by wheels » Wed Jul 15, 2009 7:00 pm
realcoolchris and Jill
I'm not the best person to answer this - others have far more experience than I do when it comes to butter making. However, in the absence of other replies I'll wade in with my thoughts.
Chris - it seems that your method of extracting the water is spot on - that's what I do (but without the luxury of butter pats). You have also found that the butter needs to be cool - I use ice cold water to wash it in. If what you are storing in the fridge (from a batch) is OK and only the frozen from the same batch isn't, it would appear to be solely related to freezing the butter. Is the butter OK, apart from the liquid? If so, I guess the only answer is to dry it well before use.
Thanks for the info about ripening the cream - I've been meaning to try this for some time.
Jill - from you description it sounds as if it has just not been churned enough.
The stages the cream goes through are hard to describe but first it thickens and then it looks whipped, it then sort of curdles and goes sort of creamy yellow and stiffer, you keep beating and all of a sudden it separates into butter and buttermilk. It does it in the blink of an eye and the change is unmistakable. The time it takes varies according to temperature, age of cream etc and sometimes even in the Kenwood it seems to take forever.
If I was doing it by hand I think I'd con the kids into believing it was a magic trick - so that they would do the hard work for me!
I hope this helps
Phil