One
very Bad Thing about the Good Old Days was the constant problem of keeping
foods in an edible state without the Good Modern Day benefits of refrigeration
and canning. Keeping butter from spoiling is not something we give any thought
to today, is it?
Several
ideas for preserving butter were suggested in a long article in an English
agricultural journal in 1790. One of the “recipes” is eminently adaptable for
use as a breakfast spread today. The
journal is Letters and Papers on
Agriculture, Planting, &c: Selected from the Correspondence of the Society
Instituted at Bath, for the Encouragement of Agriculture, Arts, Manufactures
and Commerce, Within the Counties of Somerset, Wilts, Gloucester, and Dorset,
and the City and County of Bristol..., 1790, and a section of the article
is below.
Common salt is almost the
only substance that has been hitherto employed for the purpose of preserving
butter; but I have found, by experience, that the following composition is, in
many respects, preferable to it, as it not only preserves the butter more
effectually from any taint of rancidity, but makes it also look better, and
taste sweeter, richer and more marrowy, than if the same butter had been cured
with common salt alone. I have frequently made comparative trials with the fame
butter, and always found the difference much greater than could well be
conceived. The composition is as follows:
Take of sugar one part, of
nitre one part, and of the best Spanish great salt, (or of Doctor Swediaur's
best salt, which is still better than the former, being cleaner) two parts.
Beat the whole into a fine powder, mix them well together, and put them by for
use.
Of this composition one
ounce should be put to every sixteen ounces of butter; mix this salt thoroughly
with the butter as soon as it has been freed from the milk, and put it without
loss of time into the vessel prepared to receive it, pressing it so close as to
leave no air-holes, or any kind of cavities within it. Smooth the surface, and
if you expect that it will be above a day or two before you can add more, cover
it close up with a piece of clean linen, and above that a piece of wetted
parchment, or for want of then, fine linen that has been dipped in melted
butter, that is exactly fitted to the vessel all round, so as to exclude the
air as much as possible, without the assistance of any watery brine; when more
butter is to be added, these coverings are to be taken off, and the butter
applied close above the former, pressing it down and smoothing as before, and
so on till the vessel be full. When it is quite full, let the two covers be
spread over it with the greatest care, and let a little melted butter be poured
around the edges, so as to fill up every cranny, and effectually exclude the
air. A little salt may then be strewed over the whole, and the cover be firmly
fixed down to remain close till it be opened for use. If all this be carefully
done, the butter may be kept perfectly sound in this climate for many years.
How many years I cannot tell, but I have seen it two years old, and in every
respect as sweet and sound as when it was only a month old.
It deserves to be remarked,
that butter cured in this manner does not taste Well till it has stood at least
a fortnight after being salted; but after that period is elapsed, it eats with
a rich marrowy taste that no other butter ever acquires; and it tastes so
little salt, that a person who had been accustomed to eat butter cured with
common salt only, would
not imagine it had got one
fourth part of the salt that would be necessary to preserve it.
Butter thus cured would
bear to be carried to the East or the West-Indies, and would keep sweet during
the longest voyages, if it were so packed as not to allow the butter to be so
far melted as to occasion the salts to separate from it. But as none of these
salts admit of any chemical union with the butter, it must happen that if ever
the butter be so far melted as to become of a fluid consistence,
… Butter, in its natural state, contains a
considerable proportion of mucous matter, which is more highly putrescible than
the pure oily parts of the butter, Where it is, therefore, intended that butter
should be exposed to the heat of warm climates, it ought to be freed from that
mucilage before it be cured and packed up for keeping. To prepare butter for a
distant voyage, therefore, in warm climates, let it be put into a vessel of a
proper shape, which should be immersed into another containing water. Let the
water be gradually heated till the butter be thoroughly melted ; let it
continue in that state for some time, and allow it to settle; the mucous part
will fall entirely to the bottom, and the pure oil will swim at top, perfectly
transparent while hot, but when it cools it becomes opaque, assumes a colour
somewhat paler than the original butter before it was melted, and a firmer
consistence more more nearly resembling that of tallow, and consequently
it will better resist the heat of a warm climate than butter itself. When this
refined butter is become a little stiff, and while it still is somewhat soft,
the pure part should be separated from the dregs, and then salted, and packed
up in the same way as is directed for butter" This would retain the salt
longer and keep much longer sweet, in hot climates, than if it had been cured
in its original state.
