Using a 1930 recipe to make traditional, real Cornish clotted cream

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Cornish Walking Trails

Cornish Walking Trails

Күн бұрын

This is a vlog of our journey, discovering how traditional, real Cornish clotted cream was made in 1930, tasting it and how it differs from the product sold today.
When we suggested making a video about a Cornish Cream tea, we received some comments from our American viewers saying how much they were looking forward to us making Cornish clotted cream - this surprised us! We had overlooked the point that, living in Cornwall we have easy access to clotted cream in our supermarkets whenever we want it, unlike other folks.
With Cornish clotted cream readily available, we had never made it so we decided to find out how our grandmothers and great-grandmothers would have done so. My Mum was able to furnish us with my Great-Gran's recipe book from 1930. It is a compilation of Cornish recipes, gathered by the Women's Institute in Cornwall at that time and includes a page on clotted cream.
Watch as we decipher the recipe and overcome challenges to make traditional, authentic Cornish clotted cream! With fresh milk provided by a "Jersey herd" from our local Farmer! But what does it taste like?
The standard description bit…
We are Sarah and Andrew and we film our walks around Cornwall and publish on KZbin, usually weekly. Sometimes we stay in accommodation in Cornwall and upload our vlog. Sarah is fascinated by sea glass and likes to collect it so there may be the occasional sea glass video too. The channel is a hobby and we both have normal day jobs!
Frequently asked questions:
What camera do we use?
Since December 2018 we have used: Canon Powershot G7x MkII
How do I find the books you use?
Most are still in print although some we pick up in charity shops and may be available on Amazon secondhand. Please refer to the video for the book titles. Every video shows the book three times. Sorry but we can’t put a link in every description.
Best time of year to visit Cornwall?
We love May, June for flora and fauna, July and September for spectacular scenery.
What is your dog’s name?
Sorry but we do not release the name of our dog, perhaps you can make up your own name for him.
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Пікірлер: 221
@Tmanaz480
@Tmanaz480 Жыл бұрын
I love the serving dish. It really makes the cream the star of the show.
@debjarvie-sexton1609
@debjarvie-sexton1609 2 жыл бұрын
What you have left is buttermilk and can be used to soak chicken in,make a salad dressing with mayo buttermilk sugar and splash of cider vinegar. Use for potato macaroni salads and coleslaw. Also great for making bread...
@guillerminastover7099
@guillerminastover7099 2 жыл бұрын
I am a woman from the US, my heritage is Mexican-my parents were both Mexican, so I'm first generation U.S. citizen. And I am an avid Anglophile! I so enjoyed your lovely accent, your charming sense of humor, as well as your husband's. I just made two different recipes of scones and I am planning on having a proper English Cream Tea in the autumn. Thank you for this wonderful video!😋
@iraisrose
@iraisrose 11 ай бұрын
Ask around in your Mexican family, because this is actually something I saw my great aunt serve at breakfast when I was a child. She call them natas and would spread them on a bolillo and eat with coffee. I went with her once or twice to get the milk at a small stable in Mexico City.
@Anniemcfee
@Anniemcfee Жыл бұрын
I' m heading to Cornwall in September. I'll be stopping by your house for a cream tea and scones. You two are adorable.
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails Жыл бұрын
😂
@albertwhitling2528
@albertwhitling2528 3 жыл бұрын
do you need whipping cream, or just fresh milk also do you need meybe normal cooking cream, i cant get any fancy fresh cream, but could you use the normal, store bought sweet cream, or whipping cream, or any of the sort, perhaps
@joycewingerter766
@joycewingerter766 2 жыл бұрын
from Colorado USA, i learned to make clotted cream before our trip to the UK, we spent a week in Cornwall , far too short, but i have mastered it even though we cannot get unpasturized milk. I use heavy cream and do the 12 hours at 170F and 8 hours in the fridge after. it is amazing. love your video!
@ChrisNP87
@ChrisNP87 2 жыл бұрын
I use pasteurized (Not Ultra Pasteurized) heavy cream and it always turns out perfect! Ronny Brook Farms and Sky Top Organics (Unhomogenized) are brands I use and easily accessible! Good luck!
@SuperJules57
@SuperJules57 3 жыл бұрын
Is it ok the have a cream tea for breakfast? Asking for a friend lol 😋😋😋😋
@wurlitzer895
@wurlitzer895 3 жыл бұрын
Put a spoonful of clotted cream in the scrambled eggs to make them extra, extra creamy and delicious!!
@Msrosy145
@Msrosy145 3 жыл бұрын
Any time is a good time.
