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Herb butter

Such prepared herb butter will certainly be appreciated for a quick dinner, grilled meat, or baked potatoes. Herb butter is a classic compound butter (beurre composé). French staples include maître d’hôtel butter (parsley and lemon), Burgundy/escargot butter (garlic-parsley), and the iconic Café de Paris for grilled meats. At home it’s a quick flavor finisher for steaks, roasted potatoes, vegetables, or warm bread.

Ingredients:
  • 250 g / 8,8 oz / 1 cup butter
  • One tsp thyme
  • One tsp rosemary
  • One tsp basil (dried)
  • One tsp garlic (dried)
  • Salt to taste

Recipe steps:
  1. Let's allow the butter to warm up so it's easier to handle, so we can cut it into smaller cubes for easier handling.
  2. Then put the butter in a bowl and gradually stir in the salt and herbs with a fork. We choose the amount of salt and herbs according to our taste (anyone who doesn't like salt can skip it completely).
  3. We can keep the carefully mixed butter in a container, shaped with moulds, or using foil to turn it into a rolling pin.
  4. Put the butter in the fridge and leave for at least 12 hours (preferably 24 hours).
  5. Serve with bread, grilled meat, or use in other recipes.

Before you start:
  • Use soft, room-temperature butter (about 18-20 °C / 64-68 °F).
  • Chop herbs very finely and pat them dry.
  • As a rule of thumb, mix 2-4 tbsp finely chopped herbs per 250 g butter.
  • Season gradually, salt intensifies after resting.
  • Roll into a log in parchment, chill, and slice into coins as needed.

Flavor maps and variations:
  • Provençal: thyme, rosemary, basil + a hint of lemon zest.
  • Maître d’hôtel: flat-leaf parsley, lemon juice and zest, black pepper.
  • Escargot style: garlic, parsley, a whisper of nutmeg, great on steaks and bread.
  • Café de Paris inspired: parsley, chives, tarragon, capers, anchovy, Dijon, lemon.
  • For fish/seafood: dill, chives, lemon; or use brown butter for nuttiness.
  • Mediterranean: sun-dried tomatoes, olives, oregano, garlic.
  • Czech twist: marjoram and garlic for roasts and potatoes.
  • Spicy: chili flakes, smoked paprika, lime zest.

Add-ins and technique tips:
  • Brightness: a few drops of lemon juice or white wine vinegar.
  • Crunch: lightly toasted nuts or seeds.
  • Dried vs fresh herbs: use roughly one-third the amount if dried.
  • Garlic: for longer storage, briefly sweat minced garlic in a little butter first, then fold in.

Storage and uses:
  • Keeps up to 1 week refrigerated and 2-3 months frozen. Freeze as a log or in an ice cube tray.
  • Serve on steaks, fish, roasted potatoes, grilled vegetables, pasta, or simply spread on warm bread. Add a spoon to hot dishes and let it melt to finish.

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