart because for the life of me I cannot remember.

  • @lisasnyder6291
    @lisasnyder62917 ай бұрын

    Max, my mother,who was a character, was unimpressed by how some of our family members applied butter to bread and decided to give a lesson. She grabbed her bread, butter and her knife and proclaimed “You don’t scrape butter on the bread, you slather it!”. When you said to slather it I thought of my mom and cracked up. It appears my mother would have approved of your method. Lol

  • @JvariW

    @JvariW

    7 ай бұрын

    You are actually supposed to butter bread a piece at a time. That is, if we are talking about proper etiquette

  • @RestingBitchface7

    @RestingBitchface7

    7 ай бұрын

    I like your mom. One dairy girl to another.

  • @rickwilliams967

    @rickwilliams967

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@JvariWand in extremely large quantities

  • @markpukey8

    @markpukey8

    7 ай бұрын

    I learned that from Bilbo Baggins. At one point in the Fellowship of the Ring he describes to Frodo how his great age makes him feel like too little butter scraped across too much bread. I forget the exact quote, but it stuck with me. Butter is meant to be slathered on and savored. It's not a lubricant for the bread, it's the actual topping meant to be enjoyed! Bilbo's point was about all things in life, and I try to take it that way... but it was a metaphor about buttering your bread.

  • @jakubgrzybek6181

    @jakubgrzybek6181

    7 ай бұрын

    your mother was right, butter should be covering the bread in thick layer.

  • @punklejunk
    @punklejunk7 ай бұрын

    This particular video has sparked a lot of people sharing childhood stories of making or helping make butter. Once again, food performs brilliantly at bringing people together. But it took Max sharing his interest in something so simple but so close to everyone's families. Thank you.

  • @MrMegaManFan
    @MrMegaManFan7 ай бұрын

    I’d love a whole episode of Max singing butter karaoke!

  • @zuitsuit80
    @zuitsuit807 ай бұрын

    Dogs are such amazing creatures. The idea of the family dog working to make the household butter is adorable. I hope those dogs got to taste some of their work as a treat.

  • @madnesssoft2012

    @madnesssoft2012

    7 ай бұрын

    Clearly you don't know about the cheese tax. You gotta pay it.

  • @yermanoh

    @yermanoh

    7 ай бұрын

    dogs have had many jobs over the years here one you might have heard of. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turnspit_dog

  • @bzqp2

    @bzqp2

    7 ай бұрын

    Maybe they could drink the buttermilk

  • @BlueRidgeCritter
    @BlueRidgeCritter7 ай бұрын

    I grew up on a small farm, and making butter was an everyday thing for us. Loved seeing this video. Here's a couple of tricks that will save you some trouble: put the cream in just a regular wide-mouth mason jar, or a half gallon jar if you can find one. No paddles or churn. Just shake it like shaking a mixed drink. Not too fast, but not slow either. You want the cream sloshing in it. Then as it starts to thicken/separate, slow down to a back and forth "rolling the cream" motion to gather it. It will collect in a ball as it separates and starts to stick together. Takes about 15 mins. No straining in a cloth or scraping needed. Then dump it, pour out the buttermilk, and wash it by working it with a spatula in cold water, drain it, work out any water in the butter, and work in your salt. Then mold it/press it, and refrigerate. The whole process takes maybe 30 mins. Mmm. Oh, and Max.....the "music for churning" - no. Just, no. 😂. Oh, there is one other thing. You mentioned the sweetness of the butter. There are two kinds of butter, sweet cream and sour cream. Most people are used to commercial butter which is in the middle. You can put your cream in the fridge until it sours, and then make butter, and it will taste a little bit more like what you're accustomed to. Fresh cream butter, or sweet cream butter, is going to be milder and a little more...bland. I personally love both of them, just for different uses.

  • @thedirtprincess3293

    @thedirtprincess3293

    7 ай бұрын

    Ahhhh! You described it so much better than i did! I left out the speed cuz i couldnt describe it. "Sloshing" is exactly right. Thats how my mom made it.

  • @barbararobertson9505

    @barbararobertson9505

    7 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the tips!

  • @TastingHistory

    @TastingHistory

    7 ай бұрын

    I respectfully disagree. The singing makes it go faster and the butter tastes better.

  • @StarchildMagic

    @StarchildMagic

    7 ай бұрын

    I've made butter this way when I have cream that's near its expiration date and I won't use it up in time. It's tiring, but it works. Watching an episode of Tasting History helps pass the time.

