Love, love, love my chimney starter.
I cam from a butter-in-the-fridge family, so I kept the butter in the fridge. Then I married a woman from a butter-on-the-counter family. I'll let you guess where we keep our butter now.
Love, love, love my chimney starter.
I cam from a butter-in-the-fridge family, so I kept the butter in the fridge. Then I married a woman from a butter-on-the-counter family. I'll let you guess where we keep our butter now.
I keep some butter on the counter and the rest in the fridge. If the butter is for cooking, I grab the fridge butter. If it is to be spread on bread or put on my Blueberry Eggo waffles, then I get it from the counter. I don't keep much on the counter as I don't use that much butter and it does go bad after awhile...
Does your sister-in-law store the butter next to used tooth brushed, or behind the cat's litter box? Seriously, I don't see the big deal. Butter existed long before refrigeration and we seemed to have made it this far without any serious incidences. Maybe the salt in the butter helps to preserver it.
Meat is a tad bit sketchier than butter. I mean, I've never heard of a case of salmonella or trichinosis related to rancid butter so I take a little more caution with meat. However, I have no qualms with letting raw meat sit out for a few hours as long as it's covered. In fact, I usually bring my meat up to room temperature before grilling.
Either way, your stomach rules!
I guess no one here goes to a Williams-Sonoma or Crate & Barrel very often.
Get yourself a butter bell. Room temperature butter stays good for weeks w/o a refrigerator.
Hey now, gas grills aren't all bad. Since my better half doesn't like the idea of a smoker on our deck, I've found the gas grill works well as a substitute in certain situations. It's easy to maintain a constant low temp for indirect heat slow cooking of ribs, roasts and the like. Throw a smoker box full of wood over one of the burners and you're good to go.
Mine comes in a spray bottle. So easy for a slice of cinnamon toast, or corn on the cob. I just can't believe it's not butter.
One stick of butter in a butter dish on the counter, the rest of the box in the fridge, and any extra boxes in the freezer. I don't use butter a ton, so I occassionally have to toss the last tablespoon or so from the butter dish and start over with a new stick.
I keep one stick out on the counter in a butter dish, just like the OP. The rest is in the fridge.
When we use up the one on the counter, we pull another stick out of the fridge and put it into the butter dish on the counter. We wash the butter dish by hand between sticks of butter. Never gotten sick from this. Ever. Butter spreads easily and life is good.
It seems that the difference has to do with the way the eggs are processed before they are sold:
https://www.organicvalley.coop/blog/...rigerate-eggs/
"It turns out that, here in America, eggs are refrigerated because the USDA requires eggs sold for consumption to be washed, processed, and then refrigerated before they come anywhere near a store’s shelves. On the other hand, most European and Asian countries have reached the opposite conclusion, requiring that table eggs not be wet-washed, and also not refrigerated."
The Section 15 household has had this debate, and we finally realized that it was both regional and technical.