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Home › Blog

Published: Aug 28, 2025 by Elizabeth Marek · This post may contain affiliate links ·

French Butter Recipe

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Planning to make French butter at home might sound like something only a professional chef would attempt, but honestly, it’s way easier than you think. All it takes is one quart of heavy cream, three tablespoons of yogurt with live bacterial cultures, and a little salt. Whip it together in a stand mixer (or even a hand mixer or food processor), and before you know it, you’ve got homemade butter that’s creamier, richer, and more flavorful than anything you’ll buy at the store. The result is a cultured butter with that signature tangy flavor and higher butter fat that makes every bite taste like you’re back in France.

close up of homemade french butter

What's in this blog post

  • My inspiration
  • Ingredients & supplies
  • Tips and Tricks for Success
  • Step-by-Step Instructions
  • Final Thoughts
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Other recipes you'll love

My inspiration

When I was in France with my daughter, Avalon, and my friend Cynthia, we basically lived on bread and butter. We always loved eating it, but I could never figure out why it tasted so much better there than at home.

At first, I thought maybe it was just the magic of being in France—but then I came across a TikTok video showing how to make French butter with cultured cream. Suddenly, it all clicked. The tangy flavor, the higher butter fat, the lower water content—that’s what made it taste so luxurious.

From that moment on, I knew I had to try making it myself. And let me just say, once you taste homemade butter this way, you’ll never look at store-bought butter the same again.

Ingredients & supplies

  • 1 quart heavy cream (preferably not ultra-pasteurized)
  • 3 tablespoons yogurt with live cultures (this starts the culturing process) I used organic yogurt from Straus Family Creamery
  • Kosher salt or sea salt to finish
  • Large container for culturing the cream
  • Butter making kit (optional)

Optional: herbs, black pepper, or even olive oil for turning your base into herb butter.

Tips and Tricks for Success

  1. Start with the right cream. For the best butter, use cream that’s not ultra-pasteurized. It makes for a creamier, flavorful butter.
  2. Don’t skip the culture. Adding that spoonful of yogurt with live bacterial cultures creates the tangy flavor that sets French butter apart from regular sweet cream butter.
  3. Keep it cold. Once your cream breaks, rinse the butter with very cold water until the water runs clear. This prevents much buttermilk from lingering, which can spoil the butter.
  4. Shape and store. Wrap your butter in parchment paper or keep it in an airtight container. The lower water content means it lasts longer than regular butter.
  5. Season well. A pound of butter can take more salt than you think. Or you can use pretty much an unlimited amount of seasoned salts or herbs to flavor the butter.

Step-by-Step Instructions

Combine cream and yogurt and let it ferment at room temperature until thick
The cream should be thick and smell tangy sweet not rancid
Whip the cream on high
This is what the cream should look like
Strain the butter from the buttermilk
Set up a butter washing station with three bowls of ice water
Place the butter into the first bowl and wait for the curds to firm up then squeeze out as much of the buttermilk as possible
Move the butter to the next bowl and continue washing the butter and squeezing out the excess liquid
Move the butter to the final bowl. The water should be clear
Flatten the butter, wipe away any excess water that comes out
Add in your salt or seasonings of your choice and knead them in thoroughly
Use the butter paddles to shape into a block
  1. In a large jar or mixing bowl, stir together the heavy cream and yogurt with live cultures. Cover with a clean kitchen towel and let sit at room temperature for 12–24 hours. This culturing process is what gives French butter like Bordier Butter its signature tangy flavor.
  2. Once cultured, pour the cream into a stand mixer with the whisk attachment. Whip on medium until it first turns into whipped cream, then keep going until the cream breaks and separates into butter and excess buttermilk.
  3. Drain off the buttermilk (save it for pancakes or biscuits—good things shouldn’t go to waste).
  4. Wash the butter by kneading it in a bowl with very cold water. Drain and repeat until the water is clear.
  5. Mix in your kosher salt, sea salt, or flavorings like black pepper or herbs.
  6. Wrap in parchment paper or store in an airtight container. Refrigerate and enjoy.
homemade french butter wrapped in parchment paper and butchers twine