  • @ArchaicAnglist

    @ArchaicAnglist

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@TastingHistoryI dare say the issue wasn't with song per se but with the set list.

  • @rhondaroebuck2416
    @rhondaroebuck24167 ай бұрын

    My grandmother made butter with an old wooden churn. THE BEST!! She had just milked her cow and worked hard because it needs a consistent rhythm. Still miss those biscuits too. Love this show. It got me through the pandemic.

  • @bocanjm215
    @bocanjm2157 ай бұрын

    Man I bet Disney really misses you when they watch your videos. Such a real life character 😂

  • @MuttonTheDragon
    @MuttonTheDragon7 ай бұрын

    … out of every Pokémon that could have been used, I should have seen that one coming from several miles away

  • @grumbeard

    @grumbeard

    7 ай бұрын

    I was just thinking that! Free!

  • @67jpt
    @67jpt7 ай бұрын

    When my daughter was little, I was a library worker at her school. I used to read to the kids Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder. One of our year-end projects was making butter. I put the kids in a circle and then had a jar half filled with cream. The kids were told to shake it until they got tired and pass it to the person next to them. When we were finished, I rinsed and salted the butter, gave whoever wanted to try a taste of real buttermilk, and served the butter on some homemade bread. They loved it!

  • @corgiw7281

    @corgiw7281

    7 ай бұрын

    This!! I was looking for someone to mention the Ingalls book, because those are authentic instructions if any. Using carrot squeezings to make winter butter yellow stuck vividly.

  • @Shizu_Kare
    @Shizu_Kare7 ай бұрын

    I absolutely adored your music selection for the butter churning. Overall this is a great example of how your channel takes something simple like butter and by giving historical context and production makes it a great learning experience. Not to mention making the finished product seem all the tastier.

  • @TheTrumpReaper
    @TheTrumpReaper7 ай бұрын

    It is odd that I discovered this video today. I bought a load of dairy goods yesterday and was thinking of how to make "cheese" cheese from cottage cheese and how to churn heavy cream into butter.

  • @dreamingwolf8382
    @dreamingwolf83827 ай бұрын

    Fun fact about the several millenia old bog butter- there's a charity dinner at one of the Smithsonian museums in dc every year, and if you're willing to pay an extraordinary amount of money you can sample a tiny fraction of some foods that have been preserved and discovered from various areas (like honey from Egyptian tombs, or Bog butter. etc) Supposedly it's quite earthy.

  • @VoresD

    @VoresD

    7 ай бұрын

    Mmmm, the peat bog flavor

  • @stargirl7646

    @stargirl7646

    7 ай бұрын

    Omg 😱

  • @Tipman2OOO

    @Tipman2OOO

    5 ай бұрын

    Whaaaaat that's really cool! No way

  • @MegaKat

    @MegaKat

    5 ай бұрын

    No lie, I'd try that honey. Idk about the butter, but honey never goes off.

  • @efrijim700

    @efrijim700

    3 ай бұрын

    Hard pass

  • @aoeuable
    @aoeuable7 ай бұрын

    There's one thing you didn't really get into: Souring the butter. Traditionally butter has been made from sour cream over here (I guess all of northern Europe), with industrialisation producers switched to not souring the cream but culturing it afterwards as they can use unsoured buttermilk for more things than soured buttermilk. There's a couple of places that still produce proper soured butter and it's indeed quite a bit better, though not if you expect it to be mellow. If you get a roll of Faßbutter it's even going to be churned in a batch with a (giant and stainless) butter churn, and not have undergone the usual continuous process, and it usually won't even be that much more expensive. Definitely worth the extra money when you're doing shortcrust or such.

  • @gwennorthcutt421

    @gwennorthcutt421

    7 ай бұрын

    i did read in a book about a woman, in her efforts to make butter, using sour cream. it was the first time i had heard of it so im glad to learn more about that method!

  • @sixstringedthing
    @sixstringedthing7 ай бұрын

    I had no idea that something as ubiquitous as butter was responsible for one of history's greatest scams and one of history's most epic protest rants. Max's expressive reading of the Anti-Bad-Butter diatribe was fantastic!