@ChrisNP87
@ChrisNP87 2 жыл бұрын
Yes!! 🤓
@brucetidwell7715
@brucetidwell7715 Жыл бұрын
From an American perspective, I never understood the cream/jam controversy because it seems so impractical to spread the stiffer store bought cream on top of jam, but seeing the authentic version, it makes more sense. It even seems like, if you put the cream on first, it would soak in and make your scone soggy.
@Sanderly1820
@Sanderly1820 3 жыл бұрын
Im from Cornwall UK. Preheat your oven to 160C 300f place your double cream into a shallow dish then place into middle of the oven switch off oven return 10 hrs later do not touch the oven before The end result will be awesome, this way will give you a end result like you see in shops . What you done was scolded milk, doing your way will only give you 10 ton20% cream. The oven version will give a higher yield 70to80% cream
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
Hi, I'm also from Cornwall and maybe the point of the video was a little lost for you. We have seen the double cream oven method, which in my opinion is just dehydrating or reducing a thick cream to make a thicker cream, in its simplest form. We wanted to try and follow an old traditional recipe to see if we could make cream from milk, a recipe followed by our Cornish grandparents. Sarah :)
@Sanderly1820
@Sanderly1820 3 жыл бұрын
@@CornishWalkingTrails sorry my mistake, my grandparents use to farm on the outskirts of Lanivet, the new milk that was mentioned , refers to the first milk that you get when starting to milk the cow, as you continue to milk the fat content starts to reduce , if you can collect ⅓ pint right at the start your cream content will be higher, does that make sense , I find it hard to say what I need ton, this is a result of one medication I'm taking for my illness sorry for this
@gerriebell2128
@gerriebell2128 2 жыл бұрын
@@CornishWalkingTrails my husband and I (American) live in Glasgow. We watched a documentary about Cornish clotted cream and a dairy in Cornwall that makes it. They separated cream from milk after milking. Then let the cream sit and the higher fat cream rose to the top of that, which they separated out. I can’t remember whether they let more highly fatted cream rise to the top again, or used the second cream to make the clotted cream. But the “store-bought” clotted cream was made from pure highest-fat cream with no milk on the bottom. I can see advantages to that. I wonder, if you separated the cream from the milk twice, would it make thicker clotted cream?
@lisafranklin1189
@lisafranklin1189 2 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure if you will see my comment, but I make clotted cream quiet a bit and it turns out amazing. I use heavy cream from the super market....pour into a baking dish...bake at 175°-200° for 12 hours. Take out and let cool at room temperature, and then refrigerate over night. You will have the BEST clotted cream that you've ever tasted...and it will be a very thick layer of it.
@chonettetaylor6731
@chonettetaylor6731 Жыл бұрын
I make mine the same as you
@FMN9990
@FMN9990 11 ай бұрын
Bake for 12 hours?
@chonettetaylor6731
@chonettetaylor6731 11 ай бұрын
@@FMN9990 there are other methods that work well I have tested making it on the stove Using double cream that is 48-50% fat I boil it for 4 minutes if you use other cream with less fat content depending of the fat content I have added 10-20% of butter The oven method is 80 degrees Celsius that was the traditional way I the old days where farmhouse had AGA cookers which were on all the time to heat the house
@erisdiscordia5429
@erisdiscordia5429 11 ай бұрын
@@FMN9990 yes, 12 hours. search for Food Wishes Clotted Cream and you'll find that recipe. Doing it this way puts a pretty thick crust on your cream though. You can also make it in a pan way way faster, and without losing any to crustification. (That's a science term, don't google it)
@Happyheretic2308
@Happyheretic2308 4 ай бұрын
I wonder if you could use an air fryer with a bake option for this - might be fun to try..!
@meversace
@meversace Жыл бұрын
I'm in the US. I heard of clotted cream from a Welsh lady I know. I found an organic grass fed dairy farm nearby that's sells raw milk. I'm going to go buy some and try this. I've been craving it since I first heard of it. Thank you so much!!!
