As scholarly buzzkills have long told us,
corned beef isn't really Irish
“It goes back to the Emerald Isle,” explains
Pat O'Keeffe
The actual Irish cows themselves aren't that different from their American counterparts — in both countries, over 90 percent of milkers are Holstein-Friesians, those iconic black-and-whites. What it comes down to is what the cows are eating.
Irish cows graze on those temperate hills from March to October, and are only milked during those months. (A small number — O'Keeffe estimates 10 percent — are milked year-round for drinking, or fluid, milk, but butter's the real business.) Grass-fed milk produces a rich butter, yellow with natural beta carotene. The polyunsaturated fats in fresh grass also make for pats that are softer than those from hay or grain — all the better for spreading across your scone. Like most European dairy, Irish cream also has a higher butterfat content, creating soft butter with a richer mouthfeel. And the end result?
“I have to be careful for an American audience,” Pat O'Keeffe hedges for a diplomatic moment, “but we'd say it's [like the difference between] chalk and cheese.”
And those feelings of nostalgia (and unabashed superiority) about Irish butter can run deep, even after leaving Ireland. When Dublin-born Lisa Jacobs' family emigrated to the United States, her parents continued to seek out Irish butter. And when she dropped out of law school to start making cheese in the similarly green-and-rainy Pacific Northwest, her father not-so-gently suggested that
Jacobs Creamery
But far before this modern evangelism, Irish butter had its fans. Ancient stashes of butter dating back
1,000 years
“Cork butter was the first global food brand,” explains Peter Foynes, director of the
Cork Butter Museum
The Cork Butter Exchange was established in the late 18th century, and in its day it was the largest butter market in the world. Irish butter was tied to British expansion, as buckets made their way onto ships loaded for the sugar routes, or crossed the Atlantic to feed troops fighting to quell the American Revolution. Hundreds of thousands of casks left Ireland every year, heading everywhere from Australia to Brazil, France to the West Indies. Miles of “butter roads” helped even remote rural farmers bring their butter into the global marketplace.
But after this peak — Foynes puts it in the 1870s — Irish butter production began to trail off, due to a number of factors. Colonies had steadily been establishing their own agriculture, rendering Irish exports less important. But the biggest blow came in 1879, with the mechanical separator.
Even as farmers mechanized the butter-churning process, they had long been hampered by separating — patiently waiting for the to-be-churned cream to rise to the top (a process that takes 24 to 36 hours, depending upon the temperature). With the centrifuge-like mechanical separator, that wait time is eliminated. Unfortunately, Irish farmers were late adopters; by the time they mechanized, the industry was 20 years behind. By the early 20th century, the Cork Butter Market had closed.
But luckily for lovers of good Irish butter, its grass-fed richness has made a comeback. Farms banded together to form the
Irish Dairy Board
“Some of the science — or alleged science — has changed,” notes O'Keeffe. But like a good Irishman, he was never swayed. “It was always a good product. Butter today is still as good as it was.”
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