  • @wailingalen
    @wailingalen6 ай бұрын

    I love your depiction of history with a culinary twist!! There is a rich history in our foods!! Greetings from a Vietnamese American

  • @richardk5246
    @richardk52467 ай бұрын

    I used to work for a small local dairy in the UK and we made our own butter using cream from Jersey and Guernsey cows. The butter was so rich and yellow and just delicious, perfect on top of a scone with a cup of tea.

  • @rovert881
    @rovert8817 ай бұрын

    We need an album from Max that replaces the lyrics with cooking inspired ones

  • @antcommander1367

    @antcommander1367

    7 ай бұрын

    Hard tack hallelujah... 😂

  • @chezmoi42

    @chezmoi42

    7 ай бұрын

    @@antcommander1367 I'm seeing little hard tack castanets. Fandango, anyone?

  • @My_mid-victorian_crisis
    @My_mid-victorian_crisis7 ай бұрын

    One of my favorite stories from baking and pastry class, in culinary school, was about the difference between whipped cream frosting and butter... if you whip it too much, just put it into the croissant.

  • @InformationIsTheEdge
    @InformationIsTheEdge7 ай бұрын

    2:22 My Grandad had one of those. But with whipping paddles that was for whipped cream! Every Thanksgiving he would make a big production of making whipped cream for dessert. He made a fuss about keeping his recipe "secret" even though it was only 2 ingredients. Thanks for sparking those fantastic memories!

  • @BigRoofus999
    @BigRoofus9997 ай бұрын

    Amazing episode! This does make me wonder if it might be time to revisit the very first episode with the medieval cheese. It would be fun to see how far Tasting History has come as a show, and how far Max Miller has come as our (beloved) host!

  • @TastingHistory

    @TastingHistory

    7 ай бұрын

    Oh memories.

  • @duf999
    @duf9997 ай бұрын

    I'm surprised you didn't talk about the Butter Bell, or "Beurrier Breton" as a method of keeping the butter longer before refridgeration. It's kept in water, preventing oxidation while keeping the butter soft for spreading.

  • @CardSharkPNW

    @CardSharkPNW

    7 ай бұрын

    This! I LOVE my Le Creuset butter crock! No refrigeration needed and it stays soft and spreadable.

  • @corgiw7281

    @corgiw7281

    7 ай бұрын

    I use butter irregularly, so I've tried using white vinegar instead of water in my butter bell - it pickles the butter it contacts, which is a very interesting taste!

  • @ClevorBelmont
    @ClevorBelmontАй бұрын

    I like this man; no excessive and obnoxious cuts, good delivery and he TEACHES. Max and Townsends are two of the best food historians on youtube.

  • @winegoddess55
    @winegoddess557 ай бұрын

    When I was a child, my parents started dairy farming, so we always had fresh milk. One of our chores we kids got to do, was to use a similar jar with a lid paddle, to make butter. It was fun and tasted so good! Those were the days, lol!😄

  • @HankScorpio64
    @HankScorpio647 ай бұрын

    I done the old fashioned way with the plunger style... My Great Grandmother would always con me into doing when I was down there for the summer in rural Western Virginia (no not West Virginia). Essentially she'd call me inside saying she had some errands to do and she wanted to me keep churning the butter. Well after about a few times I realized she wasn't doing any errands and she was just buggering off to my Aunt's down the road about 1mile to chat for a while and left me to do the work. I think she was doing it to be funny cause that was her personality. I caught on and told I knew what she was doing. I still did it anyways cause it was better than cleaning out the hen house or herding cattle on my uncles farm. I miss her.

  • @FortyWink
    @FortyWink7 ай бұрын

    Hey Max, check out this recipe I found for toothpaste from 13th century: "To make a paste to clense the teeth, medle ye togidere twei partis of hony, o part of mynt, and of o part wode ashe, and o part cratche; and whanne thei han meddlid tho thingis, sitte thei in the sunne, til the tyme determyned, whanne tho schulen be clensid, and be spreynt togidere with watir; if the paste is of a lord, adde ye the secounde part of a good saffroun to the paste, for the firste."

  • @jacklucas5908

    @jacklucas5908

    7 ай бұрын

    It's so strange being able to understand parts of this, whilst others are barely comprehensible.

  • @FortyWink

    @FortyWink

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jacklucas5908 Ikr. I'm hoping Max sees this.

  • @xessenceofinsanityx

    @xessenceofinsanityx

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jacklucas5908 what are you talking about, it's perfectly easy to understand! 🤣

  • @WonderWoman0313

    @WonderWoman0313

    7 ай бұрын

    I imagined Jamie Fraser saying this. 😏😍

  • @shaventalz3092

    @shaventalz3092

    7 ай бұрын

    Not sure what the "cratche" refers to. Or "gidere". Other than that, makes sense.