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails Жыл бұрын
I hope it worked for you! Sarah :)
@philstevens9914
@philstevens9914 11 ай бұрын
I'm a Brit that's lived in the US for some years now. One thing I miss is clotted cream. You can't get it here. The word "clotted" put's the silly buggers off. I found a recipe for it a few months ago. Basically take a large Pyrex dish and pour in the heaviest cream you can find. Then put the oven on as low as you can and put the dish in before going to bed. When you get up in the morning you will have clotted cream. I like this method also. I bet the way off it is great in a cuppa tea! One last thing, we used to go on holiday every year when I was a kid to St Ives. Not been for years. Must get back some time. Looks like you have a nicely done channel here. Oy, I'll be watching you two! 🙂
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 11 ай бұрын
Thanks for your lovely comment and ‘Hello!’ I’ve seen that method many times and I feel it’s really dehydrating already thick cream as opposed to scalding the full fat milk and skimming off the cream. But if it works and you get a usable cream, I’m not knocking it! love St Ives! Sarah :)
@jekku4688
@jekku4688 2 жыл бұрын
my first batch of clotted cream went bust 😞 I ended up with um...what seems like a cross between thickened cream and butter but the worst of both, separated, oily. Sigh. Hope my 2nd batch will be a success!
@angellover02171
@angellover02171 11 ай бұрын
I've tried the oven version, but it never turned out. Imfound out recently that double cream has a higher fat content. So if you make clotted cream in the US, add some butter.
@ShaneGilbert-cx4th
@ShaneGilbert-cx4th 4 ай бұрын
Rodders is such nice clotted cream,AND we can get that in Coventry. Take care and all the best. Good eferte and all the best. 😊😊👍👍👍
@creamonfirst3252
@creamonfirst3252 11 ай бұрын
Just discovered your KZbin 😊 As a Devon maid ( we always called girls maids when I was growing up) there was more Clotted cream produced here in Devon. Sadly fewer these days supermarkets mostly sell Rodders, which is fine in Cornwall but i try to support locally produced clotted cream whenever I can. Ive seen a couple of home produced methods now and may give it a try. But of course it'll be " cream on first " 😂 I did enjoy your video 😊
@carolann963
@carolann963 3 жыл бұрын
My Dad was born In Penzance and his mum, my grandmother showed me how to make clotted cream when I was first married over fifty years ago. I remember I had to buy full cream Jersey milk (gold top) I only made a small amount but was delighted it turned out a success. Its a long process and you have to be patient but as you well know it’s worth it. Sadly, people haven’t got the time these days. (still make pasties though! 😀). Thank you Sarah and Andrew for showing us how a proper Cornish cream tea should be done. I thought the “joining of the circle” with great Grannie’s cream dish was a lovely touch.💕
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
A really enjoyable trip into our family traditions and one that I will be able to remember. Enjoy your pasties! Sarah :)
@beckycochran8321
@beckycochran8321 3 жыл бұрын
@@CornishWalkingTrails I've been making clotted cream the last 3 years and crumpets too! Great success with both. I use an instapot for the cream, I just put some on a while ago, slow cook for 10 hours. In the am I will let it cool to room temp, then fridge it. I will jar it when it's all set and ready. I keep the "whey" to make scones, in the USA we make biscuits. I made Pindo Palm Jelly today so I will be serving that with the clotted cream. I will make crumpets which are quite easy. You can either use crumpet rings OR use a small can with both ends cut out....here typically something like pineapple slices come in the small cans. So I have 4 rings and one can, need to buy more of the pineapple! The crumpets are cooked about like pancakes, once they bubble up flip them over. So delicious as all the goodies sink down into those bubble areas. Fun video you did. We have friends in Zennor and Penzance, both have farms there. Our daughter (USA) married at Hellesveor Methodist Church in St Ives in 1995. Her husbands Aunt and Uncle have the farm near Penzance ( our daughter has since divorced but our connections to the area remain intact). In fact I contacted the ladies I knew when I started making the clotted cream, they were so helpful.
@celestialskye1
@celestialskye1 3 жыл бұрын
What a wonderful video you've done! Thoroughly enjoyed this. Kudos to you for going back to your family's for information and being able to talk to your Mums. How marvelous. You can also make this with just regular whipping cream ~ granted, may not have that wonderful taste of fresh, but still can be done. Thank you so much for sharing this recipe and this video! Love from California ... Katherine
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it! Invaluable advice from our Mums and such a beautiful result! Sarah :)
@sr.marycatharineperry6693
@sr.marycatharineperry6693 2 жыл бұрын
I'm from the US and clotted creme is very expensive. You two were so much fun to watch. Now I'm hungry!
