Seed to Supper Database
Butter
How to Make Guide"From cream to crust to cast iron — butter does everything."
View All Butter RecipesButter is the quiet backbone of a budget kitchen. It makes cheap bread taste expensive, turns a bare pan into a nonstick surface, and stretches a simple meal into something people remember. And when you learn you can make it from a pint of heavy cream, you'll never look at a stick of butter the same way.
5
Parts Mapped
Every piece accounted for
36
Total Uses
Nothing wasted
6
Preservation Methods
Year-round supply
Difficulty
Easy — 1 ingredient, 15-20 minutes
Time
15-20 minutes active (plus chilling)
Cost
~$2.50 per 8oz (from heavy cream on sale)
Yield
1 pint heavy cream → ~8oz butter + 1 cup buttermilk
💡 Grandmaw's Tips
The cream needs to be cold when you start, but it churns faster if you let it sit out for 5 minutes first — Grandmaw always said 'cold but not angry.'
In a pinch, put cream in a mason jar and let the kids shake it for 15-20 minutes — they think it's a game, you get free butter. Everybody wins.
Cultured butter (made from cream with a spoonful of yogurt added and left out overnight) has more flavor than sweet cream butter and the buttermilk is even better for baking.
Store-bought is $4-5/lb and homemade is about the same — you don't make butter to save money, you make it because it tastes better and you get the buttermilk free.
Keep butter wrappers in a freezer bag — you'll have a lifetime supply of pan greasers.
📝 Steps
1
Pour cold heavy cream into a stand mixer with the whisk attachment, or use a mason jar with a tight lid for small batches.
2
Whip on medium-high speed — it'll go through soft peaks, stiff peaks, then suddenly break and separate into clumps and liquid. That's the magic moment.
3
Pour off the liquid — that's fresh buttermilk, save every drop in a jar.
4
Add ice water to the butter clumps and knead/squeeze with clean hands or a spatula to wash out remaining buttermilk. Pour off the cloudy water and repeat 2-3 times until the water runs clear.
5
This washing step is what keeps your butter from going rancid — don't skip it.
6
Add salt if you want, knead it in evenly, then shape into a log using parchment paper or press into a butter mold.
7
Wrap tightly and refrigerate. Use within 2 weeks, or freeze for up to 6 months.
Every item below works beautifully with butter.
🥩 Proteins
Eggs
Chicken thighs
White fish
Shrimp
Steak
Pork chops
Lobster
Crab
Bacon
Lentils
Scallops
🥬 Vegetables
Potato
Corn
Green beans
Asparagus
Carrots
Mushrooms
Sweet potato
Peas
Broccoli
Squash
Onion
Spinach
🌿 Herbs
Parsley
Sage
Thyme
Rosemary
Dill
Chives
Tarragon
Basil
🧂 Spices
Garlic
Black pepper
Salt
Paprika
Cayenne
Nutmeg
Cinnamon
Red pepper flakes
Lemon zest
Onion powder
🧀 Dairy
Heavy cream
Parmesan
Cheddar
Cream cheese
Sour cream
Mozzarella
Gruyère
Buttermilk
🫙 Pantry
Flour
Sugar
Brown sugar
Honey
Maple syrup
Bread
Pasta
Rice
Vanilla extract
Baking powder
Cornbread mix
Chicken broth
Olive oil
Here's how to keep butter all year long.
❄️ Freezing (Sticks/Blocks)
6-9 months
Best for: Stocking up during sales, holiday baking prep
💡 Butter freezes perfectly in its original wrapper. When it hits $2.50/lb, buy ten pounds. You'll thank yourself in December.
✨ Clarifying into Ghee
3-6 months (room temp) / 12+ months (fridge)
Best for: High-heat cooking, Indian cuisine, lactose-free butter alternative
💡 Ghee lasts so long because you've removed the milk solids that spoil. Keep it in a clean jar and it'll outlast everything else in your pantry.
🧂 Salting (Heavily Salted Butter)
2-3 months refrigerated
Best for: Spreading on bread, finishing dishes, flavored butter logs
💡 Extra salt extends shelf life — that's why salted butter lasts longer in your fridge than unsalted. Grandmaw always kept salted for the table and unsalted for baking.
🫙 Compound Butter (Herb/Garlic)
2 weeks (fridge) / 3 months (frozen)
Best for: Steak topper, corn on the cob, garlic bread, baked potatoes
💡 Roll compound butter into a log in parchment paper, freeze, and slice coins off whenever you need to make something taste fancy for free.
🏺 Butter Crock (Counter Storage)
2-4 weeks at room temperature
Best for: Everyday spreading, toast, biscuits
💡 A French butter crock uses a water seal to keep butter fresh on the counter. Spreadable butter every morning without the microwave — Grandmaw's secret to perfect biscuits.
🥫 Canning (Pressure Canning Butter)
12+ months (shelf stable)
Best for: Emergency preparedness, off-grid living, long-term storage
💡 This one's controversial — the USDA doesn't endorse it, but homesteaders have done it for generations. If you try it, use pressure canning only and keep jars in a cool, dark place.
Seed to Supper to Seed
Nothing leaves the cycle. Everything comes back around.
🛒
Buy butter on sale at $2.50/lb or less — stock up and freeze up to 10 pounds at a time
🥛
Or make it from scratch: 1 pint heavy cream → 8oz butter + 1 cup free buttermilk
🧈
Keep one stick on the counter in a butter dish for daily use
🍳
Cook with it daily — eggs, vegetables, pasta, biscuits, pie crust
🌿
Make compound butters with herbs and garlic — freeze in logs for instant flavor
✨
Clarify into ghee for high-heat cooking and long-term pantry storage
📄
Save every wrapper in a freezer bag — free pan greasers for the rest of your life
🥛
Use every drop of buttermilk — biscuits, pancakes, fried chicken marinade, ranch dressing
♻️
Compost milk solids from clarifying and expired scraps back into the garden