  • @silver3roses
    @silver3roses7 ай бұрын

    I love that you have butterfree in the background.

  • @Mikisoq39
    @Mikisoq397 ай бұрын

    When you Stare into the Butterfree, it also stares back at you.

  • @scraperindustry
    @scraperindustry7 ай бұрын

    When I was a kid, my mom was making whipped cream for a cake and overwhipped it. After seeing the lumpy, watery mess, she decided to... throw away the whole batch. She had no idea she had made butter, and I also didn't realize what she had done until I was older 😂

  • @stephanpopp6210

    @stephanpopp6210

    7 ай бұрын

    So did I, but I tasted the butter and kept it. It was fairly nice. But I had put sugar in the cream, so I got sweetened butter.

  • @reepicheepsfriend

    @reepicheepsfriend

    7 ай бұрын

    This is the kind of story that makes me feel like we lost so much practical knowledge over the course of a few generations. I feel like in the 1800s nobody would "not know" how butter was made. I could be wrong I suppose.

  • @Izzy-cp8yt

    @Izzy-cp8yt

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@stephanpopp6210add a bit more sugar and you'd have buttercream frosting!

  • @giasharie274

    @giasharie274

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Izzy-cp8yt You're so right and I didn't even think of that

  • @victoriashevlin8587
    @victoriashevlin85877 ай бұрын

    I have to thank you for inadvertently solving a question that has baffled me for many years with regards to butter. When I was 22, I came to the United States for 3 years, and one thing I simply could not understand was why the butter was a strange white with the oddest taste, even though I was assured that it was indeed made of cream (I am from Ireland- we are renowned for our dairy.Grass fed cattle are the norm here).

  • @gabriellakadar

    @gabriellakadar

    7 ай бұрын

    Not only that but both US and Canadian butter have more water in them than European butter. When melted in a hot pan these butters spit all over but good European butter does not. Lots of cheating going on and even worse in Canada is sour cream. It's not sour cream. At least in the US it is still possible to buy real sour cream even at Walmart. Canada: shame on your dairy industry! Shame shame.

  • @eily_b

    @eily_b

    7 ай бұрын

    American butter is strange. Too white and with no taste

  • @NothingXemnas

    @NothingXemnas

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@Dollibet Same in Brazil. Because of the country's own vastness, grass-fed butter must come from far away, sometimes other states entirely, which is a luxury to have. It can be found and it is arguably accessible, but if you can afford to have grass-fed butter every week, you are already a bit privileged.

  • @LunarLocust

    @LunarLocust

    7 ай бұрын

    It's because American butter is made from bull milk, not cow milk.

  • @ShellyS2060

    @ShellyS2060

    7 ай бұрын

    is KERRY GOLD a good Irish butter? It's the only one I can get in the states.

  • @RobynMcIntyre
    @RobynMcIntyre7 ай бұрын

    OMG Max - one of the best episodes yet! So funny, such great acting! When I was a kid in 2nd grade, we churned butter and then got a tour of a bakery. We prepared dough and the cafeteria baked the bread for us which we ate with our own butter. One of my fave memories.

  • @lyndallstafford
    @lyndallstafford7 ай бұрын

    Hey Max, I make homemade European style butter. You let the raw cream sit out on the counter for 24 to 48 hours then make your butter. When using store bought cream you just add about a 1/4 cup of cultured buttermilk and a couple of tablespoons of live culture yogurt and then let it sit. When you wring out your butter in cheese cloth, if it is warm, put the butter in the fridge or freezer a bit before wringing out the butter.

  • @alegria101
    @alegria1017 ай бұрын

    I love how so many of us have memories of making butter in school. I don't think that is done quite as often anymore. Homemade butter is the best!

  • @andreagriffiths3512

    @andreagriffiths3512

    7 ай бұрын

    I taught my 5-6 year olds how to make butter because the topic was changes in substances - so liquid to ice, liquid jelly, popcorn kernels to popcorn and cream to butter

  • @nbenefiel

    @nbenefiel

    7 ай бұрын

    I prefer Kerrygold to my butter.

