Nabal Avocado Nabali Baladi Olives Nabali Olives Nachos Nadine Potatoes Naeini Sheep Naeng Myun Noodles Naengmyeon Noodles Nafphlion Olives Nafplion Green Olives Nagaimo Nage -- À la Nahm Tahn Beep Nakiri Hocho Knives Nalta Jute Nam Katee Nam Phrom Nama Soba Nama Yuba Namagashi Namdaeng Name Nameko-oroshi Soba Nameko Mushrooms Nametake Mushrooms Nampa Potatoes Nan Nân-e barbari Nân-e lavâsh Nân-e sangak Nân-e tâftun Nanaimo Bars Nancy Lettuce Nanette -- À la Nanjing Black Rice Previous | Next | Cream© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced![]() Cream Cream is essentially butterfat suspended in the more watery milk around it. We think of Cream as being "heavier" than milk because mentally we think about what the fat content can do to us, but it is actually lighter than milk, which is why Cream will rise to the top. Cream can be separated from milk in two ways. The first is through letting gravity do its work. Cream, being lighter than milk, will rise to the top where it can be skimmed off by hand. (What happens is fat globules cluster together, pushing out the heavier water molecules, forming lighter clusters of Cream.) Obviously, this is too slow a process for commercial production. The second way, as brutal as it sounds, is by using centrifugal force. Whole milk is preheated to above 122 F (50 C), to loosen its elements up a bit. Then, it is fed down a tube into a whizzing separator bowl that rotates about 5,400 times a minute. The Cream gravitates towards the centre and the milk rises up the slides and out through holes. The Cream is then pasteurized, then rapidly cooled to about 40 F (4 or 5 C.) It may also be homogenized, sterilized and/or ultra-heat treated.
Cooking Tips
Substitutes
Nutrition Cream contains butterfat, and small amounts of lactose (a sugar in milk), minerals, vitamin and protein. Storage Do not freeze Coffee Cream, or Half and Half Cream. They will separate upon thawing and curdle when poured into hot coffee. You can freeze a higher-fat Cream, such as Whipping Cream. History In 1878, the Swedish inventor Gustav de Laval designed the first machine to separate Cream from milk by centrifugal force. Literature & Lore "Now the profits arising from Milk are chiefly three; viz Cream, Butter, and Cheese; the Cream is the very heart and strength of the Milk, which must be skimmed very cleanly: Cleanly, I say, for Cleanliness is such an ornament to a good Huswife, that if she want any part thereof, she loseth both that and all other good names whatsoever. Cream is not to be kept above two days in Summer, and not above four in the Winter, if you wil be alwayes provided with the best and sweetest Butter." -- Hannah Woolley. The Gentlewomans Companion. London. 1673. Language Notes Called "Uachder" in Scots Gaelic. Also called: Crème (French); Rahm, Sahne (German); Crema, Panna (Italian); Crema, Nata (Spanish); Nata de leite (Portuguese)
See Also:MilkOther entries for:CreamAerosol Cream, Chantilly Cream, Clabber Cream, Clotted Cream, Coffee Cream, Crema Agria, Crème Fraîche, Double Cream, Extra Thick Double Cream, Extra Thick Single Cream, Frozen Whip Topping, Half & Half Cream, Heavy Cream, Ice Cream, Light Whipping Cream, Non-Dairy Creamer, Single Cream, Sour Cream, Whipping Cream Other entries for:MilkButtermilk, Clabbered Milk, 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 Related RecipesBacon and Potato Pie, Baked Leeks with Parmesan and Cream, Braised Pork Chops, Bacon and Cabbage, Butterscotch Beans, Butterscotch Sauce, Cheat's Trifle, Delmonico Potatoes (1), Fish and Shrimp Pie, Frozen Lime Pie, Potato and Artichoke Pie, Scalloped Parsnips and Jerusalem Artichokes |
|


