How to tell the difference between real and fake rolls of Amish butter and how each compares with supermarket butter.
It used to be that glitzy packaging and prime shelf space lured consumers to buy a product the most effectively.
In recent years, however, it seems that a popular way to sell processed food is to “dress it down” so the product resembles something homemade or an item from a farmer’s market.
What is Amish Butter?
Hence, the advent of rolled “Amish butter” humbly hand-wrapped in parchment paper.
It’s not whipped butter, but rather a solid block or “roll”.
This approach works particularly well with consumers who understand the importance of homemade and traditional foods.
However, these same people, for whatever reason, usually have no “dirt under their nails” either producing some of their own food or dealing directly with local farmers who do.
This scenario can lead to a more intellectual approach to Real Food. In other words, understanding the problem with little to no practical, on the ground knowledge of how food is produced.
While there is nothing wrong with this, it leaves a person vulnerable to food scams. Understanding only that factory fare is to be avoided, that the Food Pyramid is a joke, and that old-fashioned, minimally processed foods like butter are better is usually not enough!
You have to …. forgive the overly used phrase … know your farmer.
This gap in knowledge between what nutrient-dense foods are and how they are actually produced is what food manufacturers exploit – bigtime.
How Many Amish Farms Needed to Supply Costco?
You knew it was bound to happen, right?
As the popularity of old fashioned butter rose, so did attempts by conventional food manufacturers to cash in.
One approach that has really gone cha-ching for large commercial dairy companies is the marketing of Amish butter, also called hand-rolled butter or simply butter rolls.
Your first clue that this stuff isn’t what it claims is the mere fact that it is everywhere. For example, nearly every large supermarket chain in my large metro area carries it.
Mmmm. Let’s think about this for a minute…
The truth is that there aren’t enough small, grass-fed Amish dairy farms in the entire United States to produce enough quality butter to supply supermarkets.
We would need a return to the millions upon millions of family farms prior to WWII for this to happen!
Real Amish Butter
REAL Amish butter is a niche product much like the market for healthy butter substitutes.
You buy it directly at an Amish farm, at a farmer’s market, or from a local food club.
Some small health food stores might carry small quantities of locally produced tubs.
One thing is for sure.
Butter made from the milk from cows grazing on Amish family farms is NOT going to be a widely distributed product let alone delivered on enormous SYSCO trucks and stocked on the shelves of large supermarket chains!
What is Rolled Butter Really?
If Amish roll butter isn’t really from small, grass-fed Amish dairy farms, then what is it?
According to an employee of a company that makes rolled butter, Amish butter is really just large slabs (in this case, 40 pounds each) of commercial butter cut and wrapped in parchment paper by Amish employees.
That’s it.
Basically, the Amish butter at your supermarket is no better than other widely available butter brands such as Land O’Lakes.
The price indicates the same. At my local supermarket, 2-pound rolls of Amish butter sell for $9.99. This is comparable in price/ounce to the generic supermarket brand, which is just smaller in size. Do the math. Amish butter is about half the price of gourmet butter like Kerry Gold or Lurpak. It is about one-third the price of real Amish grass-fed butter. More on that below.
In addition, roll butter is basically the same pale yellow as supermarket butter. This indicates a low amount of fat-soluble vitamins (zero Vitamin K2) and that the cream likely came from conventional (GMO) grain-fed cows.
One other problem I can’t explain. When a package of at least one brand of roll butter I tested is kept at room temperature, it doesn’t soften! The ingredients only list “pasteurized cream and salt”. So, I’m not quite sure what is going on or what unlabeled additive(s) are at play. All I can tell you is that real butter softens on the counter!
The Color Tells the Tale
If you learn to make homemade butter or buy it from a small grass-fed dairy farm, you will see firsthand the scam of hand-rolled butter. Freshly made, artisanal butter isn’t “rolled” (aka, cut in round or oval chunks). It is scooped and packaged into tubs while still soft from churning!
The only way it would be “rolled” is if a machine shaped it into a large slab, it was chilled until hard, and then cut and wrapped probably on a factory line of some kind.
In other words, “hand-rolled butter” doesn’t mean that it is quality butter (although theoretically, it could be). It is just a description of the butter packaging process. Nothing more.