@sevenseems4917
@sevenseems4917 Жыл бұрын
so, you need to boil the milk to separate the milk fat from the milk, and then you scoop the cream, and you can eat it as it is, or take this scooped cream and leave in the oven overnight at a rather low temp, approximately 80°C, anything from 6 to 12 hours will be nice. it will thicken a little, and get a more nutty flavour. thats the proper clotted cream. what you effectively managed to make, is what Turkish people call Kaymak. every region in europe and mid east have its own traditional way of collecting cream/kaymak from the milk, there is a lot you can learn by observing different methods, traditions.. including how you preserve it, and not have to eat it all in one or two days, (spoiler= adding salt to it, then you can keep it for a month.. and after its salted and rested its eaten with meat)
@nigelgardiner8398
@nigelgardiner8398 3 жыл бұрын
I was brought up on a North Cornwall dairy farm and my Grandmother made cream every day (except Sundays, cause John Wesley said so) The process was exactly the same as you did except on a larger scale. Large enamel pans where filled with milk from the morning milking and left on slate shelf’s in the cool farmhouse dairy (pantry) The following day the pans were moved to the Rayburn where she would ‘scald’ the milk for around an hour and then place back in the dairy to cool. Once cooled she used a slotted spoon to skim off the cream. She then used the clotted cream for Jam and Cream, cooking what we called ‘plate’ pasties (cooked on a large round plate) and good old ‘Thunder and Lighting’ - a piece of bread spread with the homemade clotted cream and white sugar sprinkled on top, ummm. Good memories from a time when things were not so complicated. Thank you for the video, the cream did look good and I bet it tasted proper as well. Love your videos, need to get yourselves up to Bude, Kilkhampton and Morwenstow there are some great walks and history in those areas. 👍
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
Would love to get up to Bude, but we will probably need an overnight. Hopefully when this pandemic is under control, we can pick up our plans! My grandad used to love thunder and lightning, pouring too much syrup as my Nanny berated him! Sarah :)
@nigelgardiner8398
@nigelgardiner8398 3 жыл бұрын
@@CornishWalkingTrails forgot the syrup 😂😂
@rogerdinnis3816
@rogerdinnis3816 3 жыл бұрын
My family came from 'heartbreak corner', inland from Bude.Cream was made regularly from skimming cream off the churn then heating it gently over a paraffin stove, skimming it off with a perforated disc ( a skimmer ) then when cooled straining off the excess milk. The result was a stiff paste like consistency. Thunder and lightening was cream and golden syrup on bread or a scone. The cream replaced butter so was spread first, sorry Cornwall! ( that will start the interweb humming!). I was told that it was developed because transporting milk was too difficult and expensive, especially from the more remote farms.
@nigelgardiner8398
@nigelgardiner8398 3 жыл бұрын
@@rogerdinnis3816 where’s Heartbreak corner?
@rogerdinnis3816
@rogerdinnis3816 3 жыл бұрын
The area known as heartbreak corner ( possibly only in our family?) is the land situated in North Devon between Bude and Launceston but generally around Holsworthy. So named because of small unworkable farms combined with the distance to any large town for markets making for very poor incomes.. My family farmed there for at least two hundred years. Our farm was called a 'town' because it was self-sufficient in most things.
@lindamorgan2678
@lindamorgan2678 5 ай бұрын
Great video ! The best part is you folks talking to your elders and getting memories and advice. Bravo so many young today are not doing that.They are SMART enough now because they have a SMART phone. Ha ha Loved your vid and the comparison between yours and the supermarket type is excellent. Real clotted cream is the one YOU made. Thanks again
@kathryngrace9038
@kathryngrace9038 2 ай бұрын
For some reason this video just popped up in my feed. I think I’ll skip the “stick fire” and just buy it, but I did enjoy watching this. What fun!
@EriqKoontz
@EriqKoontz 4 ай бұрын
Have you made the recipe below the one for clotted cream, the “Cornish Burnt cream“? It looks like something mind-blowingly tasty!
@susanbarganier2282
@susanbarganier2282 3 жыл бұрын
Such fun! The Jersey cows were so pretty, hearing your moms was delightful, and your tea table was so pretty. I was also impressed with your lovely camellia blooms. Or were they sasanquas? My maternal grandmother, aka Nanny, grew them and displayed them in milk glass. And hooray for the clotted cream!
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! They were the first Camelias, fresh from our garden. They are in full bloom now, showing much wanted signs of spring! Sarah :)
@ruthdoyle3572
@ruthdoyle3572 3 жыл бұрын
You’re video was so enjoyable to watch , it brought back memories of an unforgettable family holiday we had in Cornwall yrs ago . Before we went we were told to try the clotted cream with scones and it was a delicious treat. We have very happy memories of Cornwall, it is such a beautiful quaint place , my children also look back with nostalgia to that special time we spent there
@miachambers830
@miachambers830 11 ай бұрын
Perhaps if you ‘pour off’ the whey…? Then the cream would sit on the bottom of the pan..? You would have less ‘liquid’..? Never having eaten or (obviously) making clotted cream, I have no idea what I’m talking about..! However, I am a baker and would love to have clotted creation my scones..!! Not a clue where I’d get raw milk..! Cheers.. thank you for the video..!!