  • @sweatergod5386

    @sweatergod5386

    7 ай бұрын

    Yall should know you can just put heavy whipping cream in a regular Mason jar or pretty much any airtight container (i made it in a water bottle with a screw on lid once) buy just pouring some in and shaking it back and forth. You shake for a bit and get whipped cream, and then you keep going and you get butter. Much easier and cheaper than buying a special butter churn jar thing and you don't have to dirty your kitchen aid

  • @kaylizzie7890

    @kaylizzie7890

    7 ай бұрын

    We learned about it in primary school. We were given some whipping cream in an empty water bottle and were told to shake it until it turned into butter.

  • @saltmeiner8910

    @saltmeiner8910

    7 ай бұрын

    I remember this. I had shake a jar of cream and pass it around the class taking turns during a history lesson. We weren't allowed to eat it after.

  • @dottieburton5501
    @dottieburton55017 ай бұрын

    I'm 64 and my grandmother taught all her grandkids how to churn butter with nothing more than a mason jar with a lid you shake till you have butter she made butter about twice a week and it was always so good that is about how long it lasted lol it was used in and on everything

  • @mbymariahjenae
    @mbymariahjenae7 ай бұрын

    Max’s past life as an opera singer leaping through that vibrato 🤣🧈

  • @mw_nippa5447
    @mw_nippa54475 ай бұрын

    These videos are so well done. You can tell that a tone of effort goes into your work. Thank you

  • @malicesaito9033
    @malicesaito90337 ай бұрын

    When I was a kid, my class made butter. We passed around a Tupperware with cream inside it in a circle. I think they were keeping us busy. They served it at a parent teacher night.

  • @polarbearsaysyummy5845

    @polarbearsaysyummy5845

    7 ай бұрын

    We did the same thing in either 4th or 5th grade. Our Teacher had found an antique butter churn similar to what is shown in the video. We actually had it straight out of the jar. IIRC we had it on pieces of biscuit.

  • @dawne6419

    @dawne6419

    7 ай бұрын

    We did it, too. 3rd or 4th grade, I think. In our case, the teacher brought in a jar which we all took turns shaking, and then sampled the fresh butter on crackers.

  • @terrancetegeler2372

    @terrancetegeler2372

    7 ай бұрын

    I also have done this, both in preschool and in the 3rd grade. Little did I know I would grow up to make fresh butter out of my dairy goat's raw milk after turning it to cream. I still haven't quite gotten used to the slight goaty aftertaste.

  • @kelliegerbers
    @kelliegerbers7 ай бұрын

    Why is no one acknowledging Max’s unparalleled mastery of the Betty Botter Butter tongue twister…I’m floored. That seems like a hard monologue to tackle. A…hardtack….if you will.

  • @trime1015
    @trime10152 ай бұрын

    I can't believe nobody noticed that Butterfree in the background. I appreciate your attention to detail :)

  • @kcrows4842
    @kcrows48427 ай бұрын

    When my kids were little, we’d have then make fresh butter as a Thanksgiving activity. Put whole cream in a coffee can (or other metal can), seal, duct tape the lid on. Send kids out to kick/roll/shake the can around for an hour or so. Busy kids, fresh homemade butter on your Thanksgiving table. Win/Win

  • @yowayde

    @yowayde

    7 ай бұрын

    Going to do this someday

  • @giselesmith7795
    @giselesmith77957 ай бұрын

    I remember making butter in second grade. The teacher put the cream into a jar, we all took a turn shaking the jar until a blob formed in the jar and then she took that out and finished it. We put it on bread and had a real treat. Since I am now in my 60's it was obviously a memorable learning experience.

  • @bryonygrealish6663
    @bryonygrealish66632 ай бұрын

    I learned too make butter in second grade from a project our Teacher did with us for Thanksgiving. She put cream in mason jars and had us shake them until the it turned to butter. The power of child energy is great and keeps them busy. I've been making butter ever since. I now make cultured butter as well as sweet cream. I'll add fresh herbs or spices and roll in parchment, vacuum sealer and in the freezer it goes until I need something really special for quests to eat with a warm homemade loaf of crusty bread.👍👍

  • @bubbygal82
    @bubbygal823 ай бұрын

    I really enjoy your theatrical reading of the documents and information and history during these videos. It makes my day.

  • @MrAh1123581321
    @MrAh11235813217 ай бұрын

    Can we talk about a dog powered butter machine? That's amazing.

  • @Bird_Dog00

    @Bird_Dog00

    7 ай бұрын

    Do you tie the churner to his tail and call him a good boy until the butter is done?

