The Amazing Power of Buttermilk: You’ll Never Go Back

There is something about the amazing power of buttermilk that is life-changing. When I say buttermilk, I mean the real thing.

For the sake of those of you who just need the recipe, here it is. No need to scroll or jump to it. If you’d like to keep reading my buttermilk thesis, it’s below the recipe. 😉

Let’s just say, if you have buttermilk or happen to have a dairy cow and just made your own fresh batch…you should try using it in this recipe. Trust me.

I don’t know about you, but I always turn everything into a completely whole wheat version sooner or later. I have found with this recipe that it is key for the structure that you substitute no more than half of the flour for whole wheat.  It requires the gluten concentration of regular flour for at least half the amount to ensure they don’t come out deflated.

buttermilk waffles with strawberries, butter and syrup

Wholesome Buttermilk Waffles

Ingredients

  • 1 t. Baking Soda
  • 2 t. Baking Powder
  • 11/2 cups All Purpose Flour
  • 1/2 cup Whole Wheat Flour
  • 1/4 t. Salt
  • 1/2 cup Sugar
  • 2 cups Buttermilk
  • 2 Eggs
  • 2 t. Vanilla Extract
  • 1/2 cup Butter (Melted)
  • 1 Lemon (Zested)

Instructions

  1. In a small bowl, combine all liquid ingredients, including the melted butter and zest.
  2. Using a larger bowl, whisk together all dry ingredients.
  3. Add liquids to dry ingredients and whisk to combine well.
  4. Batter will be thick.
  5. Preheat waffle iron.
  6. You can use pan spray or brush butter onto the iron before the first use but I find that a little goes a long way. I skip this step myself and find the waffles have a better outside texture for me.
  7. Pour 1/3 – 1/2 c. batter per waffle section.
  8. Cook until golden brown.

Notes

  • These are delicious as breakfast but I make up a batch and freeze some and refrigerate the rest to be eaten as a snack for my little one.
  • This recipe does very well frozen or fresh and a minute or two in a toaster crisps them up almost like they just came out of the waffle iron!

The left over milk from making butter is just not comparable to the teaspoon of vinegar I added to regular milk. Neither is Sour Milk the same thing as Buttermilk. Yogurt is not the equivalent of Sour Cream. There’s a reason we don’t use the same names.

cottage cheese on plates and a bowl of sour cream

I grew up using the life hack where you add vinegar to milk to make a buttermilk substitute. It works, sort of. At the end of the day it ends up being exactly that, a substitute. In a pinch, if you have to, it is better than just using regular milk, because you do need that touch of acidity. Most recipes calling for buttermilk are relying on it to interact with a leavening agent. The difference between the substitute and the real deal is the flavor. Vegetable oil will keep your eggs from sticking to the pan, but the more flavorful option is butter.

Just like butter is tastier than oil, buttermilk is just naturally more delicious than soured milk.

Now that you are all rolling your eyes at me for stating the obvious and preaching on the virtues of using actual buttermilk, I will move on to the point of my post.

Buttermilk rules.

I have been making pancakes and waffles for decades and while they have all been delicious enough, I have been either using plain milk or simply made soured milk to substitute for buttermilk because come on, it’s the same thing and it would be fine. Yeah, it would be fine. It was…fine. But it was never more than fine.

One day, I had bought actual buttermilk for my partner to use in something and he insisted it had to be the real thing. I rolled my eyes and brought it home. He used half of it and the rest sat in the fridge for a week while I considered it suspiciously and tried to think what I was going to do with the rest of it unless I just let it go bad. I was busy and forgot about it for 3 weeks. Surely it was spoiled now and I went to dump it down the sink, only to realize it smelled fine.

The thing about higher fat dairy is that it always lasts longer than lower fat products.

white graphing paper with hello may text

Whole milk takes longer to go sour than 1%. Yes, I did the experiment. On average, whole milk lasted 8.6 days longer than its lower fat counterpart. 😉 I’m sure there is science about it and one day I will read those articles. Regardless, I now had perfectly good buttermilk and it demanded to be used, having survived so long and so patiently in the fridge.

I resolved to make some waffles with it, because after all these years, and having tried countless recipes that called for the stuff, I had yet to actually use real buttermilk. The lack of the perfect texture of those experiments had been blamed on many things, including the waffle iron. Sir Waffle Iron, I do beg your pardon. It was not his fault at all. It wasn’t the fact that the quantity of sugar was wrong or that it didn’t have the perfect combination of leavening agents.

