Milk, 2 teaspoons of plain flour and cheese.
Buttermilk, cottage cheese , other cheeses .
Cheese, yogurt, and buttermilk are three examples of food made from milk with the help of bacteria.
No. Buttermilk is a liquid which is left over when you churn cream to make butter. You can also make cultured buttermilk by adding a specific bacteria, Streptococcus lactis to milk.
Cottage cheese is a simple cheese made from milk with an additive to curdle it - i.e., to make curds and whey. It contains milk, possibly buttermilk as well, and rennet. There are several sites on how to make your own cottage cheese out there. Rennet, btw, is non-vegetarian in many cases - if you are vegetarian, you should check the label - kosher and vegan options are out there, but are *not* the standard.
Cottage cheese is a simple cheese made from milk with an additive to curdle it - i.e., to make curds and whey. It contains milk, possibly buttermilk as well, and rennet. There are several sites on how to make your own cottage cheese out there. Rennet, btw, is non-vegetarian in many cases - if you are vegetarian, you should check the label - kosher and vegan options are out there, but are *not* the standard.
You can make cheese out of any mammal's milk.
The shortening can be replaced with butter of margarine. One can replace buttermilk with regular milk or you may add a teaspoon of vinegar to the milk which will make it curdle.
Yes, it depends on what you're making, however because buttermilk is acidic it is generally used in recipes to control the leavening/rising process. A straight substitute of milk is less acidic and will result in overly fluffy pancakes, etc... You can sour regular milk by adding 1 T lemon juice to 1 c milk and let stand for about 5 minutes. You can also substitute plain yogurt. It depends on what you're making but, for baking, buttermilk can generally be subsituted for whole milk.
The buttermilk that you find at the supermarket is made from cow's milk and not suitable for vegans. Vegans can make a substitute for buttermilk by adding a bit of lemon juice or vinegar to their favorite plant milk.
If you're asking for a buttermilk substitute, place one tablespoon of lemon juice or vinegar in a one cup measure. Fill to one cup mark with regular milk and let sit for five minutes. Use for buttermilk in any [[Q/Can you replace milk for buttermilk in a recipe#|recipe]]. I don't think plain milk would give the correct flavor to the recipe.
Sour milk and buttermilk are not the same. Sour milk is milk that has gone bad, while buttermilk is a fermented dairy product with a tangy flavor.