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I found this on google:http://books.google.com/books?id=oCVPjK0mSfkC & pg=PT126 & lpg=PT126 & dq=how+to+%22make+butter+oil%22 & source=bl & ots=fTZ08z9c8T & sig=GIPU4-Q7XtXiGWJYRI8IKlrXTXk & hl=en & ei=tdpPS6boO82PtgfS26EB & sa=X & oi=book_result & ct=result & resnum=5 & ved=0CBAQ6AEwBA#v=onepage & q=how%20to%20%22make%20butter%20oil%22 & f=falseI have also found butter oil also referred to as ghee by Rami Nagel on mothering.com. I have always thought ghee was the same thing as clarified butter. Here is what he wrote:"Make your own butter oil!!!!!!! (ghee)

"To make butter

oil, heat the butter is a sauce pan, at a very low temperature to make

sure the butter does not burn. After a couple of minutes, the butter

will start to separate, and you will see these white clumps that look

like cottage cheese. Remove the clumps by carefully skimming them off

the top and then by using a strainer. Refrigerate the butter oil, and

eat lots of it as I suspect some of the vitamins have been lost from

the long storage. Eat lots of it."Kind regards,Subject: Butter OilTo: RawDairy Date: Thursday, January 14, 2010, 8:17 PM

I have a certified organic raw milk dairy and was reading about butter oil. Does anyone know how to make it? I make raw milk butter every week. Can I turn this into butter oil somehow?

Thanks,

Kent

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butter oil is not the same as ghee (clarified butter). ghee is made by heating

the butter and butter oil is a centrifuge process. this company makes and sells

high-vitamin butter oil

http://www.greenpasture.org/retail/?t=products

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> Subject: Butter Oil

> To: RawDairy

> Date: Thursday, January 14, 2010, 8:17 PM

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> I have a certified organic raw milk dairy and was reading about butter

oil. Does anyone know how to make it? I make raw milk butter every week. Can I

turn this into butter oil somehow?

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> Thanks,

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> Kent

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Anhydrous Milkfat ("butter oil")

Anhydrous milk fat, butter oil, can be manufactured from either butter

or from cream. For the manufacture from butter, non-salted butter from

sweet cream is normally used, and the process works better if the

butter is at least a few weeks old. Melted butter is passed through a

centrifuge, to concentrate the fat to 99.5% of greater. This oil is

heated again to 90-95oC and vacuum cooled before packaging.

The processes for the production of anhydrous fat, using cream as the

raw material, are based on the emulsion splitting principle. In brief,

the processes consist of the cream first being concentrated to 75% fat

or greater, in two stages. In both of these stages, the fat is

concentrated in a hermetic solids-ejecting separator. The fat globules

are then broken down mechanically, so that phase inversion occurs and

the fat is liberated. This forms a continuous fat phase containing

dispersed water droplets, which can be separated from the fat phase by

centrifugation. This is similar to the concentration method for

buttermaking, with the addition of the mechanical rupture of the

emulsion and additional separator for removal of the residual water

phase.

One of the key machines in the system is the mechanical device for

phase inversion. This can be in the form of a centrifugal separator

equipped with a serrated disc. The disc breaks down the emulsion, so

that the liquid leaving the machine is a continuous oil phase, with

dispersed water droplets and buttermilk. Larger equipment could be

equipped with a motor-driven serrated disc or with a homogenizer. After

phase inversion, the fat is concentrated to 99.5% or greater in a

hermetic separator.

Fractionation of anhydrous milk fat

Milk fat is a complicated mixture of triglycerides that contain

numerous fatty acids of varying carbon chain lengths and degrees of

saturation. The proportions of the various fatty acids present will

also vary depending on the conditions surrounding the production of

milk.

One method of milkfat fraction is by thermal treatment. The mixture can

be separated into fractions on the basis of their melting point. The

technique consists of melting the entire quantity of fat and then

cooling it down to a predetermined temperature. The triglycerides with

the higher melting point will then crystallize and settle out.

In the modern thermal fractionation method, sedimentation by gravity is

replaced by centrifugal separation. Since a modern separator generates

a force that is thousands of times greater than the force of gravity

and since the sedimentation distances are very short, the process is

incomparably faster. The crystallizing stage can also be accelerated,

since the crystals need not be large if centrifugal separation is

employed.Fractionation of milkfat can also be accomplished by supercritical fluid extraction techniques.

Subject: Re: Butter OilTo: RawDairy Date: Friday, January 15, 2010, 5:49 AM

butter oil is not the same as ghee (clarified butter). ghee is made by heating the butter and butter oil is a centrifuge process. this company makes and sells high-vitamin butter oil

http://www.greenpas ture.org/ retail/?t= products

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> From: kentjisha <kentjisha@. ..>

> Subject: Butter Oil

> To: RawDairy@yahoogroup s.com

> Date: Thursday, January 14, 2010, 8:17 PM

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> I have a certified organic raw milk dairy and was reading about butter oil. Does anyone know how to make it? I make raw milk butter every week. Can I turn this into butter oil somehow?

>

> Thanks,

>

> Kent

>

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Just like the link I provided from Google, the process you describe below sounds

like even the centrifuge process involves heating butter, as in making clarified

butter. Perhaps the centrifugal force makes a bit more refined product than

simply clarifying the butter over low heat. I wonder if heating it to such high

temps (90-95oC - near boiling) ruins the vitamins more than if you simply

clarify the butter at a lower heat.

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> > From: kentjisha <kentjisha@ ..>

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> > I have a certified organic raw milk dairy and was reading about butter

oil. Does anyone know how to make it? I make raw milk butter every week. Can I

turn this into butter oil somehow?

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> > Thanks,

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> > Kent

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