This refined butter may be
preserved in yet another way, which I have sometimes seen practised here by way
of medical bonne bouche (comfit.) After the butter is purified,
add to it a certain proportion of firm honey, mix it well, it will incorporate
thoroughly with the butter, and when cold it eats very pleasantly spread on
bread like butter; and may be given to old people, if they relish it, instead
of marrow, and to others as being useful for coughs and colds. These were
the uses to which I have seen this substance applied, and on these occasions
the proportion of honey employed was considerable, I have seen it kept for
years, without manifesting the smallest tendency to rancidity, so that there
can be no doubt but that butter might thus be preserved in long voyages without
spoiling. The only point that remains to be ascertained is, what is the
smallest proportion of honey
that would be sufficient to
preserve the butter. Sugar is known to be a much more powerful antiseptic than
common salt, and probably honey may be in that respect nearly on a par with sugar.
If so, it would be reasonable to suppose that one ounce of honey might be
sufficient to preserve sixteen ounces of butter. In that cafe the taste of the
honey would not be extremely perceptible, so that the butter, even to those who
might not relish the sweet composition above-mentioned, might prove very
agreeable, especially if a little salt were mixed with it when about to be
used. A few experiments would be sufficient to ascertain this particular.
From the circumstance of
the honey incorporating with the butter, and not separating from it while in a
fluid state, it would promise nearly to accomplish the purpose wanted above.
Whether, when it became very fluid, and was long continued in that state, any
separation would take place; or whether the honey in these circumstances would
be in danger of fermenting, are questions that experience alone can determine.
Sugar, tho' it would preserve the butter equally well while it continued in a
solid state, would doubtless separate from it when it became fluid. Whether
melasses would do so, or what effects they would in this case produce, I cannot
tell; but a few experiments would ascertain these points. Should any method of
preserving butter in warm climates be discovered, it would be productive of so
many benefits to individuals, and to the nation at large, by giving an opening
for a new branch of commerce and manufacture, that it is much to be wished the
few experiments wanted to ascertain these points were made, with such care,
under the direction of persons who would faithfully report the result to the
public, as should be sufficient to remove all doubts upon this head.
A
version of this recipe, which solves the question of quantities of honey
required for a given quantity of “refined” (clarified) butter, appears in Cassell’s Dictionary of Cookery (c.1870.)
Butter, Preserved with Honey.
Wash and press the butter
until it is quite free from milk. Put it in a jar, and place it in a pan of
boiling water. When clarified, and just before boiling, remove it from the
water to a cool place; take off the scum, and work it up in the proportion of
two ounces of honey to every two pounds of butter. This mode of preparation
will be found very convenient where butter is eaten with sweet dishes. It will
keep as long as salted butter if the air be excluded from it.
Hmmm … Buttered Honey, or is that Honeyed Butter? Either way, it sounds delicious, and makes me
think of Honey Cakes as the recipe for the day.
Honey Cakes (A German Recipe.)
Put two ounces of
butter into a saucepan, and when melted, stir in half a pound of honey. Let it
boil, stirring briskly all the time. Take it from the fire, and when slightly
cool, mix it with the finely-minced rind of half a lemon, two ounces of sweet
almonds, blanched and coarsely pounded, the eighth of a nutmeg, grated, and
half a pound of flour, and last of all, half an ounce of carbonate of soda
dissolved in a small quantity of warm water. Leave the mixture in a cool place
twelve or fourteen hours. Roll it out half an inch thick, cut it into small
square cakes, put a thin slice of blanched almond in the four corners. Bake in
a moderate oven for twenty-five minutes.
Cassell’s Dictionary
of Cookery (c.1870.)
The other issue with butter was making it in the first place. One of my great grandmothers only had one cow, so collecting the milk to make the butter tended to happen over a longer period than ideal - so by the end of the week when she churned it was all a bit off ... consequently the butter was rancid. No fridge in those days.
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