  • @raerohan4241

    @raerohan4241

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@Bird_Dog00 Unfortunately it wasn't quite as exciting as that. The dogs just walked on something like a treadmill, and churned the vessel that way.

  • @Bird_Dog00

    @Bird_Dog00

    7 ай бұрын

    @@raerohan4241 How boring...

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado34307 ай бұрын

    That butterfree is adorable max! And perfect for the video!🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤

  • @AC-ni4gt

    @AC-ni4gt

    7 ай бұрын

    I love Butterfree❤

  • @vitorpereira9515

    @vitorpereira9515

    7 ай бұрын

    It's really beautiful. But for this episode I would have chosen a Miltank.

  • @TastingHistory

    @TastingHistory

    7 ай бұрын

    Miltank has already been used 😔 Still not ready to repeat Pokémon.

  • @ianloeler6356

    @ianloeler6356

    7 ай бұрын

    Max's pokemon brings all the nerds to the yard, and they're like, you wanna trade cards, damn right. i wanna trade cards. ill trade you, but not my charizard

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430

    @danielsantiagourtado3430

    7 ай бұрын

    @@TastingHistory You chose well

  • @beckyowens2586
    @beckyowens25867 ай бұрын

    I used to wash my butter by hand, but I was gifted a stand mixer so now I use the paddle attachment and stream in the ice water, pour out and repeat 2-3 times. The absolute best is adding roasted garlic and herbs, but I do honey, cinnamon sugar and strawberry too. Often as gifts with a loaf of sourdough.

  • @brendalucian6219
    @brendalucian62197 ай бұрын

    I've made butter in my mixer before- when I rinse it, I put it in a mesh sieve,and keep running the sieve under the cold water tap until the water runs clear.I lay a bunch of paper towels on the counter and wrap the ball of butter in them,and keep squeezing the butter and changing the paper towels until there's no more liquid coming out.Then put the butter back in the mixer bowl and work some salt in it,and pack it into a clean container and stick it in the fridge.

  • @theclocktower3258
    @theclocktower32587 ай бұрын

    I love your channel for my D&D campaigns! Nothing grounds a story more than food, and you always give me a ton of inspiration for so many different things! No longer are the days of rations being some jerky and trail mix lol Explorers from the north? They're packing pemican and hard tack! As well as foraging for fish and wild onions by the river during camp time. Stopping at a farm as you adventure? They say these fields make the freshest butter during this season. Of course we have to wash it a few times first lol Docking at the port for a while? Enjoy the smoked fish, maybe wash it down with some grog! And after a long day of questing, you chill with some satyrs who offer boiled eggs while the bread is baking. And after bread and garum, you lay down with some sweet itrion and wine, dozing off among the trees and stars

  • @cynforgiven1221

    @cynforgiven1221

    7 ай бұрын

    This sounds so cool and creative! 😊

  • @ibarzabal
    @ibarzabal7 ай бұрын

    I live in Brazil, and I am old enough to have been lucky to taste home made butter, made by my grandmother. When I was very little she used to buy milk in glass bottles, sold directly from a farm. I still remember the consistency, the taste of this butter... so good.

  • @squttnbear
    @squttnbear7 ай бұрын

    The perfect video for Butterfree.

  • @user-ed8xt5qh6s
    @user-ed8xt5qh6s28 күн бұрын

    I grew up on a farm. We had gurnsey cows. My mother made butter that was a bright yellow. She beat the cream with an egg beater, when it turned, she washed it as you did by hand, and she had wooden butter molds that she packed it in. She always made bread to go with it. My father sat in the kitchen, waiting for that bread to come out of the oven. He just loved homemade butter on a chunk of warm bread. And so did we - my brother and sister. It was a wonderful life.

  • @cerberus144
    @cerberus1447 ай бұрын

    Watched this with my mom and now she wants to make garlic butter this way.

  • @child_of_God0921
    @child_of_God09217 ай бұрын

    I LOVE the Butterfree in the background! The only thing that could have made the episode better would have been Max unexpectedly falling asleep. 🤣

  • @alkberg2140
    @alkberg21407 ай бұрын

    A simple and informative video. Sure appreciate the combination of history and food in this one- especially on the salt addition.

  • @ryanpatterson8509
    @ryanpatterson85093 ай бұрын

    The butter song solo makes this one of my favorite videos on KZread.