@vintagelady1
@vintagelady1 11 ай бұрын
Hmm, cream or jam first, sounds like the kind of thing that could lead to fisticuffs. I suppose that only an American savage would suggest mixxing the 2 right before serving? This sounds like something that requires intense experimentation, extensive trial & error. I would be ever so glad to volunteer to assist in this, as I am a retired lady & quite at leisure to eat scones with cream & jam all day long.
@lesliea.m.5392
@lesliea.m.5392 11 ай бұрын
I watched a woman make it on the stove top !! And she put 2 cups heavy cream in a pan on the stove top and brought it to a simmer and kept it going for about an hour stirring constantly then she put it in a shallow dish and in the fridge overnight, it was very thick like butter and she put it in a canning jar 😮
@grimwulf8547
@grimwulf8547 2 жыл бұрын
I think your using the wrong milk. My grandma here in Dorset used to get delivered a gold top on fridays. It was a very creamy milk with high fat content. she made clotted cream with that i the oven on real low heat covered in tin foil. When it was done she would mash it up with a fork and then put it in the fridge over night. The next day it would look, tasteand feel like the clotted cream that you buy in the shop. Saturday was clotted cream, home made jam and scones day!
@chrischamberlain6174
@chrischamberlain6174 3 жыл бұрын
Have to say that was absolutley fascinating! Off to the co-op tomorrow for Jersey cream.....!
@clivelight6059
@clivelight6059 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks cwt for the video. N.B. Most supermarket milk is homogenised - eg put through a fine sieve/ holes making fat molecules break down and stay suspended in the liquid, preventing the cream from rising to the top. Milk from Jersey cows is best and lots of cream! (gold top) Clotted cream made commercially use a cream separator, but is missing a subtle part of the flavour! Remember going to the Dairy, and watching the maid skim the cream that was in a large white enamel bowl with blue edge, and put it in a pot for my gran. Yummy!
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 2 жыл бұрын
We definitely noticed a difference between our home made cream and the shop bought product! Sarah :)
@PhilipInCoventry
@PhilipInCoventry 10 ай бұрын
This is fabulous. My aunt who made her own cream, once she had taken the top off, the liquid from below was used with porridge & breakfast cereals. She lived most of her life in Tregonetha. No one had a phone in Tregonetha village, but there was a call box in the centre of the village. Anyone answered the calls, then shouted out who the call was for. I can't make this up it's so rich! 1950s.
@chrisneedham5803
@chrisneedham5803 3 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed watching the video, very educational. 5p for a cook book from all those years ago, it may have been extremely expensive at the time. 🐶🐾🐾🐶🍷🍺👍🏼
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
Very true! Hadn't though about that. Not like to day where recipes are free on the internet! Sarah :)
@chrisneedham5803
@chrisneedham5803 3 жыл бұрын
@@CornishWalkingTrails the W.I. ladies were very posh back then, Mrs Bucket types 😂😂👍🏼
@KKnits
@KKnits 3 жыл бұрын
How fun a visit with the Girls, and then the lovely clotted cream! Thank you! Definitely going to try this!
@hazydreamer7965
@hazydreamer7965 2 жыл бұрын
Your clotted cream looks delicious. I must try it. Thanks and regards from northern Europe.
@TeaandFiona
@TeaandFiona 3 жыл бұрын
I don't think we can get unpasteurized milk here
@sayitskay
@sayitskay 3 жыл бұрын
Benny Hill...that has been a while. My father who passed away in 2015 loved watching him. My memories of a child include having Benny Hill on TV in the evening.
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
Me too and I loved the chase music, used to sing along to it! Sarah :)
@stevecooper7038
@stevecooper7038 3 жыл бұрын
Proper job! 👍🙂
@vikkielmore3480
@vikkielmore3480 2 жыл бұрын
I'm from Texas and am absolutely excited to try and make this! Thanks for the different methods! PS: scones and cream aren't a thing here so it will definitely be something different for us!
