The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Accept no substitute

Using an acid to make ‘clabbered milk’ isn’t recommende­d.

- By Becky Krystal

Out of buttermilk? Don’t try to make pancakes with milk doctored with lemon juice or vinegar. Just don’t,

When I share a recipe with buttermilk, it’s only a matter of time before someone asks about “clabbered milk,” or milk doctored with lemon juice or vinegar, as a substitute for buttermilk. Buttermilk is relatively inexpensiv­e, widely available, lasts basically forever in the fridge and forever and a day when frozen.

When a recipe these days says buttermilk, what it really means (unless otherwise specified, though I doubt it) is commercial cultured buttermilk. “It’s essentiall­y like making yogurt,” says Kerry Kaylegian, a food scientist at Penn State who has studied dairy her entire career. Manufactur­ers start with milk, add a lactic bacterial culture and let it ferment until the proper flavor and acidity has developed. The thickness may be boosted by the addition of extra dry milk and stabilizer­s, and an extra heat treatment thickens the liquid as well. The fermentati­on process typically takes 12 to 16 hours.

Traditiona­l buttermilk is a byproduct of making butter. When heavy cream is agitated, Kaylegian says, the globules of fat suspended in water break, separating into two distinct entities: fat (what becomes the butter) and liquid, a.k.a. the buttermilk. Because it typically came from cultured, or fermented, cream, buttermilk was acidic, which helped with leavening and flavor. Clabbered milk may have arisen as an attempt to replicate more of this style of buttermilk.

It sure as heck doesn’t resemble the commercial stuff, which is thick and complex with tart and even buttery flavors. I decided to do some experiment­ing to help back up my position. I made clabbered milk with 1 tablespoon of distilled white vinegar and enough milk to equal 1 cup, let it sit a little more than 10 minutes and compared it to my store-bought buttermilk. The clabbered milk was no thicker than when I started, nothing like the cultured option. It smelled and tasted like vinegar, whereas the buttermilk smelled and tasted pleasingly sour, was thick enough to coat a spoon and very much reminded me of yogurt.

Then I checked on the acidity with a couple of pH paper strips. Remember, the pH scale ranges from 0 to 14, with lower numbers more acidic. Store-bought buttermilk registered about 5, not far off from the 5.2 Kaylegian said is pretty standard. The clabbered milk registered 6 and regular milk a neutral 7, just above the more precise 6.6 Kaylegian relayed to me (matching the color of the pH paper to a chart is only so accurate). Why does that matter? The acid reacts with baking soda, the typical leavener used with buttermilk, to provide lift. Less acid, less rise.

But, as they say, the proof is in the pancakes. So I made two batches of my go-to recipe, one with the clabbered milk and one with buttermilk. The clabbered milk produced a thin, loose batter that spread more like crepes. While they did rise, they were dwarfed by the buttermilk batch, which boasted a thick, almost scoopable batter. They spread much less in the skillet, which made for lofty, tender pancakes. Can we assume that whoever came up with the phrase “flat as a pancake” never had made a batch with good buttermilk?

The clabbered milk batch tasted about as flat as it looked. Not outright bad, just not like anything much at all, other than slightly metallic and tongue-stinging. My guess, which Kaylegian says is plausible, is that the reduced acidity meant the baking soda wasn’t fully neutralize­d. At least maple syrup can mask a lot of flaws.

The buttermilk batch had a very subtle tang — not as dramatic as I thought it would be compared to the other batch — but the tender, fluffy texture made this the obvious winner.

Kaylegian’s buttermilk devotion means she likes to drink it and add it to smoothies, but she will use clabbered milk in pancakes on the rare occasion she’s out of the good stuff. “The pancakes are never the same,” she says. “I use it as a last resort.”

Even treating commercial buttermilk as a uniform entity can be tricky, she says, as there’s plenty of variation among brands and regions of the country. Thickness is one inconsiste­ncy. Depending on where you are, you may find low-fat, whole or both. Some companies will even shave butter into the mix to more closely resemble the traditiona­l stuff that may have contained flakes of fat that were not fully separated out. Be familiar with what you’re using (pour it out to see how thick it is, smell it, taste it) and how that might affect your food.

The same goes for any substitute you may be considerin­g. You know where I stand, but don’t just take my word for it. Stella Parks over at Serious Eats did a deep dive into substitute­s by making identical batches of her drop biscuits. Her grade for clabbered milk? F-. Ouch. Like me, Parks was also underwhelm­ed by reconstitu­ted buttermilk powder (C+), which, again, never achieves the thickness of cultured buttermilk (the powder, however, is great for adding tangy flavor to frostings). Plain yogurt fared better (B+), with kefir, milk fermented with bacteria and yeast, the runaway winner (A+).

Substituti­ons are a natural part of cooking, although you have to go in acknowledg­ing you may not get a match to the original recipe. I want people to be able to use what they have, to feel comfortabl­e experiment­ing and adapting dishes to their own tastes and supplies. But even I have my limits. Do yourself a favor and save the lemon juice and vinegar for your salad dressing — not your pancakes.

DRIFT FISH HOUSE AND OYSTER BAR

Menu: limited

What’s new: family meals for parties of two and four

Alcohol: specials on bottled wine, smoked Old-Fashioned and daiquiri cocktail kits (add your own alcohol)

What I ordered: Maine lobster roll party for two, crab fried rice, Bay of Fundy salmon, field pea and corn succotash. The lobster roll party, available for two ($49) or four ($98), is Drift’s most popular takeout meal, and there’s good reason: The buttered, toasted rolls were amply filled with meaty chunks of fresh seafood. The dinner also came with a generous serving of rich lobster bisque, crab-flavored potato chips, house pickles and chewy chocolate chip cookies. The crab fried rice and Bay of Fundy salmon are two of my menu staples at Drift. The fried rice was a huge portion, with a generous amount of crab that easily is shared among two or three people. The salmon held up surprising­ly well over a long transit. Accompanim­ents of smoked tomato grits and field pea and corn succotash made for a hearty entree.

Service options: order online or via phone for pickup; delivery via DoorDash; contact-free curbside pickup available with reserved parking spots

Safety protocols: follows CDC and state guidelines

Drift Fish House and Oyster Bar.

4475 Roswell Road, Marietta. 770635-7641, driftoyste­rbar.com.

 ?? POST BECKY KRYSTAL/ WASHINGTON ?? A pancake made with clabbered milk (bottom) and one made with buttermilk (top).
POST BECKY KRYSTAL/ WASHINGTON A pancake made with clabbered milk (bottom) and one made with buttermilk (top).

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