Why does milk, cream, yogurt, etc. become rancid if left unrefrigerated, but butter can just freeball in a butter dish for-seemingly-ever and still be safe and edible?

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I just don’t get it. I’m sure there’s a very sciency explanation, but it makes no sense to me. I love that it can sit out to be soft and spreadable, but you try that with cream and you’re on the way to a stinky cheese, milk or yogurt you’ve just got a curdled surprise.

So why can butter just sit out and not start to stink or become dangerous to eat?

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26 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s the milk fats that go rancid.

When you make butter, you rinse it to get all the buttermilk out. That’s the bit that goes rancid. All that’s left is solid fat, which doesn’t go off.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Butter is 80% fat. A lot of the proteins and sugars that were in the original milk have been removed, and so are not around to feed bacteria.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Only salted butter can do this. Unsalted butter will turn to black death if left out unrefrigerated. The salt is the preservative, salt is effective as a preservative because it reduces the water activity of foods.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Milk products go bad from an overgrowth of bacteria that naturally occur in basically any environment. Once a product is opened to the air, those bacteria get inside, and begin feeding off the sugars and proteins in the milk. Therefore, the more sugar and protein a product has will make bacteria grow faster, as long as the product isn’t too acidic. Milk is the most famous example because it’s pretty much the perfect environment for those bacteria. Cream doesn’t have as much sugar so it happens a bit slower, and yogurt has lots of sugar and protein, but it is very acidic, and gets outcompeted by the bacteria that already exists in yogurt. Butter *CAN* go bad the same way other dairy products can, because it does contain some milk-solids, and therefore sugar and protein, but it is extremely unlikely. Butter is mostly just the fat that is separated from whole milk, and only about 1% is actual milk. That means butter is about 0.008% sugar and protein, giving bacteria basically nothing to use to fuel themselves. Butter is much more likely to go bad from mold, which doesn’t rely nearly as much on the sugar from the food it grows on.

The other main reason is just a temperature one. Bacteria grow much slower at cold temperatures and much faster at warm ones, so environments where they already can grow at cold temperatures become a feeding frenzy at warm ones. And because bacteria grow exponentially, meaning the more they grow the faster they grow, they can cause spoilage very very quickly. The butter bacteria meanwhile are stuck barely having any nutrients to fuel themselves, and even at a higher temperature there is still so little there they are stuck at first base so to speak.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Butter oxidizes much faster at room temp. I can’t do room temp butter if it’s been out more than a day. It’s way off to me. Nothing like fresh, unoxidized butter.

Anonymous 0 Comments

oil is anti-microbial. its actually more sterile than if you bleach a surface… in fact many industrial food producers that’s how they maintain a clean environment.. they spray everything with special oil.. its actually kinda intersting… i’ll find the article.

fuck me i tried!

i can’t remember exactly how they phrased it and i can’t figure it out.. somebody else know what the fuck i’m talking about? it was some science thing comparing different surfaces after different sterilization methods and from what i remember an oily surface was the most resistant to superbugs and also to pathogenic bacteria.. but i can’t recall what kind of oil of the specifics.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Butter is about 80% fat, a few % milk solids, and the rest is water. Fat/Oil is not an ideal growth medium for bacteria. All the other things you listed have much more water and sugars(lactose). That is Great medium for bacteria growth.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Pure fat, pure sugar, pure vinegar, and pure salt are amazing preservatives. This is why we have salted dried fish, jerky, pickles, jam, and confit available on the shelves. Admittedly, fat preserved items are less popular these days, in part because they’re a bit harder to reliably preserve. Also because the Western world would find it kind of gross. Sardines are a common example.

Butter is sufficiently high fat to be reasonably well preserved. Add salt to the butter and it will be even better preserved. Reduce the water content for even longer preservation. Ghee, which is butter with the milk sugars, proteins, and water removed, is almost 100% fat, and is shelf stable for months.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Every answer here is different… Oil/fat content, salt, different *types* of fat, oxidation speed…

Either redditors are just going off of gut feelings and need to cite more sources, or butter just has multiple qualities that facilitate a long shelf life.

Either way, redditors need to cite more sources.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The reason is much more simple than most of these comments are positing. The butter has no water in it and doesn’t not absorb water from the air. This concept is why dried foods, honey, pickled, and powered items are shelf stable. Some of them will eventually pull water from the air and start rotting but if they are sealed they are basically good forever. Things will still oxidize though which is what causes things to go rancid. If you remove both water and oxygen you end up with nitrogen sealed freeze dried items which will last for as long as the seal holds and they are kept at a reasonable temperature.