Beurre Ghee KHANUM - Beurre Clarifié - 500g
SKU: 53566841727

Beurre Ghee KHANUM - Beurre Clarifié - 500g

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Beurre Ghee KHANUM - Beurre Clarifié - 500gLe beurre ghee KHANUM est le beurre clarifi idal pour saisir, mijoter et parfumer sans brler. Sa texture pure rehausse riz, currys et ptisseries d'une richesse incomparable. Un pot qui se conserve longtemps et trouve sa place dans toutes les cuisines. Le Beurre Ghee KHANUM est un beurre clarifi traditionnel, prsent en pot de 500 g. Dbarrass de son eau et de ses protines de lait, le ghee se conserve longtemps et offre un got de noisette caractristique

Le beurre ghee KHANUM est le beurre clarifié idéal pour saisir, mijoter et parfumer sans brûler. Sa texture pure rehausse riz, currys et pâtisseries d'une richesse incomparable. Un pot qui se conserve longtemps et trouve sa place dans toutes les cuisines.

Le Beurre Ghee KHANUM est un beurre clarifié traditionnel, présenté en pot de 500 g. Débarrassé de son eau et de ses protéines de lait, le ghee se conserve longtemps et offre un goût de noisette caractéristique très utilisé dans les cuisines indienne, africaine et orientale.

En cuisine, le ghee supporte des températures élevées sans brûler, ce qui en fait une excellente matière grasse pour faire revenir oignons, épices, viandes et légumes. Ajoutez une cuillère pour parfumer un riz, un dhal, un curry ou une sauce, ou utilisez-le simplement pour la cuisson de vos plats du quotidien. Une petite quantité suffit à apporter beaucoup de saveur.

Apprécié pour sa richesse aromatique et sa longue conservation, le