h a l f b a k e r yA few slices short of a loaf.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
The usual sticks of butter come in half-cup sticks, but I fin that most recipes call for amounts of butter that fall in 1/4 cup increments, thus leaving a half used stick of butter. The simple expediment of half-sized butter sticks individualy wrapped would solve this problem.
I have not yet come
across a recipe calling for 3/8 cup of butter.
Sticks of butter
http://www.thatsbj....502FTMbutter_01.jpg Not from a tree [DesertFox, Jul 10 2005]
Another butter stick.
http://www.afunworl...res/picture-778.htm Twice halfbaked. [2 fries shy of a happy meal, Jul 10 2005]
more butter, can't have too much butter
http://www.landolakes.com/products/ [dentworth, Jul 11 2005]
Knob or Stick
http://www.googlefi...2stick+of+butter%22 According to this link, butter is 4 times more likely to described as being in the form of a stick than a knob. [hippo, Jul 12 2005]
Knob of butter
http://www.ochef.com/300.htm In our experience, a knob of butter is a couple tablespoons, more or less. [SledDog, May 05 2006]
[link]
|
|
Sticks of butter? Do you harvest your butter off trees? |
|
|
Does butter really get measured in cups? That's weird. Sticks isn't much better. |
|
|
I think a much more universal method is called for. Hmmm.... now that's a posting guaranteed to bring down the fishbones. Excuse me for a sec! |
|
|
Sticks of butter are a half a cup. Lots of recipes call for something like 1/4 a cup or 3/4 a cup, which leaves half of a stick of butter unused. |
|
|
recipes here use ounces or dollops. |
|
|
A well-built slice of toast can absorb
four times its own weight in butter.
That ought to handle the surplus. |
|
|
Where did you get that nugget of wisdom from [basepair]? |
|
|
//Just what do you do in your spare
time, anyway?// I'm a researcher for
the Butter Research and Marketing
Council. Actually no. I just like butter. |
|
|
I think butter 'sticks' may be particularly American. Never seen them anywhere else. |
|
|
// think butter 'sticks' may be particularly American// Realising that weighing ingredients is not an American thing, roughly how much does a butter stick weigh? (I'm guessing it is printed on the pack - seems unlikely that supermarket goods are measured in fractions of cups) |
|
|
[Tol.]quarter of a pound, four sticks to a box usually. see link |
|
|
a full stick is a 1/2 cup, and the wrapper is marked off in tablespoons (one 'pat' being a tablespoon) so you can surely see how very difficult it would be for USers to convert at this stage in history. |
|
|
[po] Don't you mean 'knobs'? |
|
|
In the UK, a butter comes in a pack, or a pat, each which I think is about the same size as 2 sticks. |
|
|
I think it's funny that butter gets measured using a word that is about as unbuttery as you can get considering your average twig's brittle, woody, pointy, knobbly character - having a "stick" of butter is like having a "squidge" of Sherman Tank, or a "slosh" of uranium control scaffolding. |
|
|
Perhaps at some time in the past, butter was employed as a weapon of war and dropped from aircraft, and the collective noun stuck. |
|
|
I always thought a pat of butter was about the amount that you could get on the end of your knife - or is that what [Pa've] calls a pad? I am simply amazed at the confusion caused by trying to measure butter. |
|
|
You know what they say, "Heart of gold - knob of butter". |
|
| |