I have seen recipes over the years that call for, among other things, heavy cream. I never know what to buy. There are no containers in the dairy section marked "heavy cream". I've seen whipping cream (which my mom used to buy) and "table cream", and half-and-half of course. But what the hell do I buy when the recipe says "heavy cream"?
Shara_Lunison has proposed that we make butterbeer while the girls are here over Thanksgiving weekend, and her recipe calls for the stuff, and I promised her I'd get some. I've got 'til Wednesday night.
Thanks...
EZ Board Survivor
"Dreaming isn't good for you unless you do the things it tells you to." -- Three Dog Night (via the GI)
If you can't find a product with that name, use the nutrition facts label to find the cream that most resembles the one at the link above.
Tangent -- My home version of butter-beer is simply regular root beer (I use A&W) that has been spiked with a little bit of Butterscotch Schapps. It's swell!
Heavy cream means that the butterfat content is in excess of 36%. Basically, what I advise you do (if your stores do not have anything labeled heavy cream and there is no explicit fat percentage listed) is to buy the whipping cream with the highest fat content based on comparing the nutrition labels.
Even if you do not actually get a cream with a 36%+ fat content, you will have done your diligent best.
Love prevails.
~ Tracie Mckinney-Hammon
Change is not a process for the impatient.
~ Barbara Reinhold
Just used some to make an omlette this morning. It adds a creamy smoothness to the eggs.
The catholic church is the largest pro-pedophillia group in the world, and every member of it is guilty of supporting the rape of children, the ensuing protection of the rapists, and the continuing suffering of the victims.
*drool* I love real whipping cream. (that is all.)
"People without hope not only don't write novels, but what is more to the point, they don't read them.
They don't take long looks at anything, because they lack the courage.
The way to despair is to refuse to have any kind of experience, and the novel, of course, is a way to have experience."
-Flannery O'Connor
"In spite of much that militates against quietness there are people who still read books. They are the people who keep me going."
-Elisabeth Elliot, Preface, "A Chance to Die: The Life and Legacy of Amy Carmichael"