276°
Posted 20 hours ago

Echire Salted French Butter, 250g

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

The French love to start their day with some bread and salted butter. Their favourite lunch is often a Parisian sandwich. Also called a « jambon-beurre », this simple treat consists of a sliced baguette filled with ham and spread with butter. For dinner, it is common in France to serve fish with butter-sauce or mashed potatoes with hot butter. Many French butters are still made in accordance with the oldest culinary traditions. The production of Echiré butter in Poitou-Charentes, for instance, still includes the use of wooden butter churns ! These ancient tools give its delicate hazelnut flavour to this product, which holds a PDO (protected designation of origin) label. The milk used to produce Échiré butter comes from 66 farms, all within a 50 km circumference. The cows enjoy the same grass and climate. With Échiré butter the area of origin is so defined, its flavour is traceable and distinct. Échiré is produced with a huge amount of care and attention to detail, but the fact that it is from a small area in France comes across when you eat it. You can taste the difference. Skimming: the milk is separated into two components: the fat and the skimmed milk. The fat must be separated from the skimmed milk.

Do you enjoy our selection of French butters ? Feel free to browse through our complete catalogue. This list includes milk products, various cheeses and a wide array of French dairy products that will enchant your most demanding clients ! Source the tastiest unsalted butter and PDO butter here

Exclusive to Rowcliffe

Farmers have been making butter in Isigny-sur-Mer for 400 years. This cow’s milk butter, made in the Baie des Veys region of Normandy between Manche and Calvados, has also been awarded PDO status. The region’s lush valleys and temperate climate near the sea infuse the butter with a grassy, mineral flavor and pleasing hazelnut aftertaste. Well balanced between sweet and salty, Beurre d’Isigny is “ silky and supple.” It’s also a favorite among chefs because it has a long shelf life and remains stable during the cooking process. 3. Echiré It all sounds very scientific, but most of the world's best pastry chefs – in New York, Paris and London – agree and prefer baking with Echiré. It contains more butterfat than normal (84 per cent compared with 82 per cent) and a higher melting point. This makes it more plastic and malleable; this is especially good for delicacies such as croissants or puff pastry, which need rolling out several times. Echiré comes both salted and unsalted. (Incidentally, salt was first added to butter purely as a preservative, but now many people prefer a more seasoned taste.) Either way, it is pale in colour: the very light yellow of primrose petals. Its texture is also firmer than normal butter, but suppler and not as greasy. Many companies from all over the world were freely using our name to sell their butter. In 1984, a number of producers and processors set up a trade union to defend the producers and processors of Isigny-sur-Mer Butter and Cream. He prefers to buy his butter in massive slabs, because the less it is interfered with, the better it tastes. Butter should be kept in the fridge, he says. Storing it at room temperature may make it easier to spread, but just a few degrees' fluctuation will compromise the taste.

Its taste: Our butter has a creamy taste and a high iodine content, which comes from the proximity of the sea, its geological history and the type of soil, which is flooded by salt water in winter. Here are six of the fanciest French butters every gourmet cuisine connoisseur needs to try at least once. 1. Lesecure As a response to the ongoing climate crisis, producers of French butters have developed new eco friendly products. Organic butter requires the use of top-quality organic milk. This raw material is collected in eco conscious dairy farms where cows only eat fresh grass and non-GMO, pesticide-free fodder. After pasteurization, it is softly skimmed and seeded with natural lactic ferments. Organic butter contains no preservatives and no artificial food colouring. Use as is. This highly regarded butter is perfect for cooking, baking or even plainly spreading on your favorite bread. Its benefits for human health: Our milk has a high mineral salt content, particularly sodium, and high concentrations of micronutrients. These are substances that are essential for healthy and balanced growth. It is also a source of vitamin A, contributing to the growth of bones and teeth, and protects against infection.

Discover our sectoral platforms

Addition of lactic fermenting agents so that the Butter develops all of its flavours and specific texture.. The proof, as they say, is in the pudding. Or in my case the starter, with which I first ate Echiré at the Delaunay restaurant in London last year. The butter was served in the form of a slim pat alongside a freshly baked, raisin-studded roll. It was unexpectedly delicious, outshining even the bread. I realised that for me, butter had become just something to spread on toast or to cook with, instead of a food in its own right.

Churning: to transform the Cream into Butter. During this stage, repeated vigorous mixing isolates the fat globules and binds them together to form grains of butter. This butter is considered one of the best in the world. One Savuer writer admitted she loves it so much she’s had it “overnighted from a friend in Paris.” Bordier is a beurre de baratte, or butter produced using traditional French techniques including being “cultured, churned, then handled by two small wooden paddles.” Bordier butter is versatile, working overtime as a spread, an ingredient in baked goods, and as a browned base for pasta sauce. The milk is sourced from Brittany and Normandy, and Bordier butter is churned and kneaded by hand. The flavor is complex, encompassing salty, floral, earthy, nutty notes. One food writer perhaps put it best when he wrote on his blog, Churn Craft, that Bordier is “heavenly.” 5. Rodolphe Le Meunier Over the centuries, the way in which we make our Butter has changed very little. The cream is churned to form small grains of butter, which are washed with pure water and then kneaded until a smooth texture is obtained.Its colour: The presence of carotenes, precursors of vitamin A, in the lush grass of the region’s pastures, produces the natural buttercup colour of our butter. The fresh spring grass gives it a bright yellow colour and a softer texture. Depending on the season, PDO Isigny Butter will therefore not have the same colour, which is a sign of fine quality. This butter presents itself pale in colour: the very light yellow of primrose petals. Its texture is also firmer than normal butter, but suppler and not as greasy. butter is highly renowned internationally, so much so that many of the top bakeries, pâtisseries, and restaurants use this butter exclusively. There are even two shops in Japan, Maison du Beurre in Tokyo and Marché au Beurre in Osaka devoted to selling Échiré – and only Échiré. Its cult status ensures that the pure-butter croissants, made in-house, sell out before lunch.

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment