H3PO4 Ha-Ogen Melons Haas Apple Haas Apples Habak Mint Habanero Chile Peppers Hachiya Persimmons Haggis Haig Potatoes Hairy Cucumber Hairy Lychees Hairy Melon Hairy Mint Halaby Peppers Hale's Best Jumbo Cantaloupe Melons Half-Fat Double Gloucester Half-High Blueberries Half-Moon Pumpkins Half-standing Rib Roast Half Cream Half & Half Cream Halford Sauce Halibut Halibut Fluke Muscle Halkikis Olives Hall Apples Hallacas Hallo-Queen Pumpkins Halloumi Cheese Hallowe'en Pumpkins Hallowmas Bannock Hallum Apples Halvah Halved Olives Ham Previous | Next | Clabbered Milk© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced Loppered MilkClabbered Milk (aka Loppered Milk) is a product that we no longer really have any more. It was a byproduct of making Clabber Cream. To recap, to make Clabber Cream, you'd set a pail or dish of freshly-milked milk out to allow the cream to rise to the top. This could take anywhere from 1 day in warm weather to 2 or 3 days in cooler weather. During this time, two things happen to the milk. Bacteria in the milk begin their process of converting lactose (a sugar, and therefore sweet) into lactose acid (which being an acid, is tart or sour.) In addition to changing the taste, this causes a slight curdling which thickens the milk and cream. And, the cream from this slightly-transformed milk rises to the top. This cream is skimmed off the top, and referred to as Clabbered Cream in English.. The milk left behind in the pail or dish is Clabbered Milk. It is thickened from the slight curdling that occured, and has a slightly sour, tangy taste. It is sour enough to react with baking soda to cause a leavening reaction in recipes, just as buttermilk would. Clabbered Milk can also be made into cottage cheese, or fed to livestock such as pigs. Creole Cream Cheese is made from Clabbered Milk. The clabbering process only works with unpasteurized milk. Pasteurized milk, if left out, only produces the disgusting, rank sour milk that we all know today.
The word "bonneyclabber" hung on in America in a few parts of New England, where it was sometimes pronounced "bonnyclapper". In any event, there it continued to mean sour, thick milk. In some places in Scotland, however, "bonneyclabber" later came to also mean a drink made from buttermilk and beer mixed together. In any event, "clabber" is probably not, at least in this context, a old word for "cupboard or pantry", as some sources say. Acknowlegements "Clabber Girl Baking Powder History. Clabber Girl Corporation, Terre Haute, Indiana. Retrieved July 2006 from http://www.clabbergirlmuseum.com/Clabber.php See Also:Baking Powder, Clabber Cream, Creole Cream CheeseOther entries for:MilkButtermilk, Clabbered Milk, Cream, Crème de Brebis, Evaporated Milk, Goat's Milk, Gold Top Milk, Kefir, Koumiss, Powdered Milk, Raw Milk, Whey, Yoghurt Other entries for:DairyButterfat, Butter, Cheese, Nondairy Topping |
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Loppered Milk