Homemade Cultured Buttermilk is going to be a game changer for you. It’s literally as easy as mixing two things in a jar.
And whoa are you going to love having all that fresh homemade cultured buttermilk around. Read or scroll through to the end for great ideas on how to use up your real buttermilk.
I use a lot of homemade buttermilk. And by ‘a lot’ I mean a ton.
Many of my baked goods contain buttermilk. Much of my salad dressing uses buttermilk.
And my beloved, The Evil Genius? He drinks buttermilk.
Now before any of you out there yawp with a resounding, “EW!” let me just mention that millions of Southerners and displaced Southerners are right now saying, “Mmmmmmmm! A nice tall glass of buttermilk with salt and pepper sounds mighty fine right now.”
A reminder: never yuck another person’s yum. Unless we’re talking durian, then all bets are off… (You may want to read about my family vs. Durian.)
We go through a lot of the stuff. And I may have mentioned that I live in the middle of nowhere in Amish country before (or a million times before, but who’s counting?) so frequent last minute trips to the store are not convenient.
How to Make Real Buttermilk
There are probably quite a few of you out there saying, “Oh please. All you have to do is add a little vinegar or lemon juice to milk and you get the same thing. Why buy buttermilk?”
See? I just knew someone out there was saying it. Not so fast! It’s not the same thing. To prove my point, I have to talk science for a moment.
While the acidified milk might give you the same tang of buttermilk, it lacks woefully in the texture and viscosity department.
Buttermilk is used in recipes for several important reasons. First, it is acidic, so it helps invigorate leavening agents -such as baking powder, baking soda and yeast- when added to baked goods.
The acid also helps combat discoloration in baked goods and promotes deep, beautiful browning. Buttermilk contains natural emulsifiers; this improves texture and aroma, and extends shelf life after baking.
The acidity of your homemade cultured buttermilk makes it a wonderful addition to marinades for chicken and pork. The acid helps tenderize the meat and gives it a tangy flavor.
Cultured Buttermilk
You know the ‘cultured’ part of cultured buttermilk? It’s good for you.
It contains many active cultures similar to those found in yogurt. Most of the cultures generally found in buttermilk are form the Lactococcus Lactis family and many of their subspecies.
Those cultures are what make homemade cultured buttermilk so thick and creamy. And what? Good for you!
Now that you know more than you probably ever wanted to know about buttermilk let’s get onto the ‘Why make my own?’ thing. Because you can.
Seriously. You need more than that?
Okay. Also make it because it’s dirt cheap, it’s super simple, it’s really fun and you’ll never run out of buttermilk again.
Hang on one second. Someone out there just said, “I never use a whole thing of buttermilk. What do I do with all that buttermilk?” I’m so glad you asked. How about a few of these ideas:
Perfect, flaky, Homemade Buttermilk Biscuit Take it from me, these buttermilk biscuits would do my Arkansas Grandma proud… They’re lofty, flaky, tender, and utterly divine.
Bacon and Swiss Rye Muffins These are every bit as good as they sound and as easy as pie. No wait! They’re easier than pie. Pie can be hard.
Grandma’s Buttermilk Cornbread This is my Grandma’s buttermilk cornbread recipe and it is ridiculously delicious and the ultimate comfort food.
Buttermilk Cornbread Rounds Based on my Grandma’s Buttermilk Cornbread recipe, these perfectly portioned cornbread rounds fit neatly in the hand and go anywhere cornbread goes, but look cuter doing it! This one’s going a little way back in the FWF archives.
Buttermilk Pancakes Nothing beats beautiful, light, airy buttermilk pancakes smothered in real maple syrup. Nothing. This one’s also reaching way back.
Garam Masala Depression Cake from Val. Nothin’ depressing about THAT cake, I’ll tell you. We’re talking about a decadent, Garam Masala flavored chocolate cake with orange buttercream and toasted coconut.
Oh my. I only take issue with the number of servings Val specified in it. It looks like a one-person cake to me.
I would be remiss if I didn’t mention these others…
- Chocolate Chip Breakfast Cookies (Drop scones)
- Extra Crispy Fried Chicken Fingers (The Evil Genius can cook!)
- Cornbread Salad
Are you good and hungry yet? Excellent. Let’s make some buttermilk. I promise it doesn’t take but two shakes.
Homemade Cultured Buttermilk
Scroll to the bottom for an easy-print version of this recipe!
