Bluetit1802
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- Type of diabetes
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- Diet only
Why not just go for the Kerrygold? Butter from grass fed cows is healthier for us all, and Kerrygold seems to do quite well on the grass fed bit.
Hi,
On the subject of butter, can I ask which is the best butter to eat in terms of being a diabetic?
There are so many butters on the market in the UK and it’s a bit of a minefield. I haven’t tried Kerrygold as of yet but I will aim to try some at some point after reading the great reviews about it on this thread.
My all time fave butter is Anchor as I was brought up with it and my parents never really ate anything else.
I just wanted to ask because I also use butter for cooking and not just for spreading or adding it to food etc..
Kind Regards
Perfumeflower53
For us in the far north, the cost of Kerrygold is too high. We have organic butter here but I’m not sure if it’s from grass fed cows. Even that is crazy expensive. The cheapest butter is almost 5$ A pound. So I buy it when it’s on sale and freeze it.Why not just go for the Kerrygold? Butter from grass fed cows is healthier for us all, and Kerrygold seems to do quite well on the grass fed bit.
Kerrygold butter just went up in price here in the UK too. Today I bought my first pack and I love it. However I do suspect that part of the appeal is the high salt content. I am planning a special trip to Iceland (the store!) who still offer it at an amazingly cheaper price, to buy lots and freeze.Our KG went up at Costco. Now $9 for 1.5 pounds. I wish they packaged it in those foil things in 1/2 T! That would be most convenient for me as I take some food with me everyday and really noticing how much a little more animal fat keeps bs lower
When I was a small child it was still wartime in Britain. There was strict rationing. I remember I had a special butter ration of my own because I was a child. It was kept in an orange bakelite (early plastic) covered pot in the larder and I remember gazing at it and feeling very important. No-one else in the household had their own individual butter pot. I remember too that my mother and her sister had different strategies for using their very small butter ration. My aunt would enjoy one piece of toast heaped with butter, whereas my mother would eke out hers by putting just a smear on several.I don't think we had brands of butter when I was growing up. I just remember my mum buying it in slabs, cut and weighed, then wrapped in grease proof paper. No fridges in those days so it went on the tiled hearth in the front room! It may have been the butcher where she bought it, or maybe the corner shop, I can't remember.
Ah yes, dripping and the salty gravy that came with it were SO delicious!or sometimes dripping with salt
Devil's Advocate here.... Is the Kerrygold blurb on the packaging - cows on green pastures of small farms - just a good advertising strapline? Um, there are any number of local butters produced on small farms here in the West Country, with cows munching happily on grass throughout the year, including a really gorgeous creamy butter from a farm local to me - couldn't that claim apply to them and of course all the other small-farm butters produced in the UK? Or is it that Kerrygold farm grass butter really is better than these? And, actually, isn't grass-fed organic (if the farm of course doesn't spray half a chemistry lab over its land)?An in-depth comparison between Kerrygold and organic butter here:
https://www.nwedible.com/grassfed-vs-organic-butter-and-which-one-will-kill-you-faster/