Compound butters have been around just about one day less than butter itself has. And perhaps the most basic is also the most famous, the Maitre d'Hotel Butter which consists of just butter, lemon juice, parsley, salt and pepper. Here's Mrs. Beeton's* original recipe for this workhorse sauce:
MAITRE D’HOTEL BUTTER
(for putting into Broiled Fish just before it is sent to Table)
INGREDIENTS - 1/4 lb. of butter, 2 dessertspoonfuls of minced parsley, salt and pepper to taste, the juice of 1 large lemon.
Mode - Work the above ingredients well together, and let them be thoroughly mixed with a wooden spoon. If this is used as a sauce, it may be poured either under or over the meat or fish it is intended to be served with.
Average cost, for this quantity, 5d.
We've probably all made some form of compound butter--heck, if you've made garlic toast, you've made a compound butter--but categorically the concept offers so much more. It's cliche to say "the sky's the limit" but here it's really true. Just glance through the compound butter entry in Larousse Gastronomique: anchovy butter, shrimp butter, hazalnut and almond butters, crab butter, crayfish butter, herring butter, horseradish butter...gosh there's even a Colbert butter. No, there are no Republicans ground and mixed in, it's a Maitre d'Hotel butter with chopped tarragon and dissolved meat jelly.
Compound butters are widely used by restaurants and good home cooks here in my neck of the woods because salmon season really needs the kind of diversity of flavors compound butters can provide. Change the butter and you change the dish.
But fish and steak aren't the only happy beneficiaries. I recall fondly, during cherry blossom season in Washington DC, being served a grilled breast of pheasant with a bing cherry compound butter that was absolutely ethereal.
And what about vegetables? At a little dinner party last night one of my guests argued against compound butters, but he was basically arguing against butter in excess and he considers compound butters a way of promoting the use of butter, and he cited the application of a cold knob of compound butter melting atop a just-grilled steak. Of course, he's right about the fact that the butter torpedoos what is already a cholesterol heavy meal.
But what he had not considered was the use of ingredients that would actually be an argument for the reverse, or at least by the everything-in-moderation crowd for whom a butterless world is simply too dreary to contemplate. Because those other ingredients can increase the bulk, intensify the flavor and reduce the overall amount of butter you would need to season something that traditionally most of us require some amount of butter on.
I'm thinking corn on the cob.
Which is exactly what I'd done for yesterday's dinner. Ever since Larry Greenly helped me fill my freezer with roasted New Mexico green chiles, I've been putting chiles EVERYWHERE. And part of the purpose of yesterday's dinner was to test-drive a bunch of ideas I'd had rolling about in my head all week--one of which was to make a green chile compound butter for grilled corn on the cob to approximate the flavor of some street food I'd had in Santa Fe. For a bakers dozen, just one cube of butter, four green chiles, a little dried oregano, lime juice, black pepper and extra salt did the trick. The result was terrific and each person had only a nominal serving of butter--less than a tablespoon-- because portion control was asserted in the kitchen when the chile-thickened butter was spooned over the peeled-back grilled corn still nested in their husks. A finishing salt of Black Hawaiian Lava provided even more flavor and a dramatic look. More flavor and less fat than usual--what's not to love?
Cheese butters are also popular. Not lower in fat, but good! Bucko puts a blue cheese compound butter on his grilled lamb chops. I sometimes make a goat cheese butter for baked potatoes. And surely somebody, somewhere, makes a cheddar cheese butter for some nefarious, diet-buster purpose.
As usual, this topic is presented in the hopes that you'll share your favorite compound butters with the rest of us, and try just one new way to perk up your repertoire with a new recipe you haven't tried before.
Jenise
*Isabella Beeton was the original Martha Stewart, the first Super Mom. Born in 1836 and dying just 28 short years after the birth of her fourth child, she created a legacy still celebrated today for her publications on household management for the Victorian housewife.