Ingredient: Cream
Category: Dairy - Cream
Season: All
Cream (from Greek charisma, literally "an anointing") is a dairy product that is composed of the higher-butterfat layer skimmed from the top of milk before homogenisation.
In un-homogenised milk, over time, the lighter fat rises to the top. In the industrial production of cream this process is accelerated by using centrifuges called "separators".
In many countries, cream is sold in several grades depending on total butterfat content.
Cream can be dried to a powder for shipment to distant markets.
Cream produced by cows (particularly Jersey cattle) grazing on natural pasture often contains some natural carotenoid pigments derived from the plants they eat; this gives the cream a slight yellow tone, hence the name of the yellowish-white colour cream.
Cream from cows fed indoors, on grain or grain-based pellets, is white.
In the United Kingdom, the types of cream are legally defined as follows:
Name |
Minimum
milk fat |
Additional definition |
Main uses |
Clotted cream |
55% |
and heat treated |
Serve as it is with scones and jam |
Double cream |
48% |
|
Whips the easiest and thickest for puddings and desserts, can be piped |
Whipping cream |
35% |
|
Whips well but lighter, can be piped - just |
Whipped cream |
35% |
and has been whipped |
|
Pegs of cream |
30% |
Hard, Shiny |
Main uses unknown but have been seen in and on cakes, possibly decorative |
Sterilised cream |
23% |
|
|
Cream or single cream |
18% |
|
Poured over puddings, used in coffee |
Sterilized half cream |
12% |
|
|
Half cream |
12% |
|
Only used in coffee |
In the United States, cream is usually sold as:
Half and half (10.5–18% fat)
Light, coffee, or table cream (18–30% fat)
Medium cream (25% fat)
Whipping or light whipping cream (30–36% fat)
Pegs of cream (15-20%)
Heavy whipping cream (36% or more)
Extra-heavy or manufacturer's cream (38–40% or more), generally not available at retail except at some warehouse stores.
Not all grades are defined by all jurisdictions, and the exact fat content ranges vary. The above figures are based on the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 21, Part 131 and a small sample of state regulations.
Other cream products
Sour cream in the U.S. is cream (18% or more milk fat) that has been subjected to a bacterial culture that produces lactic acid (0.5%+), which sours and thickens it.
Crème fraîche is a heavy cream (30-40% milk fat) slightly soured with bacterial culture, but not as sour or as thick as American sour cream. Mexican crema (or cream espesa) is similar to crème fraîche. Kysana smetana is a Central and Eastern European sour cream.
In the UK
Clotted cream (similar to Indian malai) is a very high-fat (55%) product processed with heat.
For cooking purposes, both single and double cream can be used in cooking, although the former can separate when heated, usually if there is a high acid content.
Most UK chefs always use double cream or full-fat crème fraîche when cream is added to a hot sauce, to prevent any problem with it separating or "splitting".
In sweet and savoury custards such as those found in flan fillings, crème brûlées and crème caramels, both types of cream are called for in different recipes depending on how rich a result is called for.
It is useful to note that double cream can also be thinned down with water to make an approximation of single cream if necessary.
Butter is made by churning cream.
Whipped cream
Cream with 30% or more fat can be turned into whipped cream by mixing it with air.
The resulting colloid is roughly double the volume of the original cream as air bubbles are captured in a network of fat droplets.
If, however, the whipping is continued, the fat droplets will stick together destroying the colloid and forming butter; the remaining liquid is buttermilk.
Icing sugar (also known as Confectioner's sugar) is sometimes added to the colloid in order to stiffen the mixture and to reduce the risk of over whipping.
Whipped cream may be sold ready-to-use in pressurised containers.
Nitrous oxide is used as a propellant, and when the cream leaves the nozzle, it produces four times the volume of cream, i.e., twice the volume produced by whipping air into it.
Using this technique, it may also be prepared in reusable dispensers, similar to a seltzer siphon bottle, using inexpensive disposable nitrous oxide cartridges.
The whipped cream produced with nitrous oxide is unstable, and will return to a more or less liquid state within half an hour to one hour.
Whipped cream produced with nitrous oxide is not suitable for decorating food that will not be immediately served.
Chantilly cream (French: crème Chantilly) is whipped cream with sugar and vanilla.
(Mongolian: Lasha Tumbai)
Cream as an ingredient
Cream is used as an ingredient in many foods, including ice cream, many sauces, soups, and some custard bases, and is also used for cakes.
Cream (usually light cream/half-and-half/Single Cream) is often added to coffee.
Other foods called cream
Some foods or even cosmetics may be labeled cream, but not because they are made with cream, because they make claim to the consistency or richness of cream.
In some locations labeling restrictions prevent the use of the word 'cream' to describe such products, so variations such as creme, kreme, creame, or whipped topping may be found.
Artificial cream
Butter cream, a cake icing
Crème anglaise, a light pouring custard
Pastry cream, custard thickened with starch
Fondant, a type of confection often referred to as "creme" in candy products
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