Description
French Butter Dish in Vintage Blue
A Unique Butter Dish From the 19th Century with a Modern Taste
Having problems when spreading butter on your toast and rolls? Give our French Butter Dish in Vintage Blue a try. This 19th century inspired butter dish is handy and beautiful, making it a work of art.
What to expect from Blue French Butter Dish
- Comes with instruction
- Dishwasher and microwave safe
- Lead-free Dinnerware
- Watertight
- English Porcelain
Free Gift with Purchase
Watch the video to see how to use a French Butter Dish
Artist-Made Butter Dishes - Art & Function
Cold butter is hard to spread and very frustrating, making holes all over the toast.
With a French butter dish like this, you don’t need to refrigerate the butter, yet the butter stays fresh and spreadaime.
Besides, Blue Gold French Butter Dish is more than a butter dish; it’s a work of art.
Although the French butter dish, also known as a butter bell, has been used since the 19th century to keep butter fresh and spreadable without refrigeration, no one has ever made one as artistic yet functional as this!
This Blue Gold French Butter Dish has two parts, a base to hold water and a cup that holds the packed butter, which also serves as a lid. Watch the video below to learn how to use the French Butter Dish by Fine Ceramics.
♥microwave safe
♥Watertight
♥Porcelain
♥FREE GIFT WITH PURCHASE
How about making your butter to make this butter bell crock even more special? Here is how:
Butter Recipe
Ingredients
- 1-pint heavy whipping cream
- 4+ oz of ice water
- cheesecloth (optional)
- Salt to taste (optional)
- Food processor,
- Pour a pint of heavy cream or whipping cream into the food processor for about 4 minutes. First, the cream will turn into whipped cream with soft, stiff peaks. Keep going until the cream breaks. In this process, you are separating the butterfat from the liquid.
- Once the butter has solidified, Rinse the butter by pouring ice water inside the food processor to separate the buttermilk from the butter.
- Using a strainer, separate the water/buttermilk and save it for delicious buttermilk pancakes. Squish the butter with your hands or with cheesecloth to release all buttermilk.
- Then add some salt if you like and work that through the butter.
- This Recipe allows two sticks of butter. You can use one in your butter bell and save the leftover in the fridge until you need more butter in your new butter bell crock.
- That is it! In a few minutes, you can enjoy fresh, homemade butter with no additives, just cream, and salt; best of all, no churn is required!
- Use it in your favorite recipes, on toast, baked potatoes, or any food that asks for butter.
Enjoy!
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A 19th-century tradition on your table
Cold butter is hard to spread and very frustrating, making holes all over the toast.
With a butter bell like this one, you don’t need to refrigerate the butter, and yet the butter stays fresh and spreadable all the time.
Although the French butter dish has been used since the 19th century to keep butter fresh and spreadable without refrigeration, no one has ever made one as artistic yet functional as this one!
Besides, it’s straightforward to use a French butter dish; it has two parts, a base to hold water and a cup to pack the butter, which also serves as a lid. Once the butter bowl is inside the container with water, it becomes airtight, subsequently avoiding bacterias’ growth, not allowing the butter to get rancid.
Make a complete set with a sugar jar with these same cute birds.

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All pottery in this site is handmade in Bethesda, Maryland, USA.

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