Can one use butter to replace cream or milk in drinks?
While many liquids exist that serve as an alternate to milk for the lactose intolerant, I'm wondering to what extent can butter melted and mixed with water serve as a milk substitute, even if an imperfect one. Specifically I'm considering drinks, such as coffee, hot chocolate. Drinks that often don't require cream of milk but which personal preferences often include adding some or replacing water with it.
If I'm out of almond milk or non-lactose creams for my coffee, would mixing in a little butter make it creamier?
If I'm making hot chocolate and want it creamier than when made with just water, would a little butter help?
I've read questions on here that there is limited success mixing buttermilk and butter to get cream but it doesn't work for all uses, but that seemed to be focused on baking and whipping cream and not drinks.
Best Answer
No, it won't help you at all. Butter won't mix with any drink short of vla*. You will end up with a cup of coffee with a puddle of greasy melted butter swimming on top, or a chunk of butter if you are using iced coffee.
I've read questions on here that there is limited success mixing buttermilk and butter to get cream
The only question I have seen here which claims successful mixing uses milk (not buttermilk) and butter, emulsified with a vintage hand-operated device. If you had the device, there would still be two big problems left:
- it is made for milk + butter, not water + butter
- having the emulsion be stable under heating is quite a requirement - after all, even real cream separates in coffee if it has been standing around several days (if yours doesn't, it probably has added carrageenan).
And if you find out that it works nevertheless - are you really prepared to search for that kind of device on second-hand markets, have it take up space in your kitchen cabinets, and then, just when you are frustrated because your morning coffee is brewed but you have no cream, spend half an hour cranking?
If I were you, I would store a few sachets of powdered non-dairy creamer.
* I am now expecting a number of comments listing drinks which will mix with butter after all. My hunch is that none of them will be the kind of drink to which people add milk after serving.
Pictures about "Can one use butter to replace cream or milk in drinks?"
Can butter be used as a milk substitute?
Use 1 cup of water and 1-1/2 teaspoons of butter for every 1 cup of milk called for in the recipe. The extra butter will help your baked goods stay moist.Can butter be used as creamer?
Skip the creamer with coffee tomorrow morning and try a different kind of dairy product: butter. Not just any type of butter though. We're talking about adding one tablespoon of grass-fed unsalted butter, then whipping it up into a frothy latte-like beverage.Can you use butter instead of milk in tea?
Butter only has trace amounts of milk protein, meaning that it won't interfere with your antioxidant absorption. Adding butter to your tea or coffee might actually increase the antioxidant benefits, since it's well known that fats help your body absorb fat-soluble antioxidants, as I've discussed in this article.Can you use butter and coffee instead of milk?
Butter. Putting a slab of unsalted butter in your coffee sounds gross to the uninitiated, but there's a whole group of people who swear by it. It's been popularized over the last few years by Dave Asprey, who calls it Bulletproof coffee.🔵 Truth About Buttermilk - What Is It? How To Substitute?
More answers regarding can one use butter to replace cream or milk in drinks?
Answer 2
I certainly have no first hand knowledge of this, but I have read that the people in Tibet put yak butter in their tea.
Also it looks like someone else has come up with your idea (cow's butter in coffee):see
https://ilovebuttercoffee.com/
!
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Chevanon Photography, Jill Wellington, Adonyi Gábor, Kelly L