• @[email protected]OP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    510 months ago

    You put the butter in the bell part. The butter sticks. You then put some water in the crock and put the bell in the crock. The bell/butter displaces some water and it prevents air from getting to the butter.

    Imo it’s silly; there’s no real issue just leaving butter in a dish at room temp.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      12
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      Leaving butter out is definitely not a safe practice. Modern butter is not shelf stable and needs to be stored in the refrigerator.

      Old style butter, which had a large amount of salt as a preservative, was safe to leave out for long periods of time, but this is no longer true.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            710 months ago

            Not really. They were replying to it being unsafe. Sure, they did mention in the comment before that about leaving it in a dish, but a dish that covers butter without the water works too, just not as well as the water one, but better than out in the open. In my experience even out in the open isn’t bad in a few days like it says, closer to 1-2 weeks, especially if salted.

            • @jumperalex
              link
              English
              410 months ago

              Besides, who are these people not going through their butter fast enough to prevent it going rancid? SAVAGES! That’s Who!!!

      • @theragu40
        link
        110 months ago

        Meh.

        I’ve been leaving butter on the shelf for many, many years. And my mom before me and her mom before her. No issues.

        We don’t leave it uncovered.

        The longest a stick has sat in my house is probably a month. No noticeable issues.

        Maybe 2 months is where it turns rancid, I’ve never got there. But my point is that a blanket statement that butter left at room temp is unsafe is I am quite sure incorrect. Certainly it can’t be left out indefinitely, but it can be left out for weeks at a time with no ill effect.