How To Make Your Own Delectable Butter: A Simple and Tasty Recipe

How To Make Your Own Delectable Butter: A Simple and Tasty Recipe

Flavor Foundation: Making Butter

Just over a year ago I discovered the joys of making my own butter. What makes this a little unusual is that I began making my own cheeses nearly 15 years ago.

Last year, we had just moved to North Carolina and happily discovered a local farmers market that not only offers fresh produce, but fresh seafood and local dairy products. I was (and still am) in heaven! Did I mention they are open nearly year ‘round??

That first day I brought home cream. I had to scoop out the solid cream from the top of the old-fashioned milk bottle in order to make it pour. I mentioned this to my Dad over the phone and he longingly reminisced about receiving bottles like that daily when he was growing up on the family farm in South Dakota back in the 40’s and 50’s. I knew this was definitely something really special.

As a cheesemaker, I had searched high and low for years for milk products that were as close to untouched as possible. The only other experience I’ve had like this were the years we lived next door to wonderful friends who raised goats and we were able to get a little of the milk to make chevre. This new-found cream was like liquid gold!

I was strictly Keto at the time so I had initially bought the cream as an ingredient to replace milk. I had recently purchased Joshua Weissman’s new cookbook, so I decided to try my hand at making butter.

Now I know there are several cool new products on the market for using hand-crank style butter churns, but I assure you this method is so much easier.

All you need to make butter is a food processor (or a blender can work as well), cream and some water. You also need about 10-15 minutes. I’m not kidding. It’s that easy.

I have also tested this recipe with standard grocery store cream and it works every bit as well, but it does yield slightly less butter as there are fewer cream solids in the overall product.

So let’s get started.

Equipment you’ll need:

 

    • Food Processor

 

    • Measuring Cup for Water

 

    • Fine Mesh Sieve

 

    • Butter Muslin * optional but super helpful

 

    • Spatula

Ingredients:

 

3-½ Cups Whole Cream

2 Tablespoons Filtered Water (regular water will work, but use your fridge water if you have a filter)

2 Teaspoons Salt *optional

Steps for Recipe:

 

(see Notes)

  1. Pour the cream into the Food Processor

2.  Run for 4-6 minutes, until the solids separate from the liquid (You’ve just made butter and buttermilk)

3.  Drain solids in a fine mesh strainer

4.  Place back into Food Processor

5.  Add Cold, Filtered Water

6.  Run for another 1-2 minutes

7.  Drain solids in strainer or using Butter Muslin

8.  Place in bowl and add Salt, if desired

9.  Shape the butter into a block or roll and store it in the fridge until ready to use

Tips

Watch to see when the butter separates from the liquid in your food processor. You don’t need to overmix. I usually achieve butter at 4 to 4-½ minutes in the food processor. Some creams will take closer to the 6 minute mark.

You can knead the butter at the end, or when adding salt, to work out any additional liquid that may still be in your butter. 

If you leave your butter out and liquids start to form, simply pour it off. There’s no harm either way, but aesthetically you may want to remove it.

Storage

Butter can be stored in the refrigerator for at least one week. I store mine in a glass container with an airtight lid and mine stays fresh for closer to a month (if we don’t eat it all before then!)

Butter can be stored in the freezer for a few months - if you can wait that long!

Benefits

Making butter at home is a simple and rewarding process that can result in a delicious and nutritious product that you can enjoy with your meals. Whether you're a seasoned home cook or just starting out, making your own butter can be a fun and satisfying experience that allows you to connect with your food in a deeper way. 

There are several things that are so worth the time and effort to make yourself. Butter is definitely one of them. Use the best cream you can afford. If you want to save it for special meals or occasions, it stores well in the freezer. In a future post, I will show you how to take the butter and make it into some Flavor-full Compound Butters.

 So let’s consider all of the benefits of making butter at home, including its freshness, control over ingredients, health benefits, cost-effectiveness, and fun factor.