  • @BallisticDamages
    @BallisticDamages7 ай бұрын

    Betty bought some butter, but the butter Betty bought was bitter; so Betty bought some better butter to make her bitter butter better. Thanks for always both entertaining me and making me hungry 😆

  • @Dmetz414

    @Dmetz414

    7 ай бұрын

    Try saying that five times fast

  • @randalmayeux8880
    @randalmayeux88807 ай бұрын

    Hi Max, I remember as a kid churning butter at my grandparents house. My grandmother had a few cows that ate mostly grass most of the year. She had a 1 gallon churn with wooden paddles and a hand crank. Just like they did with other chores like shelling peas(by the bushel) and shelling pecans, they stuck the kids with it. They always acted like it was supposed to be fun, but after 10 minutes, you knew better. Anyway, after cranking for what seemed like forever, a large lump of butter would form which you took out and put in the refrigerator. The rest of the milk still had enough fat that it tasted good. With the price of heavy cream what it is, you're better off buying butter. Or maybe you just need to torture some kids.

  • @ndb_1982

    @ndb_1982

    7 ай бұрын

    As a parent, I take offense to your comment. Making butter is not "torture" how hateful of you to say. I absolutely loved shelling peas with my grandmother. I wish my son could enjoy doing it. He can shell them, sure. But not gain the wisdom of her years. Making butter in a jar is a magnificent experience, all children need. Maybe reevaluate your life choices.

  • @DrummerGrrrl

    @DrummerGrrrl

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@ndb_1982 Jeez. Lighten up! Ever heard of sarcasm? You might want to reevaluate or get your sense of humor recalibrated. SMH.

  • @Tinil0

    @Tinil0

    7 ай бұрын

    @@ndb_1982 You're not being rational, you are being overly emotional over something very silly.

  • @zap9021

    @zap9021

    7 ай бұрын

    @@ndb_1982go band to band lil bro

  • @kevinconrad6156

    @kevinconrad6156

    7 ай бұрын

    I find that it comes out about the same cost and that does not include the buttermilk one gets

  • @emmitstewart1921
    @emmitstewart19217 ай бұрын

    I remember spending a month with my great- aunt Rita.(my Great grandfather's sister). She had three guernsey cows and had a cream separator through which she would run her fresh milk every morning and get a thick cream thicker than anything I have ever seen since. When she wanted butter, she would just place a lump of this cream in a mixing bowl and stir it for about a half hour with a tablespoon and she would get her butter. I had always thought that you needed a churn or crank jar to make butter, but, if your cream is rich enough, this method works just as well.

  • @jonmeuret889
    @jonmeuret8896 ай бұрын

    This episode really brought back memories from childhood. We had a Guernsey milk cow that I milked by hand twice a day. This milk was then put in an old hand crank cream separator. What was left was raw milk that we just put in refrigerator. We sold most of the cream to local bakery and kept some to make homemade butter. I recall spending Saturday mornings using an antique glass butter churn a little bigger than what you used. Kind of fun, but kind of messy. That was the best butter ever, but that raw milk was so delicious on my Frosted Flakes!

  • @AC-ni4gt
    @AC-ni4gt7 ай бұрын

    I tried making homemade butter on my own before as a child. Shaking it in a baby food jar containing a milk of sorts. I can't remember what it was but it was fun.

  • @ericwilliams1659

    @ericwilliams1659

    7 ай бұрын

    Most likely a heavy cream which can be easily bought at the store. If you didn't have fresh cow juice from the source.

  • @bellablue5285

    @bellablue5285

    7 ай бұрын

    We did that in girl scouts, I forget what specifically we started with but we got to put the butter on crackers after which was fun (and I was an oddity for not minding the flavor of buttermilk... that was pretty divisive)

  • @SarafinaSummers

    @SarafinaSummers

    7 ай бұрын

    We did that in occupational therapy!

  • @asmith8692

    @asmith8692

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@bellablue5285same here. We all took turns shaking the canning jar filled with cream. Also either before or after making the butter the troop leader read a story to us about a frog falling into a bowl of cream and the struggle of swimming in the cream eventually created an island of butter that the frog could sit on.

  • @JanusKastin

    @JanusKastin

    7 ай бұрын

    Back in my mom's school-teaching days, that was a favorite activity of hers. Few more productive ways to burn off the energy of a room full of 5th graders than a half hour of SHAKESHAKESHAKESHAKE.

