Making and Canning Ghee (Clarified Butter) - Complete Walkthrough & Instructions

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  • čas přidán 7. 06. 2024
  • Butter is delicious, but you have to refrigerate or freeze it. But turn it into ghee, and you can store it on the shelf! In this video, we're making a big batch of ghee from the 8 pounds of butter I made awhile back, and then we're going to process it in the pressure canner. I'll go through every single step of the method I use to end up with several pints of clarified butter that's ready for the pantry.
    Disclaimer: While canning butter and other dairy products is not recommended by the USDA, many people choose to do it anyway. This video is not a recommendation or endorsement of canning ghee, but merely a depiction of how I personally do it. As with all home canning, it is done at your own risk, and it is up to you to ensure that it is done safely.
    ------------------------------
    Stuff used in this video:
    Granite Ware Pressure Canner
    amzn.to/2I9CIX4
    6-Piece Canning Tool Set
    amzn.to/2pLrzDR
    ------------------------------
    00:00 - Intro
    01:29 - What We're Using
    02:40 - Melting the Butter
    03:43 - Simmering
    04:24 - Baking the Jars
    05:21 - Preparing Pressuer Canner
    06:40 - Skimming the Foam
    08:06 - Cooking Completed
    08:56 - Filtering the Ghee
    10:04 - Filling Jars
    11:07 - Headspace & De-bubbling
    12:07 - Lids & Rings
    13:51 - Loading Canner
    14:39 - Venting
    15:40 - Processing
    16:39 - Finished Jars
    18:01 - Solidified Ghee
    18:33 - Conclusion
    ------------------------------
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Komentáře • 33

  • @karenenss5913
    @karenenss5913 Před 11 měsíci +6

    Dampen your cloth with vinegar to wipe your rims. It will cut the oil without altering the flavour.

  • @GeorgiasGarden
    @GeorgiasGarden Před rokem +2

    Excellent instructional video!! You can extend the hard solid shortenings and even oil in the fridge. I put them in the extra fridge. Lard freezes too. Just defrost in the refrigerator. My grandmother and mom canned ghee all the time. Love the trivet idea.

  • @averagejoesmiling456
    @averagejoesmiling456 Před rokem +2

    Fantastic instruction, Great Lakes! This is an easier process than what I had thought it would be. Thanks and God bless!

    • @Hoosurgirl
      @Hoosurgirl Před 10 měsíci +1

      Another great presentation, thank you

  • @o0oCircleso0o
    @o0oCircleso0o Před 4 měsíci +1

    Super informative! Great video.

  • @lifeisgood-victoria796

    I use the oven to melt the butter. I usually takes 2-3 hours at 250F. The solids go to the bottom. Use cloth damped with vinegar to clean the rims. Cheese cloth to strain it and then I can it for 90 minutes.

  • @ahhotep8
    @ahhotep8 Před rokem +2

    This was a great instructional video. I didn't know it should be canned. Thanks!

    • @bryanandjamie2032
      @bryanandjamie2032 Před 2 měsíci +2

      This is a preference based decision and not necessary. Its shelf stable once th esolids are strained and water has been simmered out.

    • @ahhotep8
      @ahhotep8 Před 2 měsíci

      @@bryanandjamie2032 Thank you for the information.

  • @andrenabhan2186
    @andrenabhan2186 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Good job

  • @kathyshaw2870
    @kathyshaw2870 Před 7 měsíci +2

    I do it in a crockpot and it works great! I cook it till all the melted butter fats are on top and the solids drop to the bottom, and I can just pour off the ghee and in a container and pour the milk solids into a different container. I always use unsalted, you can add salt, (good salt) later when you use it. I don't can the ghee, because its self-stable. But that is me.

    • @GreatLakesPrepping
      @GreatLakesPrepping  Před 7 měsíci +1

      Interesting method, but I feel the need to mention that ghee being shelf-stable doesn't make it inherently safe to store at room temperature (if that's what we're talking about). It's not the ghee; it's all the stuff that will grow in your ghee if it is not heat-treated and stored in an oxygen-free, airtight container (like a mason jar). I'm sure it's ok for awhile (in the same way it's ok to leave butter in a dish on the counter for a few days), and maybe you're not talking about keeping it for months or years. But for anyone else reading this, I do not recommend trying to store ghee at room temperature without canning.