FreshnessOne of the primary benefits of making butter at home is its freshness. Store-bought butter is often made from cream that has been pasteurized, homogenized, and shipped long distances, which can result in a less fresh and less flavorful product. When you make your own butter, you can use fresh cream that has not been pasteurized or homogenized, resulting in a delicious and fresh-tasting product that can't be matched by store-bought butter. Additionally, making butter at home allows you to use cream from grass-fed cows, which can result in a butter that is higher in nutrients and healthier for you.

Control over ingredients: When you make your own butter, you have complete control over the ingredients you use. You can choose to use high-quality cream from grass-fed cows, which can result in a butter that is higher in nutrients and healthier for you. You can also add your own flavors and seasonings to create a unique and personalized taste. For example, you can add herbs, spices, or even honey to your butter to create a flavored butter that can be used in a variety of dishes.

Health benefits: Grass-fed butter is a good source of healthy fats and nutrients, such as vitamin K2, which is important for bone and heart health. When you make your own butter using grass-fed cream, you can be sure that you are getting a high-quality product that is not only delicious but also good for you. In addition, making your own butter at home allows you to control the amount of salt and other additives that are added to the butter, which can help to reduce your overall sodium intake.

Cost-effective: Making your own butter can be a cost-effective alternative to buying high-quality butter at the grocery store, especially if you have access to fresh cream at a reasonable price. While it may seem daunting to make your own butter, it is actually quite simple and requires only a few ingredients and a bit of time. Plus, the end result is a delicious and nutritious product that can be used in a variety of dishes, from baked goods to savory dishes.

Fun and satisfying: Making butter from scratch can be a fun and satisfying experience that allows you to connect with your food in a deeper way. It's a great activity to do with friends or family, and the end result is a delicious and nutritious product that you can enjoy. 

It doesn't take long at all, and making butter can definitely uplevel your Flavor game. I absolutely make my own butter every few weeks to make sure I always have some on hand.

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Last Updated:

Post Created:  Jan 6, 2023

Wine Was Never Meant to Be Consumed Alone

Wine Was Never Meant to Be Consumed Alone

Wine is one of the few foods in history that has almost always been consumed alongside something else.

This isn't arbitrary. It's structural.

Throughout most of wine's history — in ancient Rome, in medieval France, in the farmhouse cellars of the Rhône — wine was part of a meal. It arrived at the table alongside food. It was poured in the context of conversation, hospitality, a shared experience.

It was never meant to be the main event. It was designed to be part of one.

We've drifted from that in modern wine culture. A glass of wine after work while standing at the kitchen counter is now completely normal — and I get it, because I've done exactly that. But what we've quietly lost in that habit is something worth noting.

When wine is separated from food, a few things happen.

You drink faster. There's nothing anchoring the pace.

You notice less. The sensory context that makes wine interesting — how it changes with a bite, how it opens up alongside a meal — just isn't there.

The glass becomes the whole experience. And it was built to be part of one.

Here's the practical test I'd invite you to try this week. The next time you pour yourself a glass in the evening, add something to the table. Not a full meal. Not a production. Just something:

A slice of good cheese. A few crackers. A handful of olives. Something simple that you actually enjoy.

That's it.

What you'll likely notice: you slow down. You start tasting the wine differently - because your palate now has contrast to work with. The cheese changes the wine. The wine changes the cheese. Something clicks.

This is how wine was designed to be experienced. Not as a standalone thing you consume, but as part of a moment you're in.

The shift is small. The difference is real.

Next week: what happens when you bring actual attention to that moment — and why your palate expands faster than you'd expect.

Continue Exploring

If this resonated, you might also enjoy:

What Role Is Your Glass Actually Playing?