@suzannamatthews1619
@suzannamatthews1619 3 жыл бұрын
Lovely
@lhrjfk2000
@lhrjfk2000 3 жыл бұрын
We’ve grade A,whole, 2%, 1%, low fat, nonfat, oat, almond, organic, reduced, lactose free, non dairy, vegan, vit D, goat, buffalo, coconut, milk here but damn it NO stickfire… Greetings from Los Angeles, California 🍾🥂👍
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
LOL! Very funny! Sarah :)
@ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
@ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim 7 ай бұрын
What an excellent video from start to finish, you even showed the happy cows! Thank you and may this video recieve the appreciation it deserves! Well back then I think most folks would have left the milk out overnight. This is totally safe to do BECAUSE your milk was fresh milk that morning, from happy healthy cows with a good diet and clean environment and room. So you can trust your milk to have a strong, diverse flora of gut-healthy bacteria that aid in the making of all the world's finest traditional cheeses. These flora will multiply better at room tempn whether winter or summer; fridge temp slows them down and that means a less rich, tangy, aromatic cream and possibly a bit of off flavor too. Also the 24 hours will help make a thicker clotted cream, and an easier to skim off, too. Thank you so much for sharing, your area and its old folks are so charming, it gives me a sense of longing like few other places can.
@sharonstotts7493
@sharonstotts7493 2 жыл бұрын
Do you think you were meant to leave out on counter overnight? Because way would there be a time for winter vs summer, toe it means room temperature milk
@irmar
@irmar 10 ай бұрын
Exactly, and there was no fridge in the old times. Maybe in 1929 many homes did have one, but many surely didn't.
@iblessyou.forextrablessing7597
@iblessyou.forextrablessing7597 2 жыл бұрын
Wow this is far easier than oven
@BeatTheFlash
@BeatTheFlash 2 жыл бұрын
I recommend making a rice pudding with the remaining liquid.
@loristeiner5493
@loristeiner5493 3 жыл бұрын
Loved, Loved , loved this video. Lots of work but looks like it was well worth the effort!! So glad you showed the contrast of pre made versus homemade, the one I had purchased online was not as yellow in color but mostly white, probably depends on cows diet as well as other factors!!So wonderful to see the fur babies🤗 Lyla and Milo send their regards, lots of happiness your way and stay healthy, Lori
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
Hi Lori, There is q definite difference between the shop bought and homemade cream - both lovely! Say "Hello!" to Lyla and Milo! Sarah :)
@debramiddlemas9641
@debramiddlemas9641 3 жыл бұрын
Love your video. Live in US and have wanted to learn this since I had a holiday in UK years ago. Can’t wait to try. Thank Go’s for our Mum’s
@zabeerrashid8148
@zabeerrashid8148 3 жыл бұрын
Making the jams next and tea...
@sarahwright9565
@sarahwright9565 3 жыл бұрын
Really good video. I have recommended it to my daughter who lives in Germany. She has often flown back from Newquay with the ingredients for a cream tea. Not any more post brexit!!
@lynnclark4208
@lynnclark4208 3 жыл бұрын
More info here than the others
@cebusapella9125
@cebusapella9125 3 жыл бұрын
What a fascinating and delicious looking video, I could almost taste your cream tea! I miss clotted cream terribly when I'm away from Cornwall. Many thanks.
@iskuialexanyan9792
@iskuialexanyan9792 3 жыл бұрын
Pure milk fat
@annyoung1579
@annyoung1579 2 жыл бұрын
Jeri on Hopalong Hollow You Tube here in USA made it with crock pot !! She did a Charles Dickens tea !! Yours is beautiful and love your grandmother's beautiful cream dish !!
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Sarah :)
@dee2251
@dee2251 5 ай бұрын
I’d imagine having milk from grass fed cows affects the quality of the milk and therefore the cream, just as it does with butter.
@nigelperry8863
@nigelperry8863 8 ай бұрын
Clotted cream is so much easier than this. Take a pint of heavy cream if you are in US, or double cream if you are in UK. Use a plastic or glass bowl of a size that the cream half fills it. Microwave on full (in my case 900) for 5 minutes. (it will boil) Rest for a couple of minutes. Repeat twice. Allow to cool and refrigerate. Creams and microwaves vary. If your cream is not as thick as you want, repeat the process until it is as you want it. I have done the 10 hours in the oven method as well. Results are similar.
@CandycaneBeyond
@CandycaneBeyond 2 ай бұрын
I think the 12 hour low baking method works better to help it evaporate more of the liquid
@JoannaLouise200
@JoannaLouise200 3 жыл бұрын
Looks absolutely delicious! Lovely to hear both mums' recipe advice and recollections...spanning the years from when they were children ~ gives watching the video an extra special dimension. Maybe all the remaining separated milk could be used for making rice puddings? btw, love the really pretty daisy print top.
