Showing 54 items
matching butter pat
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Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Domestic Object - GUINEY COLLECTION: BUTTER PAT
... GUINEY COLLECTION: BUTTER PAT...butter pat...Wooden butter pat, no markings.... TECHNOLOGY Dairying butter pat Wooden butter pat, no markings ...Wooden butter pat, no markings.food technology, dairying, butter pat -
Orbost & District Historical Society
butter pat
... butter pat...butter-pat hand-made dairy butter...A hand-made wooden butter pat.... gippsland This butter pat is typical of the period when food ...This butter pat is typical of the period when food processing was done at home. It would have been before the time of mass food processing factories.A hand-made wooden butter pat.butter-pat hand-made dairy butter -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Butter Pat
... Butter Pat...Butter pat...Butter Slice (pat) wooden pair rectangular with flat handle... Slice Butter pat Butter Slice (pat) wooden pair rectangular ...Butter Slice (pat) wooden pair rectangular with flat handle grooved along one face.flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, butter slice, butter pat -
Rutherglen Historical Society
Butter pat, 1910 (Approximate)
... Butter pat...well worn butter pat... well worn butter pat Butter pat ...was used by Mr Dunne's family at their farm at Lilliputwell worn butter pat -
Rutherglen Historical Society
Butter pat, 1910 (Approximate)
... Butter pat...well worn butter pat... well worn butter pat Butter pat ...was used by Mr Dunne's family at their farm at Lilliputwell worn butter pat -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Butter Pat
... Butter Pat...Wooden wedge shaped butter pat... wedge shaped butter pat Domestic object Butter Pat ...Wooden wedge shaped butter patdomestic items, food & drink consumption -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Domestic Object - BUTTER PAT
... BUTTER PAT...Wooden butter pat for patting butter into shape... DOMESTIC EQUIPMENT Food preparation butter pats Wooden butter pat ...Wooden butter pat for patting butter into shape. Rectangular with handle & grooves on one side.domestic equipment, food preparation, butter pats -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Domestic object - Butter Pat, Late 19th to mid 20th century
... Butter Pat..., butter hands, butter workers or butter pats depending on what...A pair of Butter Slices (pat) wooden flat with shaped... as butter beaters, butter hands, butter workers or butter pats ...Scotch hands have also come to be known as butter beaters, butter hands, butter workers or butter pats depending on what part of the world or time period you were in. They are wooden spatulas used when making butter used to press freshly churned butter to remove the watery buttermilk during the butter finishing or working process, also as an aid to distribute salt through the butter. Removing the buttermilk and adding salt helps to prevent rancidity in finished butter, with one side of the paddle ribbed or grooved to allow the buttermilk to drain away from the butter during pressing. The ungrooved side may be used for shaping the butter into its final form. The highest quality Scotch hands are made out of sycamore wood, but they can also be made out of metal.An everyday item in most farm households from the 17th up until the mid 20th centuries significant as it gives a snapshot into the domestic lives of people with farms or small holdings that made their own butter either for sale or for their own use.A pair of Butter Slices (pat) wooden flat with shaped handle. Side for shaping butter is textured Textured with horizontal linesflagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, domestic item, butter pats, butter making, dairy item -
Rutherglen Historical Society
Butter pat, 1950 (Approximate)
... Butter pat...Set of wooden butter pats, bat shaped, smooth on back... production butter Set of wooden butter pats, bat shaped, smooth ...Piece of home churned butter was placed between the paddles and rolled into a ball for serving.Set of wooden butter pats, bat shaped, smooth on back - grooved on frontkitchen, food production, butter -
Kiewa Valley Historical Society
Pat Butter Profiler, Circa 1950
