Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm French, and while I actually don't eat a lot of butter, there is nothing better tasting than *cultured* butter on fresh bread. This is what got me through the lockdown: home made fresh out of the oven sourdough with Normandie butter!
The baguette jambon beurre isn't the best known French sandwich for nothing. You get one at a boulangerie, then stroll along the banks of the Seine near Notre Dame, in late April or early May when the horse chestnuts are in bloom.
PP please explain "cultured butter", how is it different from the butter sold in the US? I want butter so badly right now
This just reminds me of my long-unsatisfied quest to find President salted butter in the US. And I mean the kind I used to get at Carrefour, not the one in Safeway. It was sold in a round, bell-like container with big flakes of sea salt. Giant had it for a time in their cheese section but I cannot find it anywhere now. Please help if you've seen it!
Anonymous wrote:Mustard on sandwich bread sans a butter layer first, is grotesque.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.nbclosangeles.com/the-scene/american-in-paris-says-its-weird-to-put-butter-on-a-sandwich-causing-european-uproar/3221282/
"....the influencer describes something the French do with their sandwiches that apparently Americans do not....."
I'm not French (actually Italian-born) and happen to love butter on my sandwiches - and hate mayo/mustard. Nothing better than a turkey, cheese, butter sandwich! Am I alone here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm French, and while I actually don't eat a lot of butter, there is nothing better tasting than *cultured* butter on fresh bread. This is what got me through the lockdown: home made fresh out of the oven sourdough with Normandie butter!
The baguette jambon beurre isn't the best known French sandwich for nothing. You get one at a boulangerie, then stroll along the banks of the Seine near Notre Dame, in late April or early May when the horse chestnuts are in bloom.
PP please explain "cultured butter", how is it different from the butter sold in the US? I want butter so badly right now
Well, the butter went to elite schools, participated in cotillion, has traveled extensively, and speaks several languages. Obviously.
Anonymous wrote:
I'm French, and while I actually don't eat a lot of butter, there is nothing better tasting than *cultured* butter on fresh bread. This is what got me through the lockdown: home made fresh out of the oven sourdough with Normandie butter!
The baguette jambon beurre isn't the best known French sandwich for nothing. You get one at a boulangerie, then stroll along the banks of the Seine near Notre Dame, in late April or early May when the horse chestnuts are in bloom.
Anonymous wrote:I moved to the US from western Europe roughly a thousand years ago.
But it's only very recently that I learned that most Americans don't put butter on their bread.
i remain shook.
Weirdos.
Everything feels unsettling and I question everything now.
Anonymous wrote:I don't like butter or mayo on my sandwiches, unless it's to cook a grilled cheese.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm French, and while I actually don't eat a lot of butter, there is nothing better tasting than *cultured* butter on fresh bread. This is what got me through the lockdown: home made fresh out of the oven sourdough with Normandie butter!
The baguette jambon beurre isn't the best known French sandwich for nothing. You get one at a boulangerie, then stroll along the banks of the Seine near Notre Dame, in late April or early May when the horse chestnuts are in bloom.
PP please explain "cultured butter", how is it different from the butter sold in the US? I want butter so badly right now