Ingredients:
- 1/4 to 1/2 cup cultured buttermilk (from the store or home cultured)
- 1 to 2 quarts skim,1%, 2%, or whole milk from the store or raw milk
Also needed:
- 1 clean, dry quart or half gallon jar with a tight fitting two piece lid.
Okay. Ready? If you blink you’ll miss how to do it.
Pour buttermilk (1/4 cup for a quart jar or 1/2 cup for a half gallon jar) into your clean jar. Top off the jar with your plain milk.
Tightly screw lid to the jar and shake vigorously for 1 minute. Place in a warm (but not hot) area out of direct sunlight.
Let it sit there for 12 to 24 hours, until thickened. Refrigerate when thick.
Use within two weeks. If you re-culture this regularly, you can carry on re-culturing indefinitely.
Now here’s a glimpse of my finished product. Note that mine is super thick. I used raw, whole milk to culture my buttermilk. If you use skim, it may end up a little thinner than what you see here.
Homemade Cultured Buttermilk
Rate RecipeIngredients
- 1/4 to 1/2 cup cultured buttermilk from the store or home cultured
- 1 to 2 quarts skim 1%, 2%, or whole milk from the store or raw milk
- Also needed:
- 1 clean dry quart or half gallon jar with a tight fitting two piece lid.
Instructions
- Okay. Ready? If you blink you’ll miss how to do it.
- Pour buttermilk (1/4 cup for a quart jar or 1/2 cup for a half gallon jar) into your clean jar. Top off the jar with your plain milk. Tightly screw lid to the jar and shake vigorously for 1 minute. Place in a warm (but not hot) area out of direct sunlight. Let it sit there for 12 to 24 hours, until thickened. Refrigerate when thick. Use within two weeks.
Notes
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
did you make this recipe?
Make sure to tag @foodiewithfam on Instagram and #hashtag it #foodiewithfamily so I can check it out!
This recipe was originally posted March 24, 2010, and was updated with photos, links, and improved notes March 2021.
Reader's Thoughts...
Dee says
Thank you so much for taking the time to help every body out here. I love the way you think and do things. Thank you again so much . I think your terrific!!!
Ray Bachynski says
A fine cultured home made product. Thank you for sharing. A point of note : Walmart sells an excellent cultured buttermilk made by ” Marburger Dairy ” out of Penn. #1 quality for sure. Using this buttermilk as the starting culture to your buttermilk recipe produces the finest home cultured buttermilk . As a kid growing up in Canada on a Polish farm we always made butter and enjoyed the leftover buttermilk. This ” Marburger Culture ” makes that quality farm buttermilk come alive once again . Give it a try !!
Tamara says
Thanks for the buttermilk recipe. I love eating buttermilk with cornbread in it and drinking plain buttermilk. Mmmmm. I had been buying it and then noticed that they put cornstarch in the brand I bought so I looked for how to make it and found your page. Thank you. Will be trying it soon.
John says
Glass of buttermilk with boiled potato ,dip a chunk of the potato in salt eat with the buttermilk Mmmmmm Never had buttermilk with pepper but I will try it,,, also will make the recultered buttermilk.
Nicole says
Hey just curious, what temperature is “warm”. I live in a basement suite that can be a little on the cool side, is on a shelf above my stove warm enough? Great post thank you! What are your thoughts on adding a probiotic to the process (like in a powder, like when making yogurt)?
Rebecca says
Good question, Nicole. I aim for mid to high 70sF when I do this. In the lower 80’s would also be alright, but it might scoot along faster than in the 70s, so keep your eye on it. When you’re making it this way, you’re already adding a probiotic to it. The cultures in cultured buttermilk are probiotic. 🙂
Kim says
I mixd vinegar as stated into my milk ,let ot sit in fridge overnight .It didn’t seem to really thicken. I even added a tiny bit more vinegar . Still the same . doesn’t even smell any different . Will it still work for my Irish soda bread ?I don’t want to ruin my bread . I feel like I wasted time ,money and milk ,just to “stick it to the man “
Rebecca says
Hi Kim,
I’m not sure why you added vinegar to your milk. My recipe calls for adding a small amount of actual cultured buttermilk to milk and leaving it on the counter overnight rather than using vinegar in milk in the refrigerator. Simply put, it will not thicken like buttermilk because the culturing is what thickens it. What vinegar will do is give you an approximation of the acidity of buttermilk and will deliver decent flavour to your soda bread. The end result of the bread will be a slightly different texture than if you’d used buttermilk, though.
