For this week’s homeschool science fun we made butter!
What You Need
- Cream (we used double (thick) cream)
- Clean jar with lid (not one you’ve made holes in for a previous science experiment. That was a close one!)
- Tape, to secure the lid in place
What You Do
- Pour the cream into the jar
- Screw on the lid and tape securely in place
- Shake the jar vigorously for five to ten minutes (you can pause to catch your breath)
What Happened
We shook our jars for about five minutes but nothing seemed to be happening, so we untaped the jar lid and peeked. The cream had thickened but not changed substantially.
The children were getting a bit tired of the shaking by now so I helped out and found the easiest way to keep up a rhythm was by jiggling my whole body around, ’90’s aerobics class style. Which (once they’d picked themselves up from the floor laughing) inspired C and J to launch into Gangnam Style jar-shaking – they could have carried on all day!
Eventually we heard and felt a soft, thudding sound in the jars. When we removed the lids this time, the cream had separated into a solid lump (butter) and a thin white liquid (buttermilk).
J eagerly drank the buttermilk and declared it delicious (apparently his current audiobook, Charlotte’s Web had something to do with it :-)). We spread our butter thickly on crumpets and toast – yum!
The Scientific Explanation
Cream is an emulsion that has minute droplets of fat dispersed in water. Shaking the cream makes the fat droplets stick together, forming butter.
An emulsion is a type of colloid: it has tiny particles of one substance scattered through another.
A colloid is a type of mixture: two or more substances jumbled together but not chemically combined.
What You Might Do Differently
- You can start with any kind of cream or even full fat milk. Sour cream apparently makes delicious butter, too.
- You can add vegetable oil or salt to vary the consistency and taste of your butter.
- If you use a plastic jar you can add a (clean) marble to speed up the separation process.
Want To Find Out More?
I can’t believe I had reached the age of forty-two without knowing how easy it is to make butter!
For more inspiration, visit Adventures In Mommydom and take a look at all the wonderful science that’s been going on this week.