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Post Created:  May 11, 2026

Recipe: Rich Egg Yolk Pasta Dough

Recipe: Rich Egg Yolk Pasta Dough

Rich Egg Yolk Pasta Dough

Anne Kjellgren
Michael Symon's Egg Pasta Dough (Cut Wide for Braised Dishes)
No ratings yet
Prep Time 10 minutes
Dough resting — hands-off 30 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Course Main Course, Pasta, Side Dish
Cuisine Italian, Vegetarian

Ingredients
  

Group 1: The Dough

  • 2 cups '00' flour or all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
  • 10 large egg yolks
  • 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
  • Water as needed

Group 2: To Finish

  • 1 tablespoon unsalted butter
  • Flaky sea salt
  • Fresh flat-leaf parsley roughly chopped — optional

Instructions
 

Make the Dough

  • Combine the flour and egg yolks in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Add the olive oil.
  • Mix on low speed until the dough begins to come together. If the mixture looks too dry and crumbly, add water one teaspoon at a time until the dough begins to form.
  • Once the dough has come together, switch to the dough hook. Mix on medium speed until the dough is smooth, elastic, and clears the sides of the bowl — about 4–5 minutes. If it is still sticking to the sides, add a small amount of flour; if it seems stiff and dry, add water a teaspoon at a time.
  • Remove the dough from the bowl, shape into a ball, and wrap tightly in plastic wrap. Rest at room temperature for at least 30 minutes. The dough will relax and become noticeably easier to roll.

Roll, Cut & Cook

  • Divide the rested dough into thirds. Keep the pieces you are not working with wrapped so they do not dry out.
  • Flatten one piece with your palm and run it through a pasta machine on the widest setting. Fold the sheet in thirds and run it through again. Repeat 2–3 times until the sheet is smooth.
  • Continue passing the dough through progressively narrower settings until you reach the desired thickness — setting 4 or 5 on a standard machine for wide noodles suited to a braise. The sheet should be thin but not translucent.
  • Cut the sheets into wide noodles approximately 2 cm (¾ inch) wide, using a knife or pizza wheel. Drape the cut noodles over a dowel or lay flat on a lightly floured tray.
  • To cook: bring a large pot of generously salted water to a rolling boil. Add the noodles and cook for 2–3 minutes, tasting at 2 minutes — they should be tender with a slight resistance at the center. Drain, reserving a cup of pasta water.
  • Toss the drained noodles immediately with a tablespoon of butter and a splash of pasta water if needed to prevent sticking. Season with flaky salt. Serve at once alongside the Coq au Riesling.

Notes

Attribution: This pasta dough is Michael Symon's Egg Pasta Dough — 2 cups '00' flour, 10 large egg yolks, 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil, and water as needed, mixed in a stand mixer. Anne's modification: cut into wide noodles rather than fettuccine or ravioli, to suit the Coq au Riesling braise.
Why 10 egg yolks: Symon's recipe uses only yolks — no whole eggs — which produces a dough that is noticeably richer, more golden, and more silky than standard egg pasta. The extra fat from the yolks gives the noodle a luxurious texture that holds up particularly well under a cream sauce. This is not a substitution you want to shortcut.
'00' flour vs. all-purpose: '00' flour is milled more finely than all-purpose and produces a smoother, more tender dough. If you cannot find it, all-purpose works — the texture will be slightly less silky but the result is still excellent. Do not use bread flour; the higher protein content makes the dough too elastic and difficult to roll.
The rest is not optional: 30 minutes at room temperature allows the gluten to relax fully. Dough that has not rested will spring back when you try to roll it. If you are making this ahead, wrap tightly and refrigerate for up to overnight — bring back to room temperature for 15 minutes before rolling.
On thickness: For pairing with a braise, setting 4 on a standard pasta machine gives a noodle with enough body to absorb the sauce without going soft. Setting 5 or 6 produces a thinner noodle better suited to fettuccine or lighter sauces.
Make-ahead: Cut noodles can be dried completely (1–2 hours until fully dry to the touch) and stored in an airtight container for up to 2 days, or frozen on a tray and then bagged — cook from frozen, adding 1 minute to the cooking time.
Wine Note: Fresh egg pasta is a blank canvas — the wine pairing belongs to the sauce or dish it accompanies, not to the noodle itself. If you are serving this alongside Coq au Riesling, see that recipe for the pairing guidance. If you are serving the noodles simply — tossed in butter, with perhaps a grating of Parmesan and a handful of herbs — the wine follows the butter. A good Burgundian Chardonnay or a white Burgundy from the Mâcon is the natural choice: the richness of the egg yolk pasta echoes the wine's body, and the butter connects them. For a cream or mushroom sauce, the same logic applies. For a tomato-based sauce, reach for a medium-bodied red — a Barbera, a lighter Côtes du Rhône, or a good Beaujolais cru. The pasta will follow wherever the sauce leads.
Keyword 00 flour pasta, egg yolk noodles, egg yolk pasta dough, French braised pasta side, fresh egg pasta, fresh pasta noodles, fresh pasta with egg yolks, homemade egg noodles, homemade pasta recipe, homemade wide noodles, how to make egg noodles, Michael Symon pasta, pappardelle-style noodles, pasta dough from scratch, pasta for braised dishes, pasta for Coq au Riesling, pasta machine noodles, rich egg pasta, stand mixer pasta dough, wide pasta noodles
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

