Build Me Up, Margarine Cup?

Over the weekend I happened across a protracted online discussion regarding a new (to me) product by Melt (also new to me), uh, drum roll — butter (not new to me) (I thought).

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Apparently Melt’s “butter” is what us old guys call margarine. Except instead of corn, soybean, canola, or olive oil, it’s made of this year’s designer oils including coconut and sunflower.

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The discussion centered around that the product is labeled butter. Not butter substitute, not vegetable spread, not even “plant butter” ala Country Crock’s vegan spread. Butter. Unlike most of the European countries and Canada, the U.S. does not have a standard for what can be called milk, butter, or a variety of other dairy products. The “for” group pointed to almond milk, soy bacon, and veggie cheese. The “anti” group pointed to almond milk, soy bacon, and veggie cheese. The logic seems to be that each of those products specify its source in the product name and thus does not mislead the consumer.

Personally I have a problem with calling a non-dairy product butter, although I and millions of other carnivores do it routinely when we reach for that tastiest of all spreads, peanut butter. But again, peanut butter isn’t going to be mistaken for the stuff you create sauces with or turn to into cookies (peanut butter cookies, which also use butter butter, notwithstanding). We also confuse issues with the inaccurately named buttermilk, which unlike almond milk is not made with its modifier, and let’s not even talk about head cheese.

So what’s the solution to this confusion. If I had one I’d be chairman of a high powered, and high price, think tank, not writing a blog on a free domain. Maybe we should get back to calling things what they really are, like beef and pork and sausage. But then would even the most hard core meat eater go for “cow,” “pig,” and “your guess is as good as mine?”

 

5 thoughts on “Build Me Up, Margarine Cup?

  1. I guess I’ve gotten used to butter being a verb. Anything you can spread on bread with a knife is butter. Better look for “real cream butter” on the label from now on!

      1. One of my friends was mad recently at some fried Chik’n for this reason. He didn’t think they should be allowed to call it something so close to chicken, when it is totally plant based. He was blown away because he couldn’t tell it wasn’t actual chicken.

        I personally don’t mind if non-meat products are called sausages/burgers (as those describe the style, rather than what meat is inside…)

        Having said that, I do prefer it back home in Europe, when things can only be labeled “juice” if they have real juice (it’s “juice drink” for the sugar-filled fake juices) I wonder if this butter has different branding in Europe?…I mean even if it’s good, it’s not butter!

        1. I absolutely agree with things like sausage being a technique not a specific food. Even the tortured descriptors like almond milk or cauliflower pizza identify what you will be eating. (Although it seems kind of one sided since you never hear of pork soya like you do soy bacon.) But I also wish here the regulators could agree that there be a logic to the descriptions like you have with “juice.” Either “big farma” has the regulators all wrapped up or Europeans are just not as concerned with looking politically correct in the grocery store checkout lines.

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