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-   -   Food and Drink Melting butter (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=285542)

TimBone 08-07-2014 03:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by loochy (Post 10800385)
i melt butter with something hot

You mean hot like the chick in the Iowa gif?

loochy 08-07-2014 03:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Flybone McTimmerson (Post 10800390)
You mean hot like the chick in the Iowa gif?

that girl could melt my butter ALL DAY LONG

knowhatimsayin

Fire Me Boy! 08-07-2014 03:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Eric Fisher (Post 10800380)
And on top of that, Billy Burger built a bigger better burger. A bigger better burger Billy Burger built.

I'll bet Billy's bigger better burger didn't have any goddamn Goldfish crackers in it.

RustShack 08-07-2014 03:19 PM

Slow melt on the stove... I've done it in the oven on low a few times too.

TLO 08-07-2014 03:22 PM

Anyone want to talk about gunt butter?

Iowanian 08-07-2014 03:44 PM

Tell about the schmegma you found on your keyboard.

Just Passin' By 08-07-2014 03:57 PM

Allowing butter to reach room temperature first can really make things easy and quick, and it can help avoid the explosion you can get in the microwave.

:thumb:

Skyy God 08-11-2014 02:24 PM

So, apparently "go get the butter" is infamous for referring to butt sex. Who knew?

Stewie 08-11-2014 02:44 PM

When I see commercials for the mortgage company James B. Nutter in KC, all I see is James Nut Butter. I'm ****ed up.

You'll see it that way now. Sorry!

Dinny Bossa Nova 08-11-2014 02:55 PM

Hey FMB, I am sure you posted it somewhere before, so a thousand pardons for failure to exhaust the search function, but...

Would you be kind enough to re-post your ghee recipe? Recommendations for butter to start with would be great, as well.

TIA and Ciao
Dinny

Pablo 08-11-2014 02:57 PM

I feel like I've been cheated out of precious moments of life after reading more than a couple of paragraphs about melting butter.

1/5 stars for the thread. Would not read again.

Stewie 08-11-2014 03:02 PM

I make ghee in a fat separator. It's pretty simple. Put a stick of butter in the separator and microwave for about one minute. Let sit and separate. The timing depends on the microwave and the separator, but you get the idea.

Fire Me Boy! 08-11-2014 04:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Stewie (Post 10810691)
I make ghee in a fat separator. It's pretty simple. Put a stick of butter in the separator and microwave for about one minute. Let sit and separate. The timing depends on the microwave and the separator, but you get the idea.

This isn't really ghee. What you've described is clarified butter (nothing wrong with that, it's very tasty in its own right). While ghee is a form of clarified butter, in order for it to become ghee you actually need to get some of those milk solids to caramelize a bit.

In depth, if anyone cares: http://www.willcookforfriends.com/20...ak-friday.html

Fire Me Boy! 08-11-2014 04:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dinny Blues (Post 10810680)
Hey FMB, I am sure you posted it somewhere before, so a thousand pardons for failure to exhaust the search function, but...

Would you be kind enough to re-post your ghee recipe? Recommendations for butter to start with would be great, as well.

TIA and Ciao
Dinny

I like to do it in the oven, but it takes less time on the stove top (but you have to keep a close eye on it).

Put a pound of butter into a Dutch oven (light colored interior is best so you can see the color). Set oven to 250 and start looking in on it after an hour. You're looking for the bubbling to subside, which is the water boiling out. Then you're looking for the milk solids to turn golden brown. Once you're satisfied with the browning and water being gone, take it of the oven and let it cool awhile.

As for getting the particles out, strain it through a clean tea towel or coffee filter. No need to skim, no worry about bits falling into it. Very simple.

And the ghee will keep for 6 months at room temp, or pretty much indefinitely in the fridge.

Stewie 08-11-2014 04:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fried Meat Ball! (Post 10810878)
This isn't really ghee. What you've described is clarified butter (nothing wrong with that, it's very tasty in its own right). While ghee is a form of clarified butter, in order for it to become ghee you actually need to get some of those milk solids to caramelize a bit.

In depth, if anyone cares: http://www.willcookforfriends.com/20...ak-friday.html

This is true, but my Indian colleague makes it this way. To make "real" ghee things go far beyond caramelizing milk solids. They don't bother, so why should I?


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