Back in the
1990s, Mike Myers used to do a great skit on Saturday Night Life called “Coffee Talk.” Accurately
pronounced co-AH-fee tawlk (although I personally do not enunciate this way: shut up, Zinful!), his Linda Richman character
declared everything that pleased her (much like anything that came out of
Barbra Streisand’s mouth), “Like buttah!”
Butter is
smooth, a guilty pleasure, rich and delicious. Everybody has at some point or
another loved butter, even if unknowingly. Some of us ate butter, from its stick form, because the teenage body requires pure butter in its diet (it feeds the zits).
You know when you go out and have a
nice, expensive meal in a fancy restaurant? Do you know what usually makes it
taste like heaven?
I could but
will not give you a dissertation on butter. This is precisely why the Geek Gods
gave us Wikipedia. Bon
Appétit did a piece on the flip-flop flippancy of science regarding butter
(“It’s good for you!” “No, wait, it will kill you!!” “It can help you lose weight!!!").
Julia Child loved it, and spoke the truth about it.
There used
to be a time when there were only two types of butter in the supermarket: the (plain) dairy
product and the peanut kind. The most variety you could count on was salted and unsalted. Progress has come to butter!
This started
because Reese’s has turned their cups into a peanut
butter, and added another with chocolate. There was also a conversation
about Trader Joe’s cookie
butter and the baking possibilities. And in these two separate conversations a blog post was born.
Making homemade peanut butter is
ridiculously easy and a perfect gift for folks who are trying to steer clear of
processed foods. All it takes is peanuts. You may add a little bit of oil,
sugar or substitute, and a dash of salt.
Peanut
butter is probably very popular and most people’s favorite guilty pleasure
since childhood. Tasty-Yummies
ran veritable primer on several varieties of nut butters that you all should
bookmark. The article includes recipes for raw cashew, almond, pecan, sunflower
seed, and Nutella, as well as the spices that go well with nut butters.
The magazine
Cooking
Light also has a primer on the topic, and it covers almond, cashew,
hazelnut, macadamia, peanut, pecan, pistachio, and walnut – with suggestions for
cooking with these butters as an ingredient.
For savory, compound butters, all you need is unsalted butter and a bit of
imagination. These can be used over fish, meats, vegetables, on breads, and
certainly to cook with (if you wish).
SheKnows
has a mother recipe with several varieties that all sound delicious: herb
garlic, citrus tarragon, blue cheese and chive, smoked paprika and jalapeño,
spiced brown sugar with walnuts and raisins, and even a cookie butter.
I’ve done a
simple garlic and chive compound (with pressed garlic and fresh, chopped
chives), with unsalted butter, and pepper sauce. We used to melt it over
roasted potatoes and yams. You can also use to give Ramen a different flavor (obviously you'd skip the flavor pack when preparing this as a side dish).
Finally, Brit + Co has a veritable
festival of links for flavored butters from the spicy to the sweet, from the simple
to the sublime. There are 29 recipes here, some with fruit, cheese, nuts, and
my personal favorite: bacon chive butter!
These make
for spectacular additions to your dinner table, but they also make for out-of-this-world
gifts. Something to consider for the upcoming holiday season.
The
following links are for those of you who just like to read about food. These are affiliate links, and if you choose to
buy, a portion of the sales go to fund my starving artist existence, just so
you know…
Peanut
buttah 4-packs (coconut, cinnamon raisin, honey pretzel, and sesame
cranberry)
Amish-Buggy
Gift Pack flavored buttahs (apple, blackberry, cherry, blueberry,
peach, and plum)
Jif
Whips (peanut, maple and brown sugar, as well as whipped peanut
buttah)
UPDATE: If you enjoyed this article and the recipes in it, you can link to its companion piece, a dedicated Pinterest board you can refer to any time.
UPDATE: If you enjoyed this article and the recipes in it, you can link to its companion piece, a dedicated Pinterest board you can refer to any time.
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