... Pat Butter Profiler...wooden butter pat...This butter pat profiler may have been manufactured post...This butter pat is one of two,see KVHS 0071 (A). It has... This butter pat profiler may have been manufactured post 1967(year ...This butter pat profiler may have been manufactured post 1967(year post codes appeared in Australia) however the post code was only stamped on after it was machined. This type of butter mould was used by rural families to fashion home/farm made butter. This period was in most rural regions a time of self sufficiency where any domestic type implement which could be fashioned by the family would be crafted with skill. Shopping for goods required catalogues from stores located in major rural towns and cities and involved lengthy waiting times. Travelling to and from these specialised stores was not pleasant due to the relatively poor quality of the roads and the lengthy times taken. The small general stores in the Kiewa Valley could not cater for all the needs of the valley. The 1960's was a time when facilities especially goods and services started to improve drastically. The S.E.C. of Victoria with its Kiewa Hydro Electricity Scheme provided not only an improvement of facilities in the valley but also a increase in the population. This increase resulted in a greater demand for local produce.This item is one of many domestic food processing implements used by Kiewa Valley households in the mid 1900s, whether on the farm or in the small towns and hamlets. Self sufficiency was the key to survival during these early times. Where ever possible supplies from within the valley were preferred to that brought in by travelling salesmen or traders. This butter mould and butter pat was commonly used to fashion "home" made butter throughout the valley and in some cases supplied to "outside" regional towns. Although this method of production was phased out by better access to goods from nearby cities the revival of the good organic home grown produce in the 1980s saw a greater demand of this type of farm based produce.This butter pat is one of two,see KVHS 0071 (A). It has been crafted from wood. One side has grooves running from the handle to the square shaped bottom. These grooves would stop the wet butter from clinging to the pat. The top side of the pat has been bevelled on both sides and the bottom edge. The hand grip is flat and curved to allow for a comfortable hold.domestic food preparation, wooden butter pat, butter mould circular, dairy industry -
Kiewa Valley Historical Society
Pat Butter, Circa 1950
... Pat Butter...wooden butter pat...This butter pat profiler may have been manufactured post...This butter pat is one of two,see KVHS 0071 (B). It has... This butter pat profiler may have been manufactured post 1967 (year ...This butter pat profiler may have been manufactured post 1967 (year post codes appeared in Australia) however the post code was only stamped on after it was machined. This type of butter mould was used by rural families to fashion home/farm made butter. This period was in most rural regions a time of self sufficiency where any domestic type implement which could be fashioned by the family would be crafted with skill. Shopping for goods required catalogues from stores located in major rural towns and cities and involved lengthy waiting times. Travelling to and from these specialised stores was not pleasant due to the relatively poor quality of the roads and the lengthy times taken. The small general stores in the Kiewa Valley could not cater for all the needs of the valley. The 1960's was a time when facilities especially goods and services started to improve drastically. The S.E.C. of Victoria with its Kiewa Hydro Electricity Scheme provided not only an improvement of facilities in the valley but also a increase in the population. This increase resulted in a greater demand for local produce.This item is one of many domestic food processing implements used by Kiewa Valley households in the mid 1900s, whether on the farm or in the small towns and hamlets. Self sufficiency was the key to survival during these early times. Where ever possible supplies from within the valley were preferred to that brought in by travelling salesmen or traders. This butter mould and butter pat was commonly used to fashion "home" made butter throughout the valley and in some cases supplied to "outside" regional towns. Although this method of production was phased out by better access to goods from nearby cities the revival of the good organic home grown produce in the 1980s saw a greater demand of this type of farm based produce.This butter pat is one of two,see KVHS 0071 (B). It has been crafted from wood. One side has grooves running from the handle to the square shaped bottom. These grooves would stop the wet butter from clinging to the pat. The top side of the pat has been bevelled on both sides and the bottom edge. The hand grip is flat and curved to allow for a comfortable hold.domestic food preparation, wooden butter pat, butter mould circular, dairy industry, butter -
Kiewa Valley Historical Society
Pat Butter Profiler, Circa 1950s
