Goat's Milk Butter
#1
Posted 01 March 2010 - 08:20 AM
Anyone know who carries it?
#2
Posted 01 March 2010 - 08:21 AM
#3
Posted 01 March 2010 - 09:24 AM
there is an english brand i buy at janssens in wilm, del. it's very good.
here's the one i'm referring to:
http://www.sthelensf...p?current_id=82
Edited by wkl, 01 March 2010 - 09:29 AM.
#4
Posted 01 March 2010 - 09:36 AM
DiBruno's said they sometimes bring it in, but as of yesterday they weren't carrying it.
Special K - when I had it, it had some coarse sea salt stirred in. If your butter is unsalted, you might want to try that. When spread on bread, the bit of crunch is intriguing.
BTW - I LOVE Seattle!
#5
Posted 02 March 2010 - 07:44 AM
I've had Meyenberg products and found them, especially the butter, to be quite satisfactory.
.... Shel
#6
Posted 02 March 2010 - 07:58 AM
Thanks!
#7
Posted 02 March 2010 - 11:17 AM
Special K - when I had it, it had some coarse sea salt stirred in. If your butter is unsalted, you might want to try that. When spread on bread, the bit of crunch is intriguing.
BTW - I LOVE Seattle!
Thanks. I'll try it.
We love Seattle, too - it's a great place to live - and EAT!
#8
Posted 03 March 2010 - 01:16 PM
I've been checking around the Philadelphia area for about a month now with no luck. I've tried all places already mentioned (both my local TJ and WF said they don't carry it). I checked with some of the smaller markets and also no luck. I did call Wegman's in Collegeville and Whole Foods in Plymouth Meeting and they both carry other brands of goat butter. Haven't made it to either to try them.
#9
Posted 04 March 2010 - 08:27 AM
#10
Posted 07 March 2010 - 10:22 AM
Don't think I'll buy that brand again ....
Guess a trip to Wegmans is in order.
Edited by Carole, 07 March 2010 - 10:23 AM.
#11
Posted 11 March 2010 - 05:31 PM
It all comes down to homogenization, or the natural equivalent thereof.
Cow milk easily separates into cream and non-cream portions, as anyone who remembers milk before the days of homogenization can attest. Goat milk, and to a lesser extent sheep milk, do not. That means that rather than just skimming the cream off the top of a container of milk, goat milk must first be separated because the cream and remainder are pretty much homogenized to begin with. So to produce goat butter you've got a significant extra step requiring a centrifugal separator, a significant investment for most goat milk producers.
This extra step alone makes goat butter more expensive.
#12
Posted 11 March 2010 - 05:40 PM
I bought the goat butter from Whole Foods The brand is Cabrima and is from Belgium. To me it is much too bland and I didn't like it nearly as much as the Meyenberg. To be honest it looked like lard – but at least it didn't taste like lard. Melted almost immediately on the warm toast.
Don't think I'll buy that brand again ....
Wow, the brand I got was Cabrima and I liked it a lot (my first taste of any kind of goat butter). Now I can't wait to try the Meyenberg!!
#13
Posted 11 March 2010 - 05:53 PM
Thanks for the info.
The Unrelenting Carnivore
Customer to clerk in a clothing store, "Do you have these in a size for people who actually eat?"
#14
Posted 12 March 2010 - 11:16 AM
To be honest it looked like lard – but at least it didn't taste like lard.
Goat butter is always almost pure white unless coloring (usually annatto) is added, just like cheeses made from goats milk. This us because the yellow coloring naturally found to some degree or another in cow's milk comes from carotene. Goat are very efficient utilizers of the carotene in their bodies and almost none passes through to the milk. It is sometimes hard for the uninitiated to get used to white butter.
As for the flavor not being "goaty", most producers (and many consumers) would see that as a good thing. The goaty flavor/aroma comes from the capric acid naturally occurring in goat milk. Goat milk is very fragile and if it is at all abused (less then clean milking environment, not cooled properly, agitated too much, not used in a timely manner, etc, etc, etc.) the capric acid will "kick-out" much more, giving the end product a stronger flavor. Strong flavor can also come from improper feed or contamination by the musk oils from the males (bucks). Additionally, there are breeds of goats (Toggenburgs most notably) and family lines with in breeds that tend to have stronger flavored milk.
It is much harder to make good, fresh, clean-tasting goats milk dairy products than it is to make "goaty" ones.
Edited by xxchef, 12 March 2010 - 11:17 AM.
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#15
Posted 12 March 2010 - 07:35 PM
I'm now curious to see if the flavor 'ages' and becomes more goaty as it gets older.
I grew up in Minnesota and remember from my youth when the margarine came only in white. They weren't allowed to color it to look like butter. My folks only used butter but I remember seeing it at the neighbors and wondering why they'd eat Crisco on their toast. So that goat butter color reminded me of that - and that wasn't a good thing!
#16
Posted 13 March 2010 - 09:54 AM