My husband is known for his amazing homemade pasta, and after decades of experimenting, he swears this recipe from Michael Symon is the most tender, flavorful pasta he's ever made - and I have to agree. The richness of the egg yolks - well, you may never go back to "regular" pasta. If you have the inclination to make your own, this one's a keeper.

You can find more about using this recipe and wine pairing:

Coq au Riesling: The Dish That Teaches a Region

What Role Is Your Glass Actually Playing?

What Role Is Your Glass Actually Playing?

May is Mental Health Awareness Month, and the wine world has a complicated relationship with that conversation.

We talk about wine as relaxation. As reward. As the thing you pour after a hard day. And there's nothing wrong with any of that — except when we stop noticing which version of "relaxation" we're actually after.

Here's what I mean.

There's a version of enjoying wine that enhances presence. You pour a glass, sit down with a meal or a person you care about, and the wine makes the moment better. You notice more. You slow down. The experience is fuller.

And there's a version that replaces presence. You pour a glass to check out. To quiet the noise. To get through the evening.

I'm not making a judgment about either. We're human. Both happen.

But I think most people — if they're honest — have never actually asked the question: which one is this, right now?

Wine as enhancement. Or wine as escape.

The difference isn't the wine in your glass. It's the awareness you bring to it.

When wine is working as an enhancer, something specific happens: you slow down. You notice what you're tasting. You become more present, not less. The wine becomes part of an experience rather than a shortcut away from one.

When it's working as an escape, the opposite is true. You're not really tasting anything. You're not really there. The glass is just doing a job.

Here's why I think this matters for Mental Health Month specifically: a lot of the wine culture we've built — the memes about mommy wine, the social shorthand of "I need a drink" — conflates both of these. It normalizes one without distinguishing between them. And that makes it harder to notice which one you're in.

I'm not anti-escape. I'm pro-awareness.

Because when you start noticing what role your glass is actually playing, something shifts. You start making choices instead of just reaching for habit. And that's where wine gets genuinely interesting — when it becomes intentional.

This month, I'm sharing four ideas about how to experience wine more fully. Not to drink more. Not to drink less. But to actually be there when you do.

What role does your glass play most often? I'd genuinely love to know.

Continue Exploring

If this resonated, you might also enjoy:

An Open Letter to Wine Lovers: It's Not About Finding the ONE Wine

 

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Post Created:  May 4, 2026

Mâcon & Spring Fish: A Pairing for the Season

Mâcon & Spring Fish: A Pairing for the Season

There is a moment in early spring when the food on the table starts to change.

 

The braises and the root vegetables and the things that sustained you through winter begin to feel like too much. What the season is asking for instead is something lighter, something that tastes of where we are headed rather than where we have been. Salmon with spring herbs. Pan-seared trout. Halibut with something bright alongside.