... Pat Butter Profiler...wooden butter pat...This butter pat profiler may have been manufactured post...This butter Pat/Profiler has on its base two patterns... This butter pat profiler may have been manufactured post 1967(year ...This butter pat profiler may have been manufactured post 1967(year post codes appeared in Australia) however the post code was only stamped on after it was machined. This type of butter mould was used by rural families to fashion home/farm made butter. This period was in most rural regions a time of self sufficiency where any domestic type implement which could be fashioned by the family would be crafted with skill. Shopping for goods required catalogues from stores located in major rural towns and cities and involved lengthy waiting times. Travelling to and from these specialised stores was not pleasant due to the relatively poor quality of the roads and the lengthy times taken. The small general stores in the Kiewa Valley could not cater for all the needs of the valley. The 1960's was a time when facilities especially goods and services started to improve drastically. The S.E.C. of Victoria with its Kiewa Hydro Electricity Scheme provided not only an improvement of facilities in the valley but also a increase in the population. This increase resulted in a greater demand for local produce.This item is one of many domestic food processing implements used by Kiewa Valley households in the mid 1900s, whether on the farm or in the small towns and hamlets. Self sufficiency was the key to survival during these early times. Where ever possible supplies from within the valley were preferred to that brought in by travelling salesmen or traders. This butter mould and butter pat was commonly used to fashion "home" made butter throughout the valley and in some cases supplied to "outside" regional towns. Although this method of production was phased out by better access to goods from nearby cities the revival of the good organic home grown produce in the 1980s saw a greater demand of this type of farm based produce.This butter Pat/Profiler has on its base two patterns. On each end it has horizontal grooves cut into the wood which produce distinct lines onto the surface of the butter. between these grooves there is a section of two double lines crossing in the middle and separated by eleven horizontal lines The base has an elongated rectangular shape. The upper body has been sanded into a smooth convex shaped form where a wooden circular hand grip has been fashioned.On the top of the hand grip is stamped in black print"T. & W. Davies" and under this"TAWONGA 3697"domestic food preparation, wooden butter pat, butter mould circular, dairy industry -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Domestic object - Butter Pat
... Butter Pat ...Butter Slice (pat) wooden rectangular grooved wooden pat... handle Domestic object Butter Pat ...Butter Slice (pat) wooden rectangular grooved wooden pat with flat handleflagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Butter Pat
... Butter Pat...Butter Slice (pat) wooden pair rectangular with flat handle... buuter slice Butter Slice (pat) wooden pair rectangular with flat ...Butter Slice (pat) wooden pair rectangular with flat handle grooved along one face.flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, buuter pat, buuter slice -
Kiewa Valley Historical Society
Pat Butter - pair
... Pat Butter - pair ...kiewa valley. butter pat. farm produce. domestic produce...This pair of butter pats have been crafted from wood. One... Scheme from the 1940's. kiewa valley. butter pat. farm produce ...This type of butter mould was used by rural families in the Kiewa Valley to fashion/shape home/farm made butter either for domestic use or to sell locally.Kiewa Valley was a dairying district with many farms in remote locations especially before the State Electricity Commission of Victoria built the Kiewa Hydro Electric Scheme from the 1940's. This pair of butter pats have been crafted from wood. One has one side with grooves running from the handle to the tip of the rectangle. the other side is smooth. These grooves would stop the wet butter from clinging to the pat. The top side of the pat has been bevelled. The second pat is longer and wider without grooves along the handle. This one also has 3 arrows on the handle pointing down towards the handle end and isn't bevelled. 3 arrows.kiewa valley. butter pat. farm produce. domestic produce. dairy. farms -
Port Fairy Historical Society Museum and Archives
Domestic object - Pat,Butter(2)
... Pat,Butter(2)...One Pair of wooden butter pats with grooved blades... food preparation One Pair of wooden butter pats with grooved ...One Pair of wooden butter pats with grooved bladeslocal history, domestic items, food preparation -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Butter pats
... Butter pats used by aunt Loris Peggie- Nancy Jane (peggie...A pair of wooden butter pats rectangle in shape... Mitcham melbourne Butter pats used by aunt Loris Peggie- Nancy ...Butter pats used by aunt Loris Peggie- Nancy Jane (peggie) Cooke B1914-1987 Lived 27 Wolsley Cres, BlackburnButter pats used to make butterA pair of wooden butter pats rectangle in shape with handlesdomestic items, food preparation, food technology, dairying -
