apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


Good Question: How Do I Use Ghee?

2009_04_23-Ghee.jpgWe recently received a question from a reader who had bought a jar of ghee. She was curious how long it would last in the fridge, and what she could use it for. Sara writes:

I also got a jar of ghee; how long will it last in my fridge, and what would be good uses for it (especially ones I might not think of!)

 
 

2009_04_23-Ghee02.jpgFirst off, what is ghee anyway?

When you melt butter and let it boil for a little while, the water will gradually evaporate and the milk protein and solids will settle down into the bottom and be strained away. The butter fat that is left will be solid at room temperature, and since the moisture content is very low and there are no more milk solids left in it, it can be kept for a long time without refrigeration.

This process was used primarily in the Middle East and South Asia to preserve dairy. Ghee is used as the primary cooking fat and even as lamp oil.

Ghee will last for a very long time without going rancid, although I do keep mine in the fridge to prolong its life. It should last as long as you need it to: months and months at least. You can use it as a cooking oil anywhere else you would use butter or oil: cooking vegetables, frying rice before steaming it, or searing meat. Since it doesn't have the milk solids of butter, you can fry with it at higher temperatures without it smoking. It is very high in fat of of course, so do use it with good judgment!

Readers, how do you use ghee?

Related: Word of Mouth: Ghee

(Images: Faith Durand)

Tags

Ingredients - Pantry, butter, dairy, ghee, Indian cuisine

Related Links

Share

Comments (11)

You're also gonna want to use it sparingly, since, you know, it'll eventually make your heart stop beating.

posted by Schwartz on April 24th 2009 at 8:44am
view Schwartz's profile

Use it sparingly, but you can basically use it for anything you would use butter in cooking, though certainly not at a 1:1 ratio. You can put it on toast, you can use it to make your scrambled eggs, you can sautee a piece of chicken in it... Only thing I don't know is how it would translate into baking.

posted by chi_cass on April 24th 2009 at 9:04am
view chi_cass's profile

I keep some in the fridge and substitute it for oil in any Indian-inspired cooking I do. I make yellow rice with diced onions, garlic, turmeric, cloves and cardamom, sauteeing everything together in some ghee before cooking the rice. Or in any spicy lentil dishes, curries, etc.

posted by Forthright Fattie on April 24th 2009 at 9:08am
view Forthright Fattie's profile

Indian food and lighting oil lamps. Those are the two primary uses. Other than carefully substituting for butter or oil in other recipes, I'm not quite sure there is much else you can do with it.

posted by indivara on April 24th 2009 at 9:54am
view indivara 's profile

Indian food recipes! ...

We make ghee (really easy) and use it in this dish:
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/tyler-florence/eggplant-in-curry-coconut-sauce-recipe/index.html

sooo good.

posted by amandamae on April 24th 2009 at 11:17am
view amandamae's profile

Ghee keeps for a very long time in the fridge, since it was originally made to keep butter from spoiling in hot climates. You can use it anywhere you would need a cooking "oil" and of course in any recipe that calls for clarified butter.

posted by fjorlief on April 24th 2009 at 11:27am
view fjorlief's profile

I would use it as I use any oil: primarily for sautéing things. (I'm not a baker.)

Interesting that this came up: my wife is cutting dairy from her diet, but since all the milk proteins are removed, I think clarified butter (aka ghee) would be allowed. (It's an allergy thing, which implicates the proteins.)

posted by Leisureguy on April 24th 2009 at 11:33am
view Leisureguy's profile

You don't have to store ghee in the fridge. My family is of Indian origin, and we make this stuff at home (by melting/clarifying butter for hours, and then waiting for it to harden) and we store it in a big jar for months in the cupboard. I don't recommend making it - it smells gross!

posted by kosha on April 24th 2009 at 11:35am
view kosha's profile

Sundays at Moosewood has a great recipe for Ethiopian-style spiced clarified butter...I imagine you would just simmer the spices in this stuff and strain it. I have some homemade in my fridge and use it to cook greens. It's really good!

here's one version:
http://www.whats4eats.com/sauces/niter-kibbeh-recipe

posted by akostalas on April 24th 2009 at 12:05pm
view akostalas's profile

If you make any chapatis or paranthas, a small dollop of ghee or white butter makes a fantastic topping. Also great on some dals (lentils) -- try it on the darker ones, like maa ki dal.
In all of the above the ghee is added to individual taste and served immediately, before it melts away.

posted by Aman on April 25th 2009 at 6:17pm
view Aman's profile

Unlike Kosha, I would recommend making it over buying it. I like the scent of butter baking in my oven (one of the methods for clarifying the butter), and the product is much more delicate in odor than the storebought kind, which I found not-quite-but-almost revolting. And clarifying butter is startlingly easy to do.

My mother in law especially likes ghee spread on fresh rotis.

posted by Jenny B on April 28th 2009 at 5:12pm
view Jenny B's profile