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
We enjoyed making this video, it was a dip into our heritage especially meeting the cows that provided the milk. As for the top, a bargain in last year's Sea Salt sale!!
@JoannaLouise200
@JoannaLouise200 3 жыл бұрын
Yes!, it was good to see the dairy cows...source of that precious milk. They have such pretty faces & soulful eyes, hope they get a good life (they looked very relaxed!). I wondered whether your top was Sea Salt ~ they have such stunning prints & colours!
@cathydyer3774
@cathydyer3774 Жыл бұрын
That was fun to watch. Thanks to the mothers too. 🧡 . Glad you enjoyed it. 😊😋😋
@macycharmin
@macycharmin Жыл бұрын
Very interesting. I've always wondered what clotted cream was. I wished I had known about it when in London for few days in the 90's (one of my best trips ever). That is a lot of work. I enjoyed your video too. Blessing from way across the pond in North Texas.
@dramatechws
@dramatechws 3 жыл бұрын
Nice, but not quite enough milk in the pan, and too much 'calve's milk' (The leftover separated skimmed milk) in your cream.
@break4love23
@break4love23 3 жыл бұрын
Every colonized country makes this and calls it something different.
@suerobertson5132
@suerobertson5132 3 жыл бұрын
Well done ,awesome demo,,love how our grannies used to/had to do things,clean,,fresh, all I have to do is try and sauce "real milk" love from Australia 👍🇦🇺
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
Hope you enjoy having a go! Sarah :)
@suzz1776
@suzz1776 2 жыл бұрын
Just came across ur channel. U seem like such a sweet women. Cheers from California, 🇺🇸!!!
@Happyheretic2308
@Happyheretic2308 4 ай бұрын
Could you make soda bread with the milk underneath?
@miskyloo887
@miskyloo887 2 жыл бұрын
Zap cream in the microwave in 5 min blasts until thick then chill.. Super easy..
@ladygardener100
@ladygardener100 9 ай бұрын
Nowadays milk is homogenised, this creates small fat globules so the cream does not rise to the top. So I doubt clotted cream will be as it was fifty years ago.
@marjoriejohnson6535
@marjoriejohnson6535 3 жыл бұрын
I went all the way to ireland..one of the things I wanted to do was try clotted cream. Because my friends were so busy i didn't spend long in the grocery and forgot....so sad. Now i think i need to try making it here in upstate New york,USA. Because I am now to disabled...ps...my trip to Ireland wound up as my last hurrah.
@carolleenkelmann3829
@carolleenkelmann3829 2 жыл бұрын
That was funny: needing Benny Hill music to chasing the clotted cream around the pan to harvest. It was wonderful catching a glimpse of your grandmother's old recipe book.
@gregmunro1137
@gregmunro1137 3 жыл бұрын
Buying unpasteurized milk in Canada is illegal - is a farmer is caught selling it, they can be in serious trouble.
@debjarvie-sexton1609
@debjarvie-sexton1609 2 жыл бұрын
Easiest way is to buy heavy cream and pour in baking dish and cook in oven...
@dadegroot
@dadegroot 2 жыл бұрын
Oh aye, jam first in Australia too, but we don't have the luxury of clotted cream, rather whipped is used.
@gloriagail5351
@gloriagail5351 2 жыл бұрын
I would love the Scone recipe please. I also would love to purchase the recipe book if possible.
@aprilmapp3140
@aprilmapp3140 Жыл бұрын
thank you very interesting .Something new to me. im from coventry uk.
@Kittycats26
@Kittycats26 3 жыл бұрын
I discovered your channel purely for researching walks for our holiday last year. However, being in to crafts and cookery, I absolutely adore all your additional ‘diversified’ content! I shall keep watching to see what else I can learn about
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
Wonderful! I think we would get a little stale if we produced a walk video every week, variety - the spice of life! Sarah :)
@MaxPowers
@MaxPowers Жыл бұрын
The one you did in the pan was the best. But you should have created a hole in the crust, then poured the more liquidy milk away until drained. Then you have all the beautiful crusty cream left behind. It should be then kept in the fridge for at least 12 hours before use.