Wonga Park Community Cottage History Group
Wooden Butter Churn, Wooden Butter Churn, butter pats and glass covered dish
... into butter using the butter churn The butter pats were then used...Wooden butter churn and internal photo Wooden butter pats ... The butter pats were then used to roll the butter into small balls ...Local orchardists generally had their own cow and were milked daily. They would seperate the cream from the milk in a seperator and then churn the cream that had not been used into butter using the butter churn The butter pats were then used to roll the butter into small balls or cylindrical shapes called bats. Wooden butter churn and internal photo Wooden butter pats -
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Kitchen equipment, butter pats wooden, c1880
... and working or "kneading" the butter with a pair of wooden butter pats...c1880 A pair of wooden butter pats... or "kneading" the butter with a pair of wooden butter pats ...Early settlers had to be self sufficient, growing their own vegetables, making tools and clothing and usually had a house cow to produce their milk supply. .All the buttermilk separated from the butterfat had to be rinsed out. This would improve texture and flavour, and also help the butter keep well, since milk turns rancid more quickly than fat alone. Salt was usually mixed in at this stage - for flavour and preservation. The rinsing could be done simply by washing in water, followed by draining, salting and working or "kneading" the butter with a pair of wooden butter pats, or with bare hands. c1880 A pair of wooden butter patspioneers, early settlers, market gardeners, moorabbin, brighton, bentleigh, cheltenham, milk, dairy farmers, butter pats, dairy cows -
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Kitchen Equipment, butter pats wooden, c1880
... and working or "kneading" the butter with a pair of wooden butter pats...c1880 2 wooden butter pats... or "kneading" the butter with a pair of wooden butter pats ...Early settlers had to be self sufficient, growing their own vegetables, making tools and clothing and usually had a house cow to produce their milk supply. .All the buttermilk separated from the butterfat had to be rinsed out. This would improve texture and flavour, and also help the butter keep well, since milk turns rancid more quickly than fat alone. Salt was usually mixed in at this stage - for flavour and preservation. The rinsing could be done simply by washing in water, followed by draining, salting and working or "kneading" the butter with a pair of wooden butter pats, or with bare hands. c1880 2 wooden butter patsearly settlers, pioneers, market gardeners, moorabbin, bentleigh, brighton, cheltenham, dairy farmers, dairy cows, milk, butter -
Greensborough Historical Society
Butter Pats, Unknown, Pair of butter pats, 1920-1930
... These wooden butter pats were used to shape butter...Wooden butter pats with handle. One side is ribbed... Plenty Lower Plenty melbourne These wooden butter pats were used ...These wooden butter pats were used to shape butter into bricks; making butter ready for sale and use. The excess moisture would be squeezed out of the butter; which was then transferred to a wooden board. The butter maker would hold one of these pats in each hand and work the butter into shape. These wooden pats are thin; light and easy to hold. The inside face is serrated to grip the butter and squeeze out any further water. It was also used to make patterns on the finished butter. An original pair of butter pats. Given to a Greensborough local in 1975, but used by the previous owner and her mother.Wooden butter pats with handle. One side is ribbed, the other smooth.butter pats, butter making, nancy fowkes -
Broadmeadows Historical Society & Museum
Tool - Butter Pats
... These wooden butter pats were used to shape butter...Wooden butter pats with handle. One side is rubbed...These wooden butter pats were used to shape butter ...These wooden butter pats were used to shape butter into bricks; making butter ready for sale and use. The excess moisture would be squeezed out of the butter; which was then transferred to a wooden board. The butter maker would hold one of these pats in each hand and work the butter into shape. These wooden pats are thin; light and easy to hold. The inside face is serrated to grip the butter and squeeze out any further water. It was also used to make patterns on the finished butter.Wooden butter pats with handle. One side is rubbed, the other smoothbutter pats, butter making -
Mont De Lancey
Domestic object - Butter Pats, Unknown
