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MAKING BUTTERMILK ©David B. Fankhauser, Ph.D., Professor of Biology and Chemistry University of Cincinnati Clermont College, Batavia OH 45103 Use 1 part active buttermilk as starter This page has been accessed times since26 July 2000. 20 July 98, 5 April 1999, 26 July 2000, 22 Feb 03 Add 4 parts of fresh milk to the starter Buttermilk is probably the easiest and most fool proof fermented milk product to make. All you need is active cultured buttermilk for the starter, and fresh milk for it to act on. The formation of buttermilk is based on the fermentation by the starter bacteria which turns lactose into lactic acid. As lactic acid is formed, the pH of the milk drops. Milk proteins, most notably casein, are no longer as soluble under acid conditions and they precipitate out, causing what we recognize as clabbering. Thus the two marked characteristics of buttermilk, its tartness and its thickened nature, are both explained by the presence of lactic acid. Additional by-products of fermentation give subtle variations in buttermilk flavor. The acidity of buttermilk also explains its long refrigerator shelf life. Acid is a natural preservative because it inhibits the growth of pathogenic bacteria. Thus buttermilk keeps easily for weeks in your refrigerator. If you keep it longer, it may develop mold on the inner walls of the jar. This mold belongs to the same group which grow on cheese and is not dangerous. Remove it and the buttermilk can still be used for baking. However, because the desired bacteria may have died in older samples, buttermilk older than three to four weeks may not work as an inoculum to make buttermilk. Sour cream can be made with the same procedure using one cup of cream mixed thoroughly with 2 Tbl fresh active buttermilk and letting it sit for 12-24 hours at room temperature. The higher butterfat in the cream, the thicker the finished sour cream. INGREDIENTS AND EQUIPMENT: 6-8 ounces active cultured buttermilk Check the label: it needs to say cultured buttermilk, and is not out of date. (The bacteria die down over time) 3 cups whole milk (skimmed will doubtless work, but I have not tried it) very clean 1 quart container with secure lid (I prefer Mason jars). Add 6 to 8 ounces of active fresh cultured buttermilk (starter) to a clean quart jar. Use 6 ounces if you are certain of the freshnessof the starter (a ratio of about 1 part starter plus 4 parts milk). When in doubt, use the full cup of buttermilk as starter (a ratio of 1 part starter plus 3 parts milk). Fill the jar with fresh milk. Screw on the lid securely and shake to mix thoroughly. Label with the date Let sit out in a warm part of the room (here next to our wood stove) until clabbered. It should be thickened in 24 hours. If it takes longer than 36 hours, the starter was no longer active (the bacteria had died). 24 hours later (at room temperature), the bacteria have fermented the milk, the lactic acid causing the milk proteins to clabber. In the finished buttermilk, you can see how it coats the glass. The finished buttermilk should be refrigerated. It keeps easily for weeks. Fresher buttermilk makes better starter for cheese. I have used this recipe for years to make buttermilk in large quantities. I like to use it for baking as well as drinking. It makes pancakes, waffles,and cakes rise very well. You can make any volume of buttermilk you like, so long as you hold to the proportions of at least 1 part buttermilk plus 4 parts whole milk. Every year for years, I have prepared a gallon of buttermilk (an ingredient in my cornmeal waffles) for an annual waffle breakfast I serve at Clermont College, serving about 120 people. In a large container, I add 1 quart buttermilk to 1 gallon of fresh whole milk, mix, and pour back into the original containers. The next day, the whole five quarts are nicely thickened. It works because Streptococcus lactis (or a mixed culture of S. lactis plus Leuconostoc citrovorum) ferments the lactose in milk to lactic acid. The acidic pH causes the protein in milk (most prominently casein, pink in the picture below) to precipitate, thickening the liquid. Because some of the lactose has been broken down to lactic acid, buttermilk should cause less of a problem for those who are lactose intolerant. It may be that buttermilk could be made with a lower proportion of starter (i.e. 1+6 or 1+8. Anyone have experience with this?) However, the 1+4 ratio has worked so well that I have not wanted to mess with theproportions. MAKING BUTTERMILK FROM SCRATCH I have received numerous requests for how to make buttermilk from scratch. For this, you need fresh raw milk because pasteurization destroys the needed bacteria. Allow a cup of filtered fresh raw milk to sit covered at room temperature until it has clabbered (usually several days). Place 1/4 cup of the clabbered milk in a pint mason jar, add a cupof fresh milk (does not have to be raw at this point), cover, shake to mix, allow to sit at room temperature until clabbered. Repeat this transfer of sub-culturing several more times until the milk dependably clabbers in 24 hours. Taste a small amount to confirm that it is tart, thickened, and has no off flavors. To then make a quart of buttermilk with this culture, add 6 ounces of the buttermilk to a quart jar, fill with fresh milk, cover, shake to mix, allow to sit at room temperature until clabbered. Refrigerate. MICROBIOLOGY OF BUTTERMILK: See the page on Smearing and Staining of Bacteria to learn how to see these bacteria with a microscope, and the page on Milk Fermenting Bacteria for a demonstration and discussion of Streptococcus lactis, whichis the bacterium which performs this fermentation. Below is a photomicrograph of buttermilk which has been smeared and gram stained. Cells of Streptococcus lactis can be seen as purple spots in a row. Casein is the pink mass covering most of the image. Gram stain of buttermilk (1000x), showing Streptococcus lactis (purple) with a pink background of milk protein (casein) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Return to Fankhauser's Cheese Page or Go to David Fankhauser'sMain Page Send Email to: FANKHADB@UC.EDU --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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