Final Thoughts

Making your own cultured butter at home feels like unlocking the next step in your kitchen journey. It’s one of those “why didn’t I do this sooner?” moments. The fat content gives it a silky mouthfeel, the tangy flavor makes every bite pop, and it turns the simplest things—like toast or sourdough bread—into a chef’s kiss moment. Whether you’re channeling your inner Julia Child or just trying to elevate breakfast, this is truly the best butter you’ll ever taste. Bon appétit!

Frequently Asked Questions

What’s the difference between French butter and American butter?

French butter (and most European butter) has higher butter fat and lower water content, which gives it that rich, flavorful butter vibe. American butter tends to be milder with more water.

Do I have to use live cultures?

If you want that tangy flavor, yes. Otherwise, you’ll just get regular butter. Still delicious, but not as unique.

How long does homemade butter last?

Wrapped in parchment paper or sealed in an airtight container, your butter should last about 1–2 weeks in the fridge. The less water content, the longer it keeps.

Can I make it without a stand mixer?

Totally. Use a hand mixer, food processor, or even shake a jar of cream. The home cook version works just as well—it just takes a bit longer.

Will the cream go bad on the countertop?

With the addition of the live cultures from the yogurt, the live bacteria is "good" bacteria and will stop the "bad bacteria" from growing, and is what gives the butter its delicious flavor.

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Recipe

close up of homemade french butter

French Butter Recipe

Make rich, tangy French butter at home with just heavy cream, yogurt, and salt—better flavor and more butter fat than store-bought. You'll feel like you're eating fresh butter in France!
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
fermentation: 2 days days
Total Time: 2 days days
Course: Appetizer
Cuisine: French
Servings: 13 ounces
Calories: 255kcal
Author: Elizabeth Marek

Ingredients

  • 34 ounces heavy whipping cream
  • 3 Tablespoons yogurt with live cultures
  • 4 grams salt or other seasoning

Instructions

  • Combine the yogurt and cream together in a large container like a cambro or a bowl with plastic wrap.
  • Place the cream on the counter for 48-72 hours or until the cream looks thickened and smells slightly tangy.
  • Put the thickened cream into a stand mixer with a whisk attachment and whisk on medium speed until the fat separates from the buttermilk.
  • Prepare three large bowls of ice water and set them aside.
  • Place the soft butter curds into the first bowl of ice water until they firm up.
  • Squeeze the butter curds to remove as much buttermilk as possible.
  • Move the butter to the second bowl and continue washing the curds.
  • In the final bowl of ice water the water should be clear after washing.
  • Place the cold butter onto a wooden cutting board and pound it flat with butter paddles or a wooden spoon.
  • Wipe up any water with a paper towel or towel. Try to remove as much water as possible while continuously compressing the butter.
  • Add in your salt or preferred seasonings and mix it into the butter.
  • Shape the butter into a rectangle with your butter paddles and then enjoy or freeze for later.

Video

Notes

If you have access to a local dairy with fresh, grass-fed cream, your butter will taste even better!
Ferment your cream at room temperature and check it every day to see what it looks like. Go by looks, not by time. When it's thick, it's ready!
 

Nutrition

Serving: 1ounce | Calories: 255kcal | Carbohydrates: 2g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 27g | Saturated Fat: 17g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 7g | Cholesterol: 84mg | Sodium: 141mg | Potassium: 78mg | Sugar: 2g | Vitamin A: 1094IU | Vitamin C: 0.5mg | Calcium: 55mg | Iron: 0.1mg
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

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Hi, I'm Liz! I'm an artist and cake decorator from Portland, Oregon. Cakes are my obession, which is why I'm dedicated to crafting tried-and-true recipes, small cake tutorials, as well as advanced online cake courses!

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