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The color of butter

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NZ butter, which is all pasture fed, is yellow all year round. It's not raw

though. I could take a picture of some and post it in the files if you like.

Though when I look at the state of my butter dish, I'm not convinced it's

fit for publication .....

(Kiwi) Deb

The color of butter

I live in Seattle, and while it is not legal to buy raw dairy in the

stores, we have a few farms in the area that do provide it. I had

been going to this one farm that supplied very thick and heavy cream

(it was awesome!!) and more of a creamy colored butter.

I found a farm that delivers near my house, so I switched. The cream

from the new farm is much lighter...more like heavy milk. The butter

is *yellow*. Much brighter than from the other place.

So, I am wondering if the color of the butter suggests how healthy and

high-quality it is.

Thank you!

a

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a,

The lady that I buy my raw butter from sells cultured and sweet

cream butter. The cultured butter is very pale and the sweet cream

butter is bright orange/yellow (depending on the time of year). She

has Jersey cows that pasture year round. HTH.

Teoma <><

>

> I live in Seattle, and while it is not legal to buy raw dairy in

the

> stores, we have a few farms in the area that do provide it. I had

> been going to this one farm that supplied very thick and heavy

cream

> (it was awesome!!) and more of a creamy colored butter.

>

> I found a farm that delivers near my house, so I switched. The

cream

> from the new farm is much lighter...more like heavy milk. The

butter

> is *yellow*. Much brighter than from the other place.

>

> So, I am wondering if the color of the butter suggests how healthy

and

> high-quality it is.

>

> Thank you!

> a

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The presence of color of butter is due to one of two things:

Lots of carotene-containing feed (fresh pasture, carrots, etc) or butter

coloring.

Since most people have grown up on colored grocery story butter and

margarine, many who buy farm butter are disconcerted to discover that winter

butter (and always goat butter, for that matter) is usually white. Rather

than educating their customers, some dairy folk add natural color to

forestall complaints about winter butter, and add it to cheddar and colby

cheeses to conform more to consumers' expectations.

Though I myself don't bother with butter or cheese, there are several ways

to add natural color to butter and cheese. You can grate carrots and add the

juice, you can tint the butter with infused calendula petals, or can buy

butter coloring from cheese-making suppliers made from annatto seeds.

Personally, I think even natural coloring is deceptive.

Hope this helps,

The color of butter

I live in Seattle, and while it is not legal to buy raw dairy in the

stores, we have a few farms in the area that do provide it. I had

been going to this one farm that supplied very thick and heavy cream

(it was awesome!!) and more of a creamy colored butter.

I found a farm that delivers near my house, so I switched. The cream

from the new farm is much lighter...more like heavy milk. The butter

is *yellow*. Much brighter than from the other place.

So, I am wondering if the color of the butter suggests how healthy and

high-quality it is.

Thank you!

a

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  • 2 weeks later...

On Thu, 25 Nov 2004 03:08:54 -0000

" shawnalendzion " <recon@...> wrote:

>

> I live in Seattle, and while it is not legal to buy raw dairy in the

> stores, we have a few farms in the area that do provide it. I had

> been going to this one farm that supplied very thick and heavy cream

> (it was awesome!!) and more of a creamy colored butter.

Actually it is legal, as long as the supplier is willing to put a tag on

the bottle/carton about what a danger to health it can be especially for

infants and the elderly.

The truth is that the state essentially " hassled " raw milk providers at

retail out of business.

> I found a farm that delivers near my house, so I switched. The cream

> from the new farm is much lighter...more like heavy milk. The butter

> is *yellow*. Much brighter than from the other place.

Would you mind if I emailed you offlist for your source. My current

source is a bit of a drive.

> So, I am wondering if the color of the butter suggests how healthy and

> high-quality it is.

Yup, but since I'm answering it late I'm sure others have given you the

details so I won't duplicate their efforts.

" Scholarship is essentially confirming your early paranoia through

a deeper factual analysis. "

Murray Rothbard

" Vegetarians, come away from The Dark Side.

Pork is the other white meat; beef is what’s for dinner;

and a day without pepper-crusted venison tenderloin is

like a day without sunshine. "

Brad Edmonds

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> Actually it is legal, as long as the supplier is willing to put a tag on

> the bottle/carton about what a danger to health it can be especially for

> infants and the elderly.

>

> The truth is that the state essentially " hassled " raw milk providers at

> retail out of business.

Wow, I had no idea. I thought it was simply illegal to sell raw dairy

in stores. Geez.

>

> Would you mind if I emailed you offlist for your source. My current

> source is a bit of a drive.

No problem! You can email me at services@...

a

:D

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