... Butter pats were common from about 1850 - 1920. They were...Two vintage wooden butter pats, one pale wood with a shaped...-and-dandenong-ranges Butter pats were common from about 1850 - 1920 ...Butter pats were common from about 1850 - 1920. They were used to shape the butter into pieces instead of by hand as the butter was soft.Two vintage wooden butter pats, one pale wood with a shaped handle, the other is a dark piece of wood without a handle. Both have ribs on one side for the butter to be shaped.butter, butter pats, kitchen equipment -
Greensborough Historical Society
Domestic object - Butter Churn, 1900c
... cream, includes two decorative butter pats and one wooden..., crank driven flails and lid, with two decorative butter pats... pats and one wooden implement for scraping butter inside churn ...Paddle-style butter churn used to make butter by beating cream, includes two decorative butter pats and one wooden implement for scraping butter inside churn.Wooden butter churn, consisting of u-shaped container, crank driven flails and lid, with two decorative butter pats and one wooden implement for scraping butter inside churn.butter churns, butter making, butter pats -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Memorabilia - Realia, c1920's
... Pair of Butter Pats... grampians Stawell Pair of Butter Pats Memorabilia Realia ...Pair of Butter Patsstawell -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Domestic object
... Pair of wooden butter pats... is grooved FOOD TECHNOLOGY Dairying Pair of wooden butter pats ...One side of pat is flat, the other side is groovedPair of wooden butter patsfood technology, dairying -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Memorabilia - Realia, c1920's
... Two odd Butter Pats... grampians Stawell Two odd Butter Pats Memorabilia Realia ...Two odd Butter Patsstawell -
Kiewa Valley Historical Society
Mould Butter, unknown, post 1967
... wooden butter pat...This butter mould/pat may have been manufactured post 1967... This butter mould/pat may have been manufactured post 1967(year post ...This butter mould/pat may have been manufactured post 1967(year post codes appeared in Australia) however the post code was only stamped on after it was machined. This type of butter mould was used by rural families to fashion home/farm made butter. This period was in most rural regions a time of self sufficiency where any domestic type implement which could be fashioned by the family would be crafted with skill. Shopping for goods required catalogues from stores located in major rural towns and cities and involved lengthy waiting times. Travelling to and from these specialised stores was not pleasant due to the relatively poor quality of the roads and the lengthy times taken. The small general stores in the Kiewa Valley could not cater for all the needs of the valley. The 1960's was a time when facilities especially goods and services started to improve drastically. The S.E.C. of Victoria with its Kiewa Hydro Electricity Scheme provided not only an improvement of facilities in the valley but also a increase in the population. This increase resulted in a greater demand for local produce. This item is one of many domestic food processing implements used by Kiewa Valley households in the mid 1900s, whether on the farm or in the small towns and hamlets. Self sufficiency was the key to survival during these early times. Where ever possible supplies from within the valley were preferred to that brought in by travelling salesmen or traders. This butter mould and butter pat was commonly used to fashion "home" made butter throughout the valley and in some cases supplied to "outside" regional towns. Although this method of production was phased out by better access to goods from nearby cities the revival of the good organic home grown produce in the 1980s saw a greater demand of this type of farm based produce.This well crafted circular wooden butter mould could also be used as a butter pat.The handle in the middle of the mould was not added after the crafting but has been fashioned from the initial block of wood when the bowl was crafted. The bowl structure has a rim around the edge.The top of the handle has an ink stamp "T. & W. Dav" on the top line and "Tawonga 3697" underneath.domestic food preparation, wooden butter pat, butter mould circular, dairy industry -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Domestic Object - BUTTER PATS
... Two wooden butter pats, one marked in ink, approx 1880... DOMESTIC EQUIPMENT Food preparation kitchen Two wooden butter pats ...Two wooden butter pats, one marked in ink, approx 1880 vintage butter pats donated by Sister Kerrins 154 Don St Bendigo 12.3.65domestic equipment, food preparation, kitchen -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Butter Pats
... 3 large butter pats. Grain on front is different on each... Tatura the-murray butter pats 3 large butter pats. Grain on front ...3 large butter pats. Grain on front is different on each one. 2 small butter pats. Grain on front is identical. Pattern on back of these 2 pats.butter pats