 

Mâcon is the wine for this moment. Not the austere, mineral precision of Chablis — that is a colder table wine, a winter wine in its bones. Mâcon is generous and round and just warm enough to feel like spring itself. It bridges the season without forcing the issue. (Pouilly-Fuisse is a higher-end Mâcon. The more detail on the label [longer or more specific], the better the wine, generally)

Why This Pairing Works

Weight matching weight. Spring fish — salmon, trout, halibut — are medium-bodied proteins. Not as delicate as sole or sea bass, not as rich as tuna or swordfish. Mâcon's medium body matches them precisely. A Chablis would feel too lean alongside salmon's richness; an oaked California Chardonnay would overwhelm the fish entirely. Mâcon finds the middle ground.

 

Acidity and richness. Mâcon's acidity — rounder than Chablis, brighter than an oaked Chardonnay — cuts through the natural fat in salmon and trout, refreshing the palate between bites. This is the same function lemon juice performs when squeezed over fish, but with more complexity and without the sharpness.

 

Fruit and herbs. The stone fruit and ripe apple notes in a good Mâcon-Villages or Pouilly-Fuissé harmonise with the fresh herbs — tarragon, dill, chervil, parsley — that suit spring fish preparations. The wine and the seasoning speak the same flavour language.

 

No oak competition. Most Mâcon is unoaked or lightly oaked, which means no vanilla or toast flavours competing with the delicate flesh of the fish. The wine stays clean and complementary rather than dominant.

 

The Fish and How to Prepare It

Salmon. Pan-seared with a herb butter — tarragon, lemon, a little shallot — is the natural preparation. The fat in the salmon makes the Mâcon taste rounder; the wine's acidity cuts the richness and keeps each bite fresh. Pouilly-Fuissé works particularly well here — the limestone mineral note in the wine echoes the oceanic quality of the fish.

 

Trout. More delicate than salmon, with a clean, slightly nutty flavour that suits Mâcon-Villages perfectly. A simple preparation — pan-fried in brown butter with almonds and lemon — is all it needs. The wine should be straightforward and fresh to match the trout's lightness.

 

Halibut. Firm, clean, mild. The least fatty of the three, which means it welcomes a slightly more substantial wine — a Saint-Véran or a Pouilly-Fuissé rather than a basic Mâcon AOP. A spring vegetable preparation alongside — asparagus, peas, spring onions — works beautifully.

 

Avoid: Heavy cream sauces, very spicy preparations, or anything with strong competing flavours (heavy garlic, fermented ingredients). Mâcon is not built to fight. It is built to harmonise.

 

Check Out How We Did Ours: 

 

Pan-Seared Tilapia with White Wine Garlic Cream Sauce

Anne Kjellgren @ Food Wine and Flavor
A weeknight fish dinner thatearns its place at the table. The sauce builds in the same pan — white winelifting the garlic, cream smoothing the edges, lemon keeping it honest. Readyin 25 minutes. Made for a glass of Mâcon.
No ratings yet
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Course Main Course
Cuisine American, French

Ingredients
  

For the Fish

  • 4 skinless tilapia fillets
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon unsalted butter
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

For the White Wine Garlic Cream Sauce

  • 1 tablespoon unsalted butter
  • 3 garlic cloves grated or minced
  • 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning
  • ¼ cup dry white wine Mâcon-Villages or similar unoaked Chardonnay (whatever you're drinking)
  • ¾ cup low-sodium chicken broth or stock
  • 1 cup heavy cream or half and half, warmed
  • 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
  • 2 tablespoons fresh flat-leaf parsley chopped, for garnish

Instructions
 

Instructions

    Prep

    • Warm the cream gently in a small saucepan or microwave before you begin — adding cold cream to a hot pan is what causes curdling. Grate or mince the garlic and set aside.