  • @sarahleonard7309
    @sarahleonard73097 ай бұрын

    To help keep the butter cold while working it with the paddles, you can chill a stone slab (usually marble) and use that as your work surface.

  • @sarakajira
    @sarakajira7 ай бұрын

    One of my earliest fond memories as a kid, was making fresh butter in a mason jar by shaking it, as a kids activity at some kind of preschool or daycare when I was really young. I still remember the taste. It was delicious 😊

  • @danwoodworth1603
    @danwoodworth16037 ай бұрын

    I have recently found your Chanel. You are fantastic! Your knowledge of history in each segment is quite fascinating. Your personality and comfort in front of the camera is impressive. You are very talented and very smart. I’ve enjoyed each episode and look forward to watching all of them. Hats off you you cheers

  • @TastingHistory

    @TastingHistory

    7 ай бұрын

    Thanks Dan! You got about 3.5 years to catch up on. Don't forget to subscribe and new episodes every Tuesday.

  • @nlbhaduri
    @nlbhaduri7 ай бұрын

    This is one of your most perfect episodes….your research, your humour, your passion for butter! Perfection!

  • @TheVioletMaze

    @TheVioletMaze

    7 ай бұрын

    Don't forget the singing and tongue twister!

  • @notcherbane3218
    @notcherbane32187 ай бұрын

    Another option with your freshmade butter is to cut it into smaller pieces and freeze it and then just pull it from the freezer and use it as needed it will last a lot longer that way

  • @be6715

    @be6715

    7 ай бұрын

    I do that with store bought butter. It freezes very well.

  • @bzqp2

    @bzqp2

    7 ай бұрын

    Only one important thing to remember - it's best to cover it with at least a few layers of foil or put it in a box and then foil it to keep the smells out. Otherwise the butter will very quickly absorb all the smells from the freezer.

  • @adriennedunne1748
    @adriennedunne17483 ай бұрын

    I saw it being made once on a heritage video. People were dressed in the old-fashioned style in that same setting. Some of the butter was shaped in little wooden carven moulds to be used by the family of this great house. The rest was in two blocks the size of or thereabouts that you made, one herbed and one plain. Fascinating. Thanks Max. You're videos are so interesting. I made butter myself a few times. Smaller amount. I used a small hand mixer. It was delicious 😊 yum yum

  • @faithsrvtrip8768
    @faithsrvtrip87687 ай бұрын

    My butter churn and butter paddles arrive tomorrow! I am so excited I can't wait to make home made butter! And it finally cooled off here in Montana so this is the perfect time of year to make butter! Woo hoo!

  • @realhorrorshow8547
    @realhorrorshow85477 ай бұрын

    I recall hearing on a British documentary that one of the reasons many folk songs and tales made specific reference to "dairy maids" was because - compared to many agricultural workers - dairy maids had to be very clean - in clothing and in person - to avoid contaminating valuable dairy produce. This, in turn, made them more attractive.

  • @joejo867

    @joejo867

    7 ай бұрын

    I think it was also because Milk Maids tended to be immune from Smallpox and so had clear 'pure' skin. I seem to remember that's how the vaccine was discovered, dairy maids caught the bovine variant of smallpox, which was harmless to humans but also gave them antibodies against smallpox. Can't remember the inventors name now though which is bugging me. Keep thinking Louis Pasteur but wasn't him

  • @raerohan4241

    @raerohan4241

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@joejo867 Yes but that was discovered later. It wasn't a commonly known phenomenon until then

  • @joejo867

    @joejo867

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@raerohan4241 sorry, not sure I understand? I just meant that Dairy Maids had a rep in old folksongs for being 'pure' and attractive partly because they didn't tend to get smallpox. I know the smallpox vaccine is relatively modern compared to a lot of the old folk stories, but people weren't stupid, they would have seen that dairymaids got smallpox less often, even if they didn't know why. Eventually someone (still can't remember his name. Lister?) joined the dots and brought us vaccines.

  • @realhorrorshow8547

    @realhorrorshow8547

    7 ай бұрын

    @@joejo867Edward Jenner - let me check - 1796. He wasn't the very first though. I know Thomas Jefferson tried an earlier version of vaccine - more dangerous - in his household before he got a sample of Jenner's vaccine. Pasteur was involved later.

  • @johnbaird4912

    @johnbaird4912

    7 ай бұрын

    @@joejo867Edward Jenner