How to Make Fresh Homemade Butter at Home

Here are simple tips and tricks for making the best, easiest homemade butter. Spoiler: you only need one ingredient.

smudge of butter melting into slice of toast on chopping board

Homemade Butter

I know the question: Why make your own butter? For me there are three clear reasons:

  • Cheaper – Butter prices keep rising. The main ingredient for homemade butter is usually less expensive.
  • Easy – It really is simple to do at home.
  • Satisfying – Turning cream into butter feels rewarding and gives you control over flavor and texture.

The Magic Ingredient

The only essential ingredient is cream: Heavy Cream (US) or Double Cream (UK). You’ll also want some ice or very cold water and fine salt if you prefer salted butter.

What you’ll need

There are several common tools you can use; all work the same way. Choose whichever is most convenient:

  • Hand mixer (my go-to)
  • Stand mixer
  • Food processor
  • Mason jar (for shaking by hand)

All methods rely on whipping the cream until the fat separates from the liquid.

overhead shot of butter in small dish with knife resting on it

How to make Butter

Whip cold cream past stiff peaks and beyond whipped cream. Keep mixing until the mixture breaks and the fat separates into solid butter and liquid buttermilk. At that point you’ll have butter solids and a pale liquid buttermilk.

Don’t waste the buttermilk

The separated buttermilk is useful: save it for baking, marinating meats, or making dressings and dips. It’s a handy byproduct, so store it in a sealed container in the fridge for a few days.

How to make butter - 6 step by step photos

How to remove buttermilk from butter

After the cream has separated, pour off the buttermilk into a bowl. Use a spatula to press the butter against the bowl to squeeze out the remaining liquid.

Ice water rinse

Rinse the butter with ice water (or very cold water) to remove residual buttermilk. Add cold water, gently mix and press the butter to expel liquid, then drain. Repeat until the water runs clear. Thorough rinsing helps the butter keep longer.

Storage

Pack the butter tightly and refrigerate. It can also be frozen and thawed in the fridge.

Shelf life

If you’ve removed all the buttermilk, homemade butter will keep for about 3–4 weeks in the fridge. If some buttermilk remains, it will spoil sooner, so take care to wash and press the butter well.

How to make butter - 4 step by step photos

How to use homemade butter

Spread it on toast, use on grilled cheese or sandwiches, or flavor it by stirring in fresh herbs, garlic, or honey to make garlic or honey butter. Salt can be added to taste.

butter in a small blue dish with knife resting on it

How to make Butter (Full Recipe)

smudge of butter melting into slice of toast on chopping board

Homemade Butter

Tips and tricks for the easiest homemade butter — you only need one ingredient.
Course: Condiment
Cuisine: Universal
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Total Time: 15 minutes
Servings: 1 cup
Calories per serving: 103 kcal
Author: Chris
Cost per serving: £1 / $1

Equipment

  • Spatula
  • Stand mixer or hand mixer
  • Large bowl
  • Food processor or mason jar (optional)

Ingredients

  • 2 cups / 500ml Cold Heavy Cream (US) or Double Cream (UK)
  • Fine salt, to taste (optional)
  • Ice water, as needed (about 1 cup)

Instructions

Hand Mixer

  1. In a large bowl, whip cold cream until stiff peaks form and then continue until the mixture breaks into small lumps and liquid. When it separates, use a spatula to press and remove the buttermilk. Pour in ice water and press again, repeating until the water runs clear. Season with salt if desired and store.

Mason Jar

  1. Pour cream into a mason jar, seal tightly and shake vigorously until the butter separates. Pour off the buttermilk, transfer the solids to a bowl, rinse with ice water and press out remaining liquid. Season and store.

Stand Mixer

  1. Whip cream with the whisk attachment on low to medium speed past stiff peaks until it separates. Switch to the paddle if desired, pour off buttermilk, rinse with ice water and press out liquid. Season and store.

Food Processor

  1. Process cream until it separates into butter and buttermilk. Pour off the buttermilk, transfer solids to a bowl, rinse with ice water and press out all liquid. Season and store.

Notes

a) Cream — Use cold heavy/double cream with high fat content. Higher fat yields more butter. Milk or non-dairy alternatives will not work.

b) Storage — Keeps in the fridge for up to one month if all buttermilk is removed. Any remaining buttermilk shortens shelf life.

c) Variations — Stir in fresh herbs, garlic, or honey to make flavored butter.

d) Buttermilk — Save for baking, marinades, dressings or dips. From 2 cups of cream you’ll get about 1 cup of buttermilk. Store it sealed in the fridge for 2–3 days.

e) Calories — Nutrition is based on 2 cups heavy cream and includes buttermilk where noted.

Quick Demo

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
Homemade Butter
Amount Per Serving
Calories 103
Fat 11.01g (17%)
Saturated Fat 6.85g (43%)
Cholesterol 41mg (14%)
Sodium 11mg
Carbohydrates 0.83g
Protein 0.61g
Vitamin A 437IU (9%)
Calcium 19mg (2%)
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
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