Churncraft: The Classic Butter Churn Updated - Remodelista
Not long ago I went to a dinner party where one of the guests brought a ramekin of lovely hand-churned butter as an offering (she made it the low-tech way: filling a mason jar with heavy cream and shaking it).
“The churn represents our American heritage and a deep commitment to the future of food. We wanted to build a bridge from the past to the future, so integrity of design was essential—compelling shapes, solid engineering and honest materials.”
Made by hand in a Connecticut workshop, the churn has a cast metal frame from Canada, stainless steel shafts and a shaft collar machined in Connecticut, bronze bushings, a wooden handle milled in Maine, and precision gears imported from Germany.