I was reading though one of the other threads and noticed many like the old heated butter compartment in vintage fridges. I've seen comments over the years about how folks miss this option. I guess I have to ask why?
I never refrigerate my butter I use daily, I have a butter dish on the counter and it stays there. I keep the rest of my butter in the fridge. I buy it when it's on sale, 10-12 lbs. and it keeps fine for months, never freeze it btw. I keep the house cool in the winter so the butter is often too hard on the counter - that might be the only reason for a heated butter keeper in my situation. I've thought about designing a small butter warmer you plug into a USB port to keep the butter spreadable in the winter months, but I just pop in in the micro for a few seconds.
What is the attraction of the vintage heated butter compartments?
I never refrigerate my butter I use daily, I have a butter dish on the counter and it stays there. I keep the rest of my butter in the fridge. I buy it when it's on sale, 10-12 lbs. and it keeps fine for months, never freeze it btw. I keep the house cool in the winter so the butter is often too hard on the counter - that might be the only reason for a heated butter keeper in my situation. I've thought about designing a small butter warmer you plug into a USB port to keep the butter spreadable in the winter months, but I just pop in in the micro for a few seconds.
What is the attraction of the vintage heated butter compartments?