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Re: buttermilk

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>

> If I use commercial buttermilk to culture homemade buttermilk, can I from then

> on use my own buttermilk to culture subsequent batches?

>

Yes, you can, OR.. you can just let your own buttermilk culture happen by

letting your raw milk ripen on the counter.

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“OR.. you can just let your own buttermilk culture happen by

letting your raw milk ripen on the counter.”

Do I put out whole milk to culture or just buttermilk left from making

butter? For how long? I was wondering about this myself today as we’re

in our third week of using raw milk. I know you can order different cultures,

but I was wondering if you have raw milk, can you just let it culture on the

counter like you would a sourdough?

Any info and input would be greatly appreciated!

Thanks,

Danis

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,

Of course, that makes perfect sense! I was not thinking about it being only

cream to start with (although I did know that.) So wonder what is left in cream

once the butterfat is removed in the form of butter? Thank you.

Kathy

> True buttermilk is richer because it is the leftover of the cream, not just

> the milk. You let the cream rise to the top of the milk and skim it of

> leaving the " skimmed " milk behind. Then you churn (I do this in my food

> processor) and you get butter and leftover milk (which is left from the

> cream only). This is richer because it is a cream byproduct as opposed to

> a milk byproduct. Hope this makes sense.

>

>

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Since I kefirize the cream for about 8-12 hours prior to making the

butter, the buttermilk is also kefired and sometimes really thick. I

pour this into ice cube trays, freeze and add to my kefir fruit

smoothies - yum!

Rhonda

> True buttermilk is richer because it is the leftover of the cream,

not just

> the milk. You let the cream rise to the top of the milk and skim

it of

> leaving the " skimmed " milk behind. Then you churn (I do this in my

food

> processor) and you get butter and leftover milk (which is left from

the

> cream only). This is richer because it is a cream byproduct as

opposed to

> a milk byproduct. Hope this makes sense.

>

>

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