Has this ever happened to you: A recipe such as this or this calls for buttermilk, you dutifully buy a litre of the stuff and are then left with a litre minus 1/4 cup? Scam alert! I think buttermilk should be free. After all, it's just the runoff from making butter from soured milk (though these days it's more likely its own product made from pasteurized milk curdled by adding a culture.) And why don't they sell buttermilk in smaller sizes? If they can do it with milk and all manner of cream, surely they should be able to figure out a way to do it with buttermilk, right? Am I right? (I think I'm right.)
BLUEBERRY BUTTERMILK CAKE
(serves 6)
Ingredients:
1 cup all-purpose flour
½ tsp baking powder
½ tsp baking soda
¼ tsp salt
½ stick butter, room temperature
2/3 cup sugar
1 ½ Tbsp brown sugar
½ tsp vanilla extract
1 large egg
½ cup buttermilk, well-shaken
1 Tbsp lemon zest
1 cup fresh or frozen and thawed and drained blueberries
Method:
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Butter and 9-inch pan and put and cover the bottom with a piece of parchment paper.
Mix together flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt.
Using a mixer, blend together butter and white sugar for a couple of minutes, or until fluffy. Add vanilla and egg and beat a couple minutes more. At a low speed, add flour and buttermilk and lemon zest, alternating between wet and dry until just combined for a silky batter.
Pour batter into prepared baking dish or cake tin and smooth evenly. Top evenly with berries and sprinkle with brown sugar.
Bake in preheated oven until cake is golden on top on inserted toothpick comes out clean – about 25 minutes. Cool in pan for a few minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack and cool for 20 minutes. Present it sunny side up on a plate.
3 comments:
When I get stuck with a carton minus 1/4 cup, I measure the rest out into 1 cup containers and freeze it. Then I just pull one out to defrost the night before for pancakes.
How did you get to be so smart?
Great idea.
Ohhhh, they know EXACTLY what they are doing selling you buttermilk in quart containers, don't kid yourself. Here's what I do--make butter! Just get some heavy cream, tick it in your mixer on high, throw a bit of salt in there, take it past stiff peaks and the liquid starts to separate out. Let it go for a minute and you have, fresh, homemade butter, and fresh, homemade buttermilk! Both are quite good--the butter is firm and delicious (although maybe you don't want to waste it in a recipe), and the buttermilk is very tangy--amazing. Smart? Am I smart (too?) (I think I'm smart).
Actually, I think it is amazing that we overlook things like this all the time because we have become so used to grabbing what we need from the grocery store shelves.
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