SC - Devonshire cream or clotted cream
Helen
helen at directlink.net
Fri Sep 10 23:51:09 PDT 1999
clotted cream
This specialty of Devonshire, England (which
is why
it's also known as Devonshire or Devon
cream ) is
made by gently heating rich, unpasteurized
milk until a
semisolid layer of cream forms on the
surface. After
cooling, the thickened cream is removed.
Clotted
cream can be spread on bread or spooned atop
fresh
fruit or desserts. The traditional English
"cream tea"
consists of clotted cream and jam served
with SCONES
and tea. Clotted cream can be refrigerated,
tightly
covered, for up to 4 days.
I have been baking scones and so that is why I wanted it. For scones and
fruit. That is all I know. I made some crème fraîche the other day from heavy
cream and buttermilk for a cake icing (with candied lemon peels and powder
sugar) that turned out really good on blueberries too. I was scared leaving
cream out over night in the summer, but it was fine and did just what it was
supposed to. I have seen crème fraîche added to a meat dish like you would sour
cream.
http://food.epicurious.com/s97is.vts?action=filtersearch&filter=recipe-filter.hts&collection=Recipes&ResultTemplate=recipe-results.hts&keyword=creme+fraiche
Hope this helps,
Helen
Stefan li Rous wrote:
> I saw some devonshire cream in one of my grocery stores in the past few
> weeks. I know we have talked about it here on this list before. Since it
> was somewhat expensive and I wasn't sure what I would/could do with it,
> I didn't buy it. Why would I want to get this and what would be a good
> way to try it? How do you that eat this, eat it?
>
> Thanks.
> Stefan
> --
============================================================================
To be removed from the SCA-Cooks mailing list, please send a message to
Majordomo at Ansteorra.ORG with the message body of "unsubscribe SCA-Cooks".
============================================================================
More information about the Sca-cooks
mailing list