What is Devonshire Cream

What is Devonshire Cream


Today many traditional foods are but a pale imitation of their former selves, which is why we are particularly proud of the unswerving quality of Rodda’s Cornish Clotted Cream. Click here to visit roddas.co.uk

Devonshire cream is a form of clotted cream, made from fresh,
unpasteurized, unhomogenized milk. I don’t recall if it is scalded
first, but it is essentially held at a temperature just above blood warm
overnight, by which time it will have soured just a bit (which will be
far more evident in the milk than in the cream) and the cream will have
had a chance to float to the top. The surface will have dried out a bit,
and it resembles a sheet of yellow leather. It can be lifted off with a
skimmer, and treated and served in various ways.

An extremely elegant method of serving it is with sheets rolled into a
sort of ball, known in sources from just-post-period as cabbage cream,
because of the shape.

Devonshire cream, when sold commercially, is packed into jars and
pasteurized, so it’s uniformly thick and smooth.

It’s quite possible to make clotted cream in places other than Devon,
but you really need Devoinshire milk to make Devonshire cream.

Posted in Clotted Cream on Nov 19th, 2008, 1:20 pm by guest   

No comments yet. Be the first.

Leave a reply