Names and Uses in Various Countries
In the United States, clarified butter is typically served warm with unbreaded, cooked seafood as drawn butter.
In England, clarified butter is used in the process of potting, whereby foods such as shrimp and hare are preserved in pots of butter.
In India and Pakistan, clarified butter, commonly known as ghee, is a common cooking oil. In Pakistan, it is used mainly for cooking, especially, chicken Karahi and lentils. It is also burned as a fuel in religious lamps. In northern India, the milk solids are a delicacy eaten with various unleavened breads. The milk solids are called mehran in Hindi, ney (நெய்) in Tamil, neyyi (నెయ్యి) in Telugu, neyyi (നെയി) in Malayalam, तुप (tūp) in Marathi, thuppa (ತುಪ್ಪ) in Kannada.
In Brazil, this is known as manteiga clarificada and it is commonly mistaken for manteiga de garrafa (bottle butter), which is featured mostly in cuisine from the northeast.
In German, clarified butter is known as Butterschmalz (butter lard), sometimes rendered into English as "butter schmalz".
In Iran, it is known as "yellow oil" or "good oil", and is used in place of other oils.
In Middle Eastern countries, it is known as samnah. It replaces oil in frying and sautéing because of its perceived superior flavor. In some Arab countries, such as Egypt, the separated milk solids that remain in the bottom (mortah) are a rare delicacy, and are eaten as a spread on bread.
Rural families in the Maghreb, particularly those of Amazigh descent (among whom ghee is referred to as smen or d'haan) sometimes bury a sealed vessel of it on the day of a daughter's birth, aging it until it is unearthed and used to season the food served at her wedding.
In Ethiopian and Eritrean cuisines (particularly in the highlands), clarified butter is infused with ginger, garlic, and several spices, and is known as niter kibbeh in Amharic and tesmi in Tigrinya. In traditional African cultures, clarified butter is used in an ointment worn in the hair or on the skin. For example, the women of the Hamer people wear a mixture of clarified butter and red ochre in their hair.
In Uganda, among the Ankole cultures, clarified butter is made into a dish called eshabwe, a white, frothy cream that is eaten with solid foods and is sometimes added to smoked meat.
In Mongolia, it is known as "shar tos".
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