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M**Y
A great book, well-written, delightful in composition, thoroughly researched, and belongs on every kitchen's shelf of cookbooks
A great book, well-written first and foremost, but delightful in its composition, starting with history, through past and modern production, and then the use of butter. The book ends with an encouragement for the reader to expand their own use of butter - through recipes, recommended high-quality butters to purchase, and instructions on making one's own. By my estimation, it is a thoroughly researched subject, augmented by many first-hand accounts by the author, which required extensive travel, but has led to an engaging and comprehensive narrative that's a joy to read. I lived in Wisconsin for thirty years, the first five in a rural community in the midst of dairy farms (and dated the daughter of a dairy farmer for a time), and this book captures the lives of people involved in dairy industry. The recipe selection is a well thought out "greatest hits" collection, highlighting the flavor and texture that butter provides. Many of these recipes have been favorites of mine for decades (Pound Cake, German Pancakes, Butterscotch, to name a few not currently in vogue) - my palate obviously favoring butter flavor over sweetness. I found this book searching for a recipe for Old Fashioned Buttercream Frosting (aka Danish Frosting or Ermine Frosting), a stable and less sweet and more buttery version than classic American Buttercream. When time permits, try the silky European Buttercream Frosting; it's worth the time to prepare. Once you have tried these two versions of buttercream, you will not go back to the standard version popular in the US. Me, I am going to try each of these recipes and also try my hand at making my own butter.
S**N
fascinating and informative
I learned so much. Couldn’t put it down. Can’t wait to try some of the recipes. Learned about this book from a podcast
S**M
Interesting Read!
This book was a fascinating look at the history of butter and how it was discovered and used by ancient cultures, and how much (and little) the art of butter making has changed. This book is about half history, and half cookbook.
C**A
Fascinating overview of butter in human life, plus enticing recipes!
I love reading about the history of food and cooking, and this is a fascinating, in-depth look at butter- mostly, but not exclusively, bovine.Approximately 2/3rds of the book is devot3d to the history of butter in human societies.The rest includes an extensive and seductive assortment of butter-centric recipes, plus various appendices with artisan butter producers, a bibliography, and other notes. It is now heading into winter here, and I am excited to start trying tomake some of the laminated doughs like puff pastry, croissants, and the like!Very recommended for fans of food history and, of course, BUTTER.
H**L
Butter is best.
I really highly value this book. It's a very thorough and comprehensive piece of work. I read it first from my local library, and discovered it's well worth the cost, which isn't steep to begin with. I'm buying copies for my friends in the culinary fields as well as every medical professional I can justify getting it for, especially the folks who have never looked into the flawed methodology behind the research that led to the modern "ban on butter". The author has delved deeply yet concisely into the history, the chemistry, the flavor and consistency, the biology, and recipes to top it off. I'd recommend the hardback version as this is something for the generations, but the visual pun of the paperback cover is a nice touch.
P**H
Would also like to have more information on how/where to buy your ...
The book was informative at times and repetitive at times. Historically interesting but would have likes more local perspective in the US on where to but some of this butter locally. Would also like to have more information on how/where to buy your own cream from a dairy and the complete steps to try to make your own butter.
L**T
You'll melt for the history of our kitchen's most overlooked staple
Food nerd alert! Ms. Khosrova's book "BUTTER: A Rich History" is a well researched, easy to read book on a pantry staple. As a chef I appreciated her peripatetic exploits to understand what is a deceptively simple food stuff that has a rich history. Having made butter from scratch, it puts into perspective how great it is to live in an age where it's so readily available. The bonus recipes are staples for the classically trained Chef.
A**R
Explore butter
Fast service from Midtown Scholar Bookstore. I have already read the book but wanted it for the recipes. Good book. Go read it. Explore butter!
S**H
An interesting description of the history and the place of ...
An interesting description of the history and the place of butter in our food stream following by recipes that refine the standard methodologies for pastries and other butter uses.
M**R
for the butter fiend
excellent
V**D
Light, yet satisfying
I love food. I love butter. I love history. Someone wrote a book on the history of butter? I have to read it. It turned out to be a light read, more akin to an elongated magazine article or reportage than a history book, yet overall very enjoyable. Its first half compiles bits of history, nutritional science, anecdotal research, interviews, and Trivial Pursuit-like vignettes. The second part is a list or recipes to bake, and cook with butter. A very tangible and predictable outcome of reading the book would be to dash to your patisserie of choice and indulge in the rich taste of some legitimate artisanal croissants. That is my plan for tomorrow morning.
C**S
great book
Super book. Thanks
D**A
Five Stars
Anxious to read.
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