• 13Nov

    butter.jpgA couple of weeks ago, the boy and I attended a “Cooking for Two” class at L’Academie de Cuisine. I’ll be posting more on that later, but first, here’s the most important thing we learned; the highest and best use of your freezer….
    Compound butter. It’s butter, bacon, garlic, shallots, and parmesan cheese, all mixed together. You can whip up a batch in ten minutes, then you stick it in the freezer and cut off hunks of it for literally whatever you want. So far I have had it on a baguette, and also mixed it with rosemary and stuffed it under the skin of a roasting chicken. The instructor at L’Academie also recommended we melt it and toss it in cooked pasta. I plan to never be without it again.
    2 sticks softened, salted butter
    At least half a cup of parmesan cheese
    1 shallot, finely chopped
    3 strips bacon, cooked until crisp and finely chopped
    2 cloves garlic (use a press)
    Mash it all up, then stick it all in a food processor if you like. I didn’t, and the texture was fine. Also, I didn’t use salted butter, so I had to toss some salt in later.

5 Responses

  • Alright – Compound butter is pretty much the best stuff ever made.
    But I agree with you…and disagree with the recipe – never ever use salted butter if you can. I’ve got nothing against salt, but it’s not fat-soluable. That means that salt butter is actually diluted with a huge amount of water to keep the salt in solution. It can’t get as hot, it’s not as tasty, and there’s much less real volume there.
    I say stick with unsalted and then add the salt yourself.

  • Ditto what Zoe said about using unsalted butter. Here’s something else you can do with it – make your compound butter as normal, but instead of just tossing it into the freezer, Let the butter get soft (note: that does NOT mean melted), and using a pastry bag, you can pipe it into different shapes. Let’s say you do a few rosettes – pipe the rosettes onto a sheet pan of sorts, freeze, and then put the rosettes into a bag. It’s an easy way to go gourmet, and you can toss one of those rosettes on top of a hot steak or something like that. It adds a whole new dimension to your cooking.

  • I never buy salted butter either. The salt will prevent you from knowing if the butter is starting to turn rancid, which unfortunately can happen before it gets to you.

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