  • @Gusterdogsmom
    @Gusterdogsmom Před rokem +1

    I love ghee! I have lots of ghee on my shelves. Another great video.

  • @rachelh9228
    @rachelh9228 Před 7 měsíci

    I've melted butter in the oven, worked great

  • @ahhotep8
    @ahhotep8 Před rokem

    What brand of lids do you use?

  • @karenenss5913
    @karenenss5913 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I usually use salted butter to make my ghee. The flavour is different than with unsalted butter but the salt precipitates out with the milk solids. Don’t worry either way. Other than burning it, it’s hard to make butter not taste good. One hint. I use a splatter screen over my pan.

  • @selfhealherbs13ms
    @selfhealherbs13ms Před měsícem

    Are you getting tiny drops of water around the rim with the lids? I'm just wondering🤔

  • @matthewmcnabb2043
    @matthewmcnabb2043 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Should have dried the lids off before putting them on the jars. Ither than that, perfect.

  • @99999me1
    @99999me1 Před 5 měsíci

    I make ghee and put it in the frindge and I use it all up in a year.. It just looses that nutty flavor after a few months.. But it does not go bad..
    Does pressure canning help retain the nutty flavor?

  • @acerrubrum5749
    @acerrubrum5749 Před rokem +1

    👍

  • @KYAg227
    @KYAg227 Před rokem +1

    I am new to canning and i dont have a pressure canner but i have a vacuum sealer, can i just do that instead?

    • @GreatLakesPrepping
      @GreatLakesPrepping  Před rokem +5

      Definitely not. A vacuum sealer is only good for 100% dry foods. You need pressure canning, because the temperature has to be raised high enough to kill anything that could otherwise grow into botulism or other nasty bacteria. You must use heat sealing for anything even slightly wet. Depending on the acidity of it, you can use hot water bath (for things like tomato sauce and pickles), but most other things need higher temps so a pressure canner is needed (most veggies, meats, in this case dairy).

    • @KYAg227
      @KYAg227 Před rokem +1

      @@GreatLakesPrepping makes sense thanks!

  • @RedStorm.
    @RedStorm. Před rokem +1

    😎

  • @sorciere...
    @sorciere... Před 6 měsíci

    Yet the sale it a the store so why would they not approve it?

    • @GreatLakesPrepping
      @GreatLakesPrepping  Před 6 měsíci

      The capabilities of a commercial factory to can food is much different than a home kitchen.

  • @pjsolarz
    @pjsolarz Před 2 měsíci

    If you split the difference 60 minutes would have been the answer.

  • @KYAg227
    @KYAg227 Před rokem +2

    To hell with the USDA criminals!

  • @WisconsinAdventures
    @WisconsinAdventures Před 6 měsíci

    Lots of wrong information in this video. This video is full of things this guy "thinks" and has done no research on lol

    • @GreatLakesPrepping
      @GreatLakesPrepping  Před 6 měsíci +3

      I completely disagree. Can you name any specific things that I've done "wrong" in making my ghee? You wrote an earlier comment which you've since deleted that stated I am spreading misinformation because ghee is not made from clarified butter. You must have realized that was wrong, since you deleted it. But you still decided to be upset by something about my video, so what is it specifically? The way I make my clarified butter (and ghee) is the same process as you will find from a million other sources. I truly hope you will share what exhaustive research you have apparently done on the subject of ghee-making, and enlighten me as to the specific points of misinformation you have accused me of spreading.

    • @barbbaker4652
      @barbbaker4652 Před 4 měsíci +2

      What wrong information, don't post something unless you have facts

    • @ygordon141
      @ygordon141 Před 19 dny

      There was no wrong information in this video. It is clear, if you actually watched and listened to the video, that he explains his research.