Did you know you can make your own homemade butter in a KitchenAid mixer or food processor?!! It is fun & easy and tastes SO much better than the store bought stuff!
Okay, so maybe I just tend to get overly excited about butter in general, but I am pretty sure that making homemade butter in my Kitchen-Aid is both the coolest and the most domestic thing I’ve ever done. Just when I didn’t think it was possible to love an appliance even more….I mean really, what’s better than homemade butter? Mmmmmmmm…..butter……
But I digress.
It was seriously so easy that I see a lot more butter making in our future. Since this was technically a homeschool activity (and had no selfish motivations whatsoever!), we tried to follow the instructions from Little House in the Big Woods as closely as we could. Of course considering that we didn’t have a cow or a real butter churn, or even a wooden bowl and paddle, we did a lot of improvising.
We used a quart of heavy cream, which made approximately a pound of butter and about 2 and 1/2 cups of buttermilk. I paid $5.99 for the cream at Publix, which was a lot, but next time I’d probably stock up at Sam’s Club, where it is just under $3 a quart. I’ve heard Aldi has super cheap cream as well. We also grated a carrot to add yellow coloring because that is the way Ma Ingalls did it, but next time I would probably skip that step!
How to Make Homemade Butter
Here is what you need:
1 carrot (optional) 1/4 c. milk (optional) 1 quart heavy cream 3/4 teaspoon salt
Step 1 (optional): Peel & finely grate a carrot. Heat in small saucepan with 1/4 cup milk until milk is bubbly. Use a clean cheesecloth to strain orange-colored milk into the bowl of your stand mixer. Discard shredded carrot.
Step 2: Pour cream into bowl of stand mixer fitted with paddle attachment. Add salt. Cover mixer with a towel–trust me on this one, it will be messy! Turn mixer on high.
Step 3: Continue mixing, checking on mixture frequently. It will first turn to whipped cream, then begin to get grainy and separate into butter and buttermilk, and the splashing will get much worse. The butter is ready when it sticks in a clump to the paddle.
Step 4: Place a colander over a bowl, then strain the buttermilk off of the butter. (For a GREAT recipe using buttermilk, try these super yummy refrigerator raisin bran muffins–they are our FAVORITE!)
Step 5: Using your hands or a spatula, press out excess buttermilk under cold running water until water runs clear. Shape into stick or ball. Butter will keep covered in refrigerator for up to 4 weeks. Serve with bread and enjoy!
Note: While we were making our main batch of butter in the Kitchen-Aid, we also made a very small amount of butter by placing the cream in a small jar and taking turns shaking it. This was a great way to show the kids how much work it is to make butter by hand! Our shaken butter didn’t turn out quite as firm, probably because we didn’t shake it long or hard enough–my 3 and 6 year old didn’t have a lot of stamina, but older kids would probably do a little better!

HOMEMADE BUTTER
Ingredients
- 1 carrot optional
- 1/4 c. milk optional
- 1 quart heavy cream
- 3/4 teaspoon salt
Instructions
- (OPTIONAL) Peel & finely grate a carrot. Heat in small saucepan with 1/4 cup milk until milk is bubbly. Use a clean cheesecloth to strain orange-colored milk into the bowl of your stand mixer. Discard shredded carrot.
- Pour cream into bowl of stand mixer fitted with paddle attachment. Add salt. Cover mixer with a towel–trust me on this one, it will be messy! Turn mixer on high.
- Continue mixing, checking on mixture frequently. It will first turn to whipped cream, then begin to get grainy and separate into butter and buttermilk, and the splashing will get much worse. The butter is ready when it sticks in a clump to the paddle.
Place a colander over a bowl, then strain the buttermilk off of the butter.
Using your hands or a spatula, press out excess buttermilk under cold running water until water runs clear. Shape into stick or ball. Serve with bread and enjoy!
Recipe Notes
Preparation time: 30 minutes. Number of servings (yield): Approximately 1 pound of butter + 2 1/2 cups of buttermilk. Butter will keep covered in refrigerator for up to 4 weeks.
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Thank you so much for posting this! We have one of those antique butter churns that is a square one-gallon glass jar with a wooden paddle inside, operated by a crank turned by hand. We love the butter we make with it but I’ve had surgery on both shoulders recently. I have a batch of cream inmy KitchenAid RIGHT NOW because of your post! It never occurred to me that my KA could do this! God bless you and your beautiful family. Ignore the critics, my dear, and keep on sharing. There will always be someone who will appreciate what you have to say. 🙂
Has anyone tried pressure canning this butter? I can butter by the pound. But love them homemade so much more. Would love to combine them two evils!
We live in South Africa, and make all the butter we use.
We simply buy heavy cream (at a special Farm Shop) and whip it in our Kenwood Mixer at speed 4. No splashing or mess. It takes about 15 to 20 minutes if the cream is cold from the refrigerator, and less time if it is room temperature.
We then save the first straining of buttermilk, and use it in bread or muffin making. When we wash the butter in fresh cold water the second and third times we throw away the water afterwards. The third straining is usually clear water.
We mash the butter, using a potato masher, in the cold water to ‘wash’ out all the remaining buttermilk. We then add 1/2 a teaspoon of pink Himalayan salt, shape it into 250ml blocks, and freeze. Simply delicious, and has no ‘additives’.
One litre of this special farm heavy cream costs R30.00 and yields +500grams of butter.
In the normal stores here, 500g of commercial butter costs from R49.99 to about R59.99 or more. Imported butters cost so much that we never purchase them. (We only once were able to buy commercial butter at R29.99 and that was on a very deep and never repeated special)
This was so cool! Just made some butter, and she wasn’t kidding about the messiness!!! Even with the cover on my Kitchenaid mixer, I needed to put a towel on. It was a quick and easy experiment that I had my 17-year-old and his girlfriend help me with!!!
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