It turned out, I just needed to follow the actual recipe. What a concept.

Those waffles were the simplest recipe I’d ever found. I didn’t have to separate any eggs, there were no complicated mixing instructions and I even forgot to grease the waffle iron because the small one had been up all night and I was half insane from lack of sleep.

The best waffles I have ever eaten, hands down.

I even changed that recipe the next time I made it and doubled the sugar, forgot the melted butter and substituted half of the flour for whole wheat flour. I even added half a cup more buttermilk because that was all that I had left I didn’t feel like letting it die in the fridge. They still turned out amazing: crispy on the outside, chewy yet fluffy on the inside. They freeze perfectly and toast up for breakfast just like the world’s most delicious home-made Eggo. I can tell you the one thing I didn’t mess with, though.

Don’t substitute ANYthing for the buttermilk.

Add more if you like. Use less if you please. But whatever you do, don’t change it out for anything else.

I am now absolutely starving for some waffles, but I am out of buttermilk and I’m not wrestling my child back into his carseat again today. I also refuse to use a substitute, so I will just have to wait until tomorrow.

Lemon Cheesecake Squares

I love Lemon Cheesecake, but hate making it. Also, my mixer is currently making banshee noises and threatening to burn down the place, so today I thought I would try out my new food processor and turn my decadent recipe into an every day treat.

dessert square with crust, cheesecake and curd layers

Lemon Cheesecake Squares

Yield: 1 8x8 Square Pan

Ingredients

Crust

  • 2 pkgs. (about 2 c.) graham crackers
  • 1/2 c. butter, salted
  • 3 T. granulated sugar

Cheesecake

  • 1 1/2 pkgs. (12 oz. total) cream cheese
  • 1/2 c. granulated sugar
  • 1 1/2 T. all purpose flour
  • 1/2 c. sour cream
  • 1 1/2 T. lemon juice
  • 2 eggs
  • Zest of 1 lemon

Lemon Curd

  • 6 T. lemon juice
  • 2/3 c. granulated sugar
  • 5 T. butter, salted
  • 3 eggs
  • Zest of 1 lemon

Instructions

Preparation

  1. Set cream cheese on counter and allow to come to room temperature.
  2. Preheat oven to 325*.
  3. Zest and juice 2 lemons.
  4. Melt the 1/2 c. butter for the crust.

Crust Layer

  1. In food processor, pulverize graham crackers to fine crumbs.
  2. Add melted butter and sugar.
  3. Pulse to combine.
  4. Spray or line 8x8 pan with parchment.
  5. Press crumb mixture into the pan.
  6. Bake for 10 minutes.
  7. Remove from oven and allow to cool.

Cheesecake Layer

  1. Lower oven heat to 300*.
  2. In mixer with paddle attachment or in food processor, mix cream cheese until smooth.
  3. Add sugar, flour and sour cream and mix on low until smooth.
  4. Add the zest and lemon juice and mix to combine.
  5. Add eggs, one at a time and mix on low until smooth.
  6. Pour cheesecake mixture onto crumb crust and smooth out into corners.
  7. Bake 35-45 minutes.
  8. It should be set but still have a slight jiggle in the center.
  9. Remove from oven and allow to cool.

Curd Layer

  1. Combine zest, lemon juice, sugar, butter and eggs in saucepan over low heat or in a double boiler.
  2. Stir often with whisk until mixture begins to thicken.
  3. When curd has reached 160*F, remove from heat.
  4. Cool 5 minutes.
  5. Pour over cheesecake and refrigerate until firm.

Notes

  • The eggs in the curd used to be 6 yolks. I hate wasting egg whites, so you’re welcome. I’ve fixed it for both of us. It turned out perfect, don’t worry. 😉 If you like yours richer and don't mind using the egg whites elsewhere, be my guest!
  • For beautiful slices, run your knife under hot water before slicing.

This is the easiest ‘cheesecake’ I’ve ever made to date, and believe me, I’ve made many. You will be happy to note that food processors are just as, if not better than a mixer for creaming the cheese. I dumped, pulsed, baked and ate within an hour.

I might never make a regular cheesecake again, because let me tell you…I did this in an hour with frequent interruptions from an 8 month old child who is currently in the stage of climbing on top of everything. If you know how to baby proof the walls (from being scaled by a Spiderman wannabe), please drop me a line.