Food and travel both tend to lead to cultural analysis, and I have a question to pose to my homeland now that I’m back: What’s with the lack of proper appreciation for cream?
There is a paucity of knowledge in this country of the various textures, viscosities, and acidities that cream can take on when its fat content and temperature are allowed to roam freely. I blame a combination of the ready availability of Reddi-wip (that’s right, I googled the spelling), an aversion to the idea of fat, and a fanatical fear of bacteria. If you couldn’t get whipped cream in a can, maybe laziness would lead to the discovery that those strawberries will taste great swimming in a pool of liquid cream. Better yet, double cream. But I have a horrible feeling that people around here don’t really know what double cream is.
Squeamishness about pasteurization and fear of fat form the biggest obstacle, the latter inhibiting motivation to try new creamy things, and the former providing an excuse not to. Clotted cream, the ultimate does of milk fat, is very difficult to find in America, and also impossible to make at home, since it has to be made from unpasteurized milk. The milk is heated just below boiling and then left to sit, allowing the cream content to rise to the top. The resulting silky substance is skimmed off for spreading on scones and cakes. They make a similar product in Turkey, called kaymak, which is served in a pool of honey and eaten with toast. Not something you need to have heaps of at every meal, but certainly part of a complete breakfast or special teatime snack.
Then there’s fromage frais and crème fraiche. Crème fraiche is starting to show up more here (Trader Joe’s makes it), and it’s essentially the same thing as sour cream, though I think it has a better texture (maybe it has fewer unpronounceable viscosifying chemicals in it). But fromage frais remains elusive, which is a shame, because it’s a perfect tangy accompaniment to stewed fruits, tarts, or fresh berries. Greek yogurt or softened cream cheese would probably work in many of the same contexts, but there’s still something specific about fromage frais.
Maybe there are completely acceptable substitutes for all of these creamy concoctions, but with a centuries-old tradition of dairy science experimentation, why limit ourselves?
To cleanse the palate, I’ll end with some photos of the impressive produce at the Fatih Mosque street market.