Katie wrote:My related question is a bit more specific: why is butter so much more expensive this year than it was last year?
Katie wrote:My related question is a bit more specific: why is butter so much more expensive this year than it was last year?
Katie wrote:I have noticed a big increase. A basic store-brand pound of butter for $2 was not hard to find last year, now it is.
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I haven't posted about any change in the butter quality. My only gripe was the new packaging. Western-style, Eastern-style, or Martian-style, it doesn't fit in my freezer cubby. A few months ago, it was two sticks on the bottom, two sticks on the top. Now it's a flat pack. However--and I feel sure about this--I will get over the disappointment.aschie30 wrote:grits wrote:The flat pack for the non-organic butter is a recent change.aschie30 wrote:I'm a little confused. The good butter (which was discontinued) was made by Humboldt Creamery, which is in California. So was it "flat-packed" into a rectangle (ie, Western-style)?
Right, so prior to the change, the butter you liked was in Eastern-style packaging, then?
JoelF wrote:I have to take exception to that logic: To make a pound of butter, you end up with 2.5 gallons of skim milk, which still has value.
The reason why butter is high-priced is that butter is goooood, and there is a high demand for cream and butterfat. With Atkins still popular for dieting, delicious delicious fats are in higher demand. Ice cream, cheese, coffee drinks, baked goods, etc. all need butterfat. Demand is a big part of it, transportation costs are probably the next biggest contributor to the price.
Katie wrote:I have noticed a big increase. A basic store-brand pound of butter for $2 was not hard to find last year, now it is.
d4v3 wrote:I have found that the inner wrappers of most butter very clearly state plant# xx-xxx. Of course that doesn't help much if one is in a a store looking at the outside of the box, which has a more cryptic code. I know it indicates at least the plant the butter was packeged at, if not the number of the dairy. ...