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  1. RisingDamp666

    0 ratings12345
    Mar 1st 2008, 09:05

    Dickinson's or Tiptons? I'll go with the Tiptons. Yes, definitely Tiptons. Now, as to the nice recipe above, Meyer or Sorrento?....

  2. carlmalone

    0 ratings12345
    Mar 1st 2008, 12:00

    Love that lemon curd. On a slightly different note, I actually just picked up some Sarabeth's orange apricot marmalade and spread it over a bread custard last week. Holy heavenly! That stuff is the bomb, too.

  3. Hoss

    0 ratings12345
    Mar 1st 2008, 16:52

    I know I'm the odd one out here, but I can't stand lemon curd, or anything made with it. I'd rather chew on aluminum foil.

    Lavender scones on the other hand sound awesome. I'm roasting a chicken with Herbs de Provence right now as I write, and the lavender aroma just kicked in. I looove lavender. In small amounts that is. It's easy to lose control. One overdose of lavender can turn you off of the stuff for years. I once made a lavender creme brulee in '98. I ate three servings, then couldn't touch the stuff until Clinton was out of the White House.

  4. carlmalone

    0 ratings12345
    Mar 1st 2008, 17:17

    Christa or someone else: briefy summarize the arguements of salted vs. unsalted butter?

  5. ChristaSeychew

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    Mar 1st 2008, 17:50

    Good point, carlmalone.

    There are lots of argument to be made, for certain, but the most obvious of all, is that as a cook, it is important to be able to control the amount of salt in any given dish yourself. The use of salted butter eliminates that option. It also plays fast and loose with the flavor profile of your dish. I'd certainly rather use a high quality sea salt to season my dishes as opposed to the less refined version used to make cheap butter more palatable.

    Additionally, the salt in the butter can mask unpleasant odors or flavors that your butter may have easily picked up from your refrigerator. That odor or flavor may make itself known in your dish once the butter has been incorporated with the rest of the ingredients- this of course depends on how delicate your dish is and/or how discerning your palate may be!

    Salt is added to butter for flavor, but also as a preservative. Unsalted butter has a shorter shelf-life. Please note that although the amount of salt in the average stick of butter varies by manufacturer, it ranges between approximately 1/2 - 3/4 tsp. per stick.

    I like good old fashioned salted butter on my toast, as unhip as that may be, but we tend to use unsalted butter around our house in every other application.

    I have a pretty extensive set of stories on butter that we ran in the print magazine last spring. I'll upload them and link them to a new article in the next week or so. Keep an eye out, maybe we can stir up a little butter controversy!

  6. vbm547

    0 ratings12345
    Mar 1st 2008, 19:07

    VBM HAS GREAT LEMON CURD WILKIN & SONS TIPTREE ESSEX ENGLAND

    SHAMELESS SELF PROMO

  7. Hoss

    1 ratings12345
    Mar 1st 2008, 21:05

    Christa is spot on about the salted/unsalted butter reasoning. Control.

    One thing to add though, that I learned from a friend that worked at Cabot creamery in VT. They salt the old stuff that's been laying about, and stockpile product as salted when supply is greater than demand. So not only does the salted keep better, but it's generally older to begin with.

    That said, I agree about salted butter on toast (bagels, & grilled cheese as well). My favorite is Kerrygold which is available at Weggies. So sweet and creamy. Yum. Unsalted Cabot is my fave for the general cooking and baking. Dash's carries Cabot, but not always the unsalted. The only reason I go there these days is for the butter. That and to watch the retired cop with the thin mustache and the ancient 6-shooter in his holster read the paper.