Recipe Finder

New! Find all your favorite Southern Living recipes on MyRecipes.com

Recipes
Tips from our Test Kitchen:
A Cut Above
Frozen Vegetables - From Our Kitchen
From Our Kitchen: 75 Top-Rated Cookie Recipes
From Our Kitchen: Grill Toppers
From Our Kitchen: Make a Signature Sauce
 



Blog: Eating My Words

White Barbecue Sauce
The color spectrum of barbecue sauce is rich and diverse—one reason why sampling different styles from all over the South is so much fun, and so delicious.


 
A Southern Secret Ingredient
We’re absolutely crazy about tart, creamy buttermilk. It’s our Test Kitchens’ favorite surprise ingredient.
By Donna Florio / Photography Jennifer Davick / Styling Buffy Hargett / Food Styling Angela Sellers
   
  Buttermilk Breakfast Cake with Buttermilk-Vanilla Glaze
   
  Fried Green Tomatoes

Recipes:
Strawberry-Buttermilk Sherbet
Buttermilk-Garlic Mashed Potatoes
Cornbread Stew
Basic Buttermilk Cornbread
Buttermilk Drop Biscuits
Fried Green Tomatoes
Herbed Beef Roast With Tomato Gravy
Tomato Gravy
Buttermilk Breakfast Cake
Buttermilk-Vanilla Glaze

View our user's Top 10 Five-star Buttermilk Recipes

It's probably the most misunderstood item in the dairy case. With flecks of butter punctuating its smooth texture, buttermilk as a beverage lacks a certain appeal. But as an ingredient, it's a Southern superstar. It enhances baked goods, adds richness to gravies, and offers a creamy base for salad dressings. Want light, tender biscuits or cake layers? Substitute buttermilk for some of the milk. Need a good soaking liquid for that chicken you're planning to fry or bake? Buttermilk not only boosts the flavor and tenderizes the meat, but it also helps the breading cling to the chicken.

Past generations crumbled cornbread into the tangy beverage as a light meal. While today we enjoy buttermilk in the cornbread, rather than the other way around, we still know a good thing when we taste it. Try these splendid recipes, and you'll want to adopt buttermilk as your own secret ingredient. But don't worry. We won't tell a soul.

A Not-so-Buttery Product
Though buttermilk seems richer and creamier than regular milk, it actually contains the same fat content as the whole, low-fat, and nonfat milks from which it is made. Originally, it was the liquid that remained after churning butter. Today's commercial buttermilk is made by adding lactic acid to pasteurized, homogenized milk, causing it to thicken and sour. (The process is similar to the one used to make sour cream and yogurt.) Some producers add a few flecks of butter for color and richness. The acid makes buttermilk a prized ingredient in baked goods—it tenderizes them and lends depth of flavor. It also makes this milk a long-lasting staple that will keep in the refrigerator for up to a week past its sell-by date.

"A Southern Secret" is from the May 2008 issue of Southern Living.




Advertisement