    Sear the Fish

    • Pat the tilapia fillets dry with paper towels — this is what gives you a proper sear rather than steam. Season both sides generously with salt and pepper.
    • Heat the olive oil and butter in a large skillet over medium heat until the butter foams and subsides. Add the fillets and cook undisturbed for 3 minutes per side, until golden and just cooked through. Remove from the pan and set aside on a warm plate.

    Build the Sauce

    • In the same skillet over medium heat, melt the butter. Add the garlic and sauté for about 1 minute, stirring, until fragrant but not browned. Add the Italian seasoning and stir to toast the herbs for 30 seconds.
    • Pour in the white wine first, letting it bubble and lift any browned bits from the pan. Then add the chicken broth. Bring to a boil, then simmer for 5 minutes until the liquid reduces by about one-third. This is where the flavour concentrates.
    • Reduce heat to medium-low. Slowly pour in the warmed cream, whisking continuously — don’t walk away — until the sauce is smooth and silky. Stir in the lemon juice. Taste and adjust salt and pepper as needed.

    Serve

    • Return the fillets to the pan and spoon the sauce generously over them, or plate the fish and pour the sauce over at the table. Scatter the chopped parsley over the top. Serve immediately with steamed vegetables, rice, or crusty bread to catch every drop of the sauce.

    Notes

    Notes

    • The wine matters here. Use a Mâcon-Villages or any unoaked Chardonnay you’d be happy to drink alongside the dish — the sauce will taste exactly like what you pour into it. Avoid anything heavily oaked, which muddies the brightness.
    • Warm the cream first. Cold cream added to a hot pan is the primary cause of curdling. Thirty seconds in the microwave is all it takes.
    • Don’t rush the reduction. The 5-minute simmer after adding the wine and broth is where the acidity mellows and the garlic sweetens. Cutting it short leaves the sauce thin.
    • To thicken the sauce further: Mix 1 tablespoon cornstarch with 3 tablespoons cold water into a slurry. Add to the sauce and simmer 5 minutes more.
    • Fish options: This sauce works equally well with sole, flounder, or a thin salmon fillet. Adjust cook time slightly for thicker cuts.
    • Swap options: Fresh garlic can be replaced with 1 teaspoon garlic powder. Italian seasoning can be replaced with ½ teaspoon dried thyme — or use fresh herbs and double the quantity.
    Wine Pairing Note This dish was built around a glass of Mâcon-Villages. The same wine in your glass goes into the sauce — a simple principle that connects the plate and the pour in a way that feels inevitable rather than calculated. The wine’s bright acidity cuts through the cream; the cream softens the wine’s edges. Both are better for it. A Pouilly-Fuissé elevates the experience without overcomplicating it. If you’d like something slightly leaner, a Saint-Véran works beautifully here as well.
    Keyword capers, fish, garlic, Lemon, salmon, tilapia, trout, white wine sauce
    Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

    What to Buy and How to Serve It

    Mâcon-Villages or Saint-Véran for everyday; Pouilly-Fuissé for the more considered meal

    Serve at 50–54°F — cooler than room temperature, warmer than you'd serve Chablis. This is not a wine that needs to be cold; it needs to be cool enough to stay fresh but warm enough to show its fruit. In practice: thirty minutes in the refrigerator before serving if it has been at room temperature, or fifteen minutes out of the refrigerator if it has been fully chilled.

    The practice this week: pour the Mâcon before the fish arrives. Taste it alone. Notice how much more immediately welcoming it is than the Chablis from last week — if you have a memory of that wine, the contrast will be striking. Then taste it with the first bite of fish. Notice how both settle into each other, neither competing, neither diminishing.

    That ease is what Mâcon does. It is a wine designed to be at the table, not to be contemplated. Pour it. Eat. Enjoy the season.

     

    Coming next Thursday: Burgundy Pinot Noir and roast lamb — a pairing timed perfectly for the Easter weekend. One to plan ahead for.

     

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    Last Updated:

    Post Created:  Mar 26, 2026