FERMENT · MILCHFERMENTE

Crème fraîche

crème fraîche

Crème fraîche — französische Sauerrahm-Kultur, hitzestabil

Fermentationsdauer 12-24 hours at room temperature
Temperaturbereich 20-24°C (68-75°F) — mesophilic, no warming required
Salz / Lake none
Schwierigkeit Einfach
Bedeutung Etabliert
Übersetzungshinweis

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Profil

Crème fraîche is the French cultured cream that occupies a culinary position with no direct American equivalent. It is thicker than American sour cream, milder in tang, higher in fat (typically 30-40% versus sour cream's 18-20%), and — most editorially significant — does not break when added to hot pans. This heat stability is what allows crème fraîche to be stirred into a finishing sauce, dolloped onto a hot stew, or used as a base for warm pan sauces in ways that American sour cream simply cannot tolerate without curdling.

The ferment is operationally the simplest possible: heavy cream (35-40% fat, ideally) is combined with 1-2 tablespoons of existing cultured buttermilk per cup of cream, the mixture is covered with cloth or a loose lid, and left at room temperature for 12-24 hours until it has thickened to a heavy ribbon-falling consistency and tastes mildly tangy. The same mesophilic culture that makes buttermilk drives crème fraîche, just operating on cream instead of milk — Lactococcus lactis species and Leuconostoc — producing the same diacetyl-driven aromatic profile but at a fat level high enough to confer the heat stability and the characteristic mouthfeel.

The heat-stability mechanism is straightforward: high-fat cream that has been cultured (and thus has a denatured protein matrix and lowered pH) is less prone to the protein coagulation that causes thinner dairy products to curdle in hot sauce. Standard sour cream at 18-20% fat will break when added to a simmering pan; crème fraîche at 35-40% holds together and integrates into the sauce. This single property is what makes crème fraîche so culinarily useful: it provides acidity and richness simultaneously in dishes where neither sour cream nor heavy cream alone would work.

French tradition uses crème fraîche across registers. It is dolloped onto smoked salmon, stirred into mushroom sauce, swirled into pumpkin soup, used as the dairy base for pan sauces deglazed from roasted meats, sweetened lightly and served alongside fruit tarts as the dessert dairy. The same product reads as savory or sweet depending on context, which is one of its appealing flexibilities. For the home fermenter, crème fraîche is among the highest-return ferments per unit effort: equipment is a jar and a cloth; the operation is pour-and-wait; the culinary upside over commercial supermarket sour cream is substantial.

Schlüsseltechniken

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Häufige Fehler

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Querverweise