:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Ghee is butter that has been improved by fire and patience. :INFO What Ghee Is and Why It Is Different Ghee is clarified butter with all water and milk solids removed. Regular butter is roughly 80% fat, 16% water, and 4% milk solids. Those solids burn at high heat and cause spoilage. When you cook out the water and filter out the solids, you are left with pure butterfat — shelf stable at room temperature for months, with a smoke point of around 485°F versus butter's 350°F. :COUNTER.half 30 to 45 Minutes | :COUNTER.half 485 F :PATH Melt Butter Over Low Heat Place butter in a heavy pan over lowest heat and let it melt without stirring. | :INFO Melt Butter Over Low Heat Cut unsalted butter into rough chunks and place in a heavy-bottomed saucepan over the lowest heat possible. Let it melt slowly without stirring. As it heats, it will foam on top from water evaporating. After 10 minutes the foam will subside. A second more delicate foam will appear later — this signals the milk solids are beginning to brown. :PATH Watch for the Three Stages Foam, then clarity, then golden solids on the bottom — remove at stage three. | :INFO Watch for the Three Stages First the butter foams and sputters as water boils off. Then the liquid turns clear and golden — this is clarified butter, not ghee. Continue cooking. The milk solids settle to the bottom and begin to turn light golden brown. At this point — and not before — pull the pan from heat. The solids will be toasty, not burnt. This browning stage is what gives ghee its nutty, complex flavor. :PATH Strain Through Cheesecloth Pour through cheesecloth into a dry glass jar and seal once cool. | :INFO Strain Through Cheesecloth Line a fine mesh strainer with cheesecloth and set it over a clean, completely dry glass jar. Pour the hot ghee through slowly. The browned milk solids will collect in the cloth. Discard solids. Let the ghee cool to room temperature, then seal. Water causes spoilage — make sure all equipment is bone dry. :CHECKLIST What You Need [ ] 2 to 4 sticks (225 to 450g) unsalted butter [ ] Heavy-bottomed saucepan [ ] Cheesecloth and fine mesh strainer [ ] Clean, dry glass jar for storage :NOTE Never Walk Away During the Final Stage The difference between golden milk solids and burnt ones is about 90 seconds of attention. Once the liquid turns clear and you see the solids starting to brown on the bottom, watch closely. Burnt ghee tastes bitter and cannot be rescued. Keep heat on lowest setting and pull the pan slightly before you think it is done — carryover heat finishes it. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] One pound of butter becomes one jar of ghee. The jar outlasts the month. :LINK https://www.seriouseats.com/how-to-make-ghee-clarified-butter Serious Eats — How to Make Ghee (Clarified Butter)