Is sour cream in olde recipes the same as sour cream today? [duplicate]

Is sour cream in olde recipes the same as sour cream today? [duplicate] - Composition on bowl with delicious whipped cream near mixer

I have a really old cookbook (about 1890) that calls for soured cream or sour cream in some recipes. Is this the same as the stuff you get in a tub at the store or is it like sour milk where you put vinegar in say, heavy cream??



Best Answer

In a cookbook that old, the sour cream referenced is probably a home-fermented variety, used as a preservation method in the days before widespread home refrigeration. You can still do this with the appropriate bacterial cultures, but most of us now buy our sour cream at the store instead. That product is similar, but made in much larger batches with a highly standardized, refined bacterial culture, producing a product with a predictable sourness and texture. Home-cultured versions are more variable, but they use similar processes on a much smaller scale.

Whether you want to call this the "same" is partly a linguistic distinction that depends on how much you want to consider the differences in scale and equipment between pre-refrigeration and modern methods.

In contrast, the addition of something sour to cream is really a substitute, used when you don't have a proper sour cream available. A cook back in the 1890s could use the same substitution then as we might today. But the production of sour cream (and all sorts of fermented milk products, such as yogurt and kefir) is much older than that, and there would have been some variety of "traditional" sour cream available, though not universally or year-round in the days before mechanized food distribution systems.




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Is all sour cream the same?

Regular Sour Cream is made from light cream and contains no less than 18 percent milkfat. Reduced-Fat Sour Cream is made from half-and-half and must contain at least 25 percent less milkfat than regular sour cream, though many on the market contain 40 percent less.

When recipe calls for sour cream What can I substitute?

There are several good dairy options for replacing sour cream, including Greek yogurt, cottage cheese, cr\xe8me fra\xeeche and buttermilk.
  • Greek Yogurt. Greek yogurt makes an excellent stand-in for sour cream. ...
  • Cottage Cheese. This cheese has a rich history. ...
  • Cr\xe8me Fra\xeeche. Cr\xe8me fra\xeeche literally means fresh cream. ...
  • Buttermilk.


Is there an imitation sour cream?

Tofutti Imitation Sour Cream Milk Free - 12 Oz - Albertsons.

Is soured cream the same as sour cream?

Sour cream (in North American English, Australian English and New Zealand English) or soured cream (British English) is a dairy product obtained by fermenting regular cream with certain kinds of lactic acid bacteria.



Panna acida: ricette veloci (sour cream recipe)




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