@phil7301
@phil7301 3 жыл бұрын
Great video again,. Me and the ex made clotted cream years back,, we used pasteurised milk, it was a fair few yrs ago but what I remember it was ok. Couldn't have been great tho as we never made it again ! Mind you when the local shop sells it so why dirty the dishes 😁🥟🥟🥟👍
@NatashaNewtonArt
@NatashaNewtonArt 3 жыл бұрын
That looked delicious; such an interesting video too! If you could have heard all the oohs and ahhhs and mmmmms emanating from our house this morning...I think at one point we may have rubbed our thighs vigorously. 😂
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
That sounds so intriguing! Like Gogglebox for CWT!! If only I was a fly on the wall! Sarah :)
@suejackson6625
@suejackson6625 3 жыл бұрын
Looks lovely! How interesting, really enjoyed the history. Hope we can safely visit your lovely county again someday soon. Sue J Morecambe Bay.
@AHD2105
@AHD2105 2 жыл бұрын
Lol, maybe tip the liquid into a jug and the scoop out the cream.😂😅🤣
@blitzpfalz9973
@blitzpfalz9973 3 жыл бұрын
Nice that you prepared a clotted cream yourself. I've been waiting for this for a long time as we are big cream tea fans. Jam first, of course. The problem because we live in Germany is not available in the Roddas supermarket clotted cream. But the preparation is difficult, unfortunately my English is not so good that I can follow your conversation. We are all the more looking forward to our next holiday in Cornwall with Cream Tea. Enjoy your meal and stay healthy. best regards Günter
@ArchiMad1317
@ArchiMad1317 2 жыл бұрын
Afghani people have the clotted cream in pink tea or for breakfast with home made bread and a sprinkle of suger on top of it
@CocoyMoya1985
@CocoyMoya1985 Жыл бұрын
Scones with jam and clotted cream... just lovely 💗💗💗
@BeatTheFlash
@BeatTheFlash 2 жыл бұрын
Rodda's is nothing like proper clotted cream.
@starshine8169
@starshine8169 2 жыл бұрын
I believe stand meant on the counter not the fridge for 24 hours
@lyudmilaaksan2232
@lyudmilaaksan2232 3 жыл бұрын
I am usually have a problem converting measurements from old strange stuff. :) Especially because English is not my first language.
@Tmanaz480
@Tmanaz480 10 ай бұрын
I wish we had more Jersey herds in the U.S. They're a small niche here.
@WolfmanWoody
@WolfmanWoody 3 жыл бұрын
It was nice to see your old dog in that video. Not Andrew (lol), but the grey one, we haven't seen it for quite a few videos now. Hope he's doing well still.
@anastasia10017
@anastasia10017 2 жыл бұрын
I have never seen clotted cream as stiff as the store bought stuff they show in this video.
@stellamariesmithson1431
@stellamariesmithson1431 Жыл бұрын
I make it every week but the modern way. I use the milky bit in my scones
@elshadiesolomon9050
@elshadiesolomon9050 3 жыл бұрын
you could have just drained the milk underneath
@MicheleMaBelle67
@MicheleMaBelle67 10 ай бұрын
Well done! I thoroughly enjoyed this!
@deebaker9961
@deebaker9961 3 жыл бұрын
I love old recipe books. I used to have several from my great aunt, that were her mom's, but after moving several times, I have lost them. I would love a copy of your mum's recipe book!
@annahaug1420
@annahaug1420 2 жыл бұрын
Very nice, but how did the second homemade one taste?
@Adam-ox6zy
@Adam-ox6zy 3 жыл бұрын
Great stuff -AND the jam on first! Spot on!!
@michaellock3600
@michaellock3600 3 жыл бұрын
It seems like every tv personality on the planet is following in your footsteps , From Darcey Bustle and Julia Bradbury. To Ms Calman . But for all their big production crews none of them have the same feel for companionship as your Lovely selves Keep it up, and when you've done it all Do it again 👍👍👍👍👍 Please
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! Yes, everyone is down here for a slice of the action, Cornwall has a draw that no-one seems to resist! Sarah :)
@sandie321
@sandie321 3 жыл бұрын
Brill. Really enjoyed that. Thank you🍶
@stephenjohns3817
@stephenjohns3817 3 жыл бұрын
Another great video....shop bought creams probably contain additives to make it solidify....
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
We are left wondering how the creameries make it today without getting the runny, thin product under the cream - so many questions! Sarah :)
@suerobertson5132
@suerobertson5132 3 жыл бұрын
Also a just read a post that said, that you say," cheers and scones'. Lol I thought it was " cheers and gone". 👍🇦🇺 u 2 are the perfect couple,
@CornishWalkingTrails
@CornishWalkingTrails 3 жыл бұрын
😁Sarah :)
@Rickettsia505
@Rickettsia505 9 ай бұрын
OMG, the camellias!
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