Small grass-fed dairy farmers typically package real Amish butter in one pound tubs. It is also very yellow and quite expensive – usually about three times the price of commercialized Amish butter.
Beware of Fake Amish Butter at Farmers Markets
Here’s another tip. I’ve seen the same “Amish butter” available at supermarkets being hawked at farmer’s markets too. It’s kind of like the problematic trend of small businesses buying conventional produce (same as in a supermarket) and selling at a farmers market or roadside stand like it’s local or worse, organic!
In sum, Amish roll butter is certainly a better choice than margarine, and if that is what fits your budget, then buy it. However, don’t be fooled by the clever branding.
Rolled butter isn’t the down-home, country-made product suggested by the name and the packaging. If you want real Amish butter, you won’t be finding it at the grocery store.
You get what you pay for. Supermarket price? Supermarket butter.
Ky
Sarah- I’m interested to know your opinion on a better grocery store butter: Kerry Gold versus Organic Pastures organic pasture butter. I don’t believe Kerry Gold is certified organic, but it is from pastured cows and has a much more yellow color and wonderful flavor. The OP brand is certified organic but it is a big organic brand and thus I’m not sure I should trust that the cows are truly grass-fed/pastured. I feel a product from Ireland would probably be cleaner than a product from a large corporation in the US. Which do you think is better or more trustworthy? I do purchase real Amish butter from a local Weston Price market when I can, but my family eats a lot of butter so I do have to purchase from the grocery store as well. Which brand do you recommend? Thank you for your time!!
Sarah
What I buy at the store in a pinch is outlined and why at the end of this article. https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/beware-the-new-kerrygold-butter/
Hope that helps!
Itene
Great article. And thanks Rebecca for the tips. Would you mind posting how you do it? Do you use a cake mixer? How do you culture the cream to make buttermilk? I’ve done it with lemon juice or white vinegar. Thanks again!
LIsa M
I’m pretty happy to hear this as I’ve bought it a few times hoping it might be a little better, but finding it only to be a pain in the butt to store and use that big roll. Glad I can skip it now in favor of the organic stuff at a minimum.
Kirsteen Wright
I’m in the UK. It’s funny to read of Lurpak and Kerrygold being gourmet butters. Here they’re just standard butters and to be honest I avoid them. For the same price i can get organic grassfed butter in practically any supermarket. I guess we’re lucky here in that we have quite a number of registered organic farms and most cows are grass fed.
Sarah
Supermarket food is MUCH worse in the US than in the EU unfortunately. I was AMAZED at the quality of products available at the grocery store in Germany, Belgium and Netherlands while visiting last summer.
Elisabeth
I fell for fake Amish butter… once. But, as soon as I opened it up and discovered how pale and tasteless it was, I knew I’d been scammed ;(
Rhonda
I’ve seen this at my local Publix and was wondering. Almost bought it, but thought I should check it out first. Thanks for the timely info!
HHE reader
Wow Rebecca! Good job! I’ve always dreamed of doing that, maybe I will. You comment is inspiring. 🙂
HHE reader
Having lived in a community with large Amish/Mennonite populations, I thought it was real. I knew it wasn’t as good as Kerrygold because of the color but it did fit in my budget so we used it on and off for a few years, especially in financially challenging times. I also noticed it didn’t soften as much. Then we moved to Florida and when I saw it in Publix I was overjoyed for a few seconds, then perplexed…. then upset. Because that’s when it hit me that it really was a mass market gimmick after all. Thanks Sarah—you are my favorite whistleblower. 🙂
Randy Hartwig
This article is very well said. Watch out for the deceptive labeling of food. Please read ingredients I have made my own butter and bought Kerrygold. I find Kerrygold is the best tasting butter I have ever had. If only they made it and sold it in raw.
Rebecca
The list of scams really is endless! I have been making my own butter for several years now and it still doesn’t beat any bought butter anywhere! In May and June when the grass is the best, I buy a couple rounds of cream from a local farm and make it all into butter which I freeze in a bunch of glass bowls. Then I cultured the buttermilk and freeze that too to use throughout the year in baked goods. It’s exhausting, but then I’m stocked up for the year , plus it’s a lot cheaper. Definitely worthwhile!