MuyMar says
Sadly in Argentina buttermilk is not available. I make yogurt the same way, but the cultures are diferent I think.
amber M collins says
How do you reculture the butter milk!?!?
Rebecca says
Hi there, Amber! Simply use some of the buttermilk you made and repeat the process!
Martha Teitelbaum says
I know you posted this years ago but see you’ve responded to some more recent comments so figure it’s still relevant.
I wanted you to know this worked perfectly.
It did separate but all it needed was to be stirred thoroughly. The buttermilk was delicious. I used skim (although the starter buttermilk was 2%) and it was still very thick.
My mother always made buttermilk when I was a kid, but I didn’t drink it then and so never really paid attention to how she did it.
Thank you for posting this so I could make it just the way my mom did!
Rita Roach says
And this recipe is good drinking buttermilk? I am so excited to try it.
Rebecca says
My husband likes it that way! It’s VERY thick, usually, so you may want to thin it out for drinking.
Shelly says
Love your recipe, and love your attitude about making it! I ALWAYS feel like I am beating the system too when I can make something homemade.
Rebecca says
Yes! That’s exactly it!
Angela Hinkle says
I bought a can of saco cultured buttermilk blend for cooking and baking is this what I can use to make the buttermilk to drink because I love buttermilk to drink and put cornbread in it to eat didn’t know if it’s the same stuff your talking about if same I’ll do the1/4cup first to see if it turns out ok please let me know so I can make it today thank you
Rebecca says
Hi Angela,
I’m not actually familiar with Saco Cultured Buttermilk Blend. If it is a canned liquid, it is likely not a live culture in it, though, and would therefore be unsuitable for culturing fresh buttermilk. If it is a powder, it will not be suitable for culturing unless it says “live and active cultures” on it. Honestly, this recipe is truly geared for using fresh cultured buttermilk from the refrigerated section of the store.
Molly says
Now I’m so sad. I just made a batch of overnight blue corn waffle batter and didn’t have enough buttermilk so I poured in some regular milk, shook the container and made up the difference. I remembered having read something somewhere about making your own cultured buttermilk and had hoped to get on the internet and find out how to do it with yogurt. After reading all the helpful comments and your replies I am indecisive about trying this. I don’t want to waste the good, homemade yogurt or the milk either if it won’t work. Guess I will have to add buttermilk back to the shopping list and get this going another time. Definitely bookmarking this page for the great instructions! Thank you!
Sid Wilson says
I just bought an old butter churn and can hardly wait to make butter milk. As a kid my great grandmother , grandmother and great aunts always made their on and I loved it. Today’s store bought buttermilk is so inferior. Thanks for sharing your recipe and humor!
Mel says
I tried to make biscuits using this and it was so thick it I had a hard time with the dough. Should I have thinned it before?
Rebecca says
I think it is a good idea to thin with whole milk to about the consistency of commercial buttermilk if you’re having trouble with it. 🙂
Pete says
My dad always used powered milk. Is your recipe the same with the ingredients. He was frugal also but at that time powered milk was a lot cheaper.
Lyn says
I have to try this. Thanks so much for sharing this.
Nell Croissant says
I got on here to ask why mine is so thick. Now I know it’s ok. By the way, when my bought milk is getting a little age on it, I just pour my culture into the milk container and press on smartly. I add salt to mine too for taste.
Rebecca says
Good thinking, Nell!
Jo Ann Engle says
How do you culture your own buttermilk.. We have dairy cows and use the creme to make butter but before have just poured off the whey after the buttermakng. How can we make this into real buttermilk.
Sandi says
We’re not quite as remote as you are, but only have one store nearby that sells buttermilk and I try to avoid buying dairy there. Plus, theirs isn’t full-fat. I just got some that’s whole milk, and started some sour cream with it tonight. Next, I’m going to use your instructions to make more buttermilk. If I can keep up with re-culturing, it will be a lifesaver!
I use buttermilk constantly to make homemade Ranch dressing, sour cream, and fried chicken. And I’m spoiled when it comes to dressing. I won’t eat store-bought anymore. Even the good stuff from the store just doesn’t cut it for me (I break down about once every year or two and buy some when I’m desperate and in a hurry and I regret it every time).