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Re: buttermilk

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Meg,

>I use the milk left over from making butter to soak my grains or oatmeal

because it's a little richer and I don't have anything else to do with it.<

Really? How could milk left over from making butter be richer? It seems that

you are taking out the fat when you make butter. Also, I might consider letting

the milk/buttermilk set out as being " soured " and " cultured " milk/buttermilk

being something that you have added another culture like piima or something

to it. Not trying to be picky, just trying to learn and be " technically

correct " .

What do you all think?

Kathy

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Richer than water, I would presume. Before kefir entered my life, I

preferred to cook my grains/oatmeal in at least a mixture of milk/water.

Soaking them in milk/whey/kefir helps you to be able to digest them. If

you can get your hands on a copy of NT (Nourishing Traditions by Sally

Fallon and Enig (sp?)), it talks about it...

Peace,

Blane

If God is for us, who can be against us? Rom. 8:31b

To ignore the facts does not change that they are the facts. - Andy Rooney

Whether you think you can, or think you can't, you're right. - Henry Ford

*******************************************************

" realfoodie2003 "

<realfoodie2003@ To: RawDairy

yahoo.com> cc:

Subject: Re:

buttermilk

09/28/2004 10:49

AM

Please respond

to RawDairy

>I use the milk left over from making butter to soak my grains or oatmeal

because it's a little richer and I don't have anything else to do with it.<

Really? How could milk left over from making butter be richer?

Kathy

PLEASE BE KIND AND TRIM YOUR POSTS WHEN REPLYING!

Visit our Raw Dairy Files for a wealth of information!

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/RawDairy/files/

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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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> 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.

>

>

Yes this does make sense . I was racking my brain to try to answer her

question

too, thinking " Why would it be richer?...Why why... " and your answer made it go

" ding! " in

my head. Of course. It's richer because it comes from the cream. You make the

butter

with the cream, not the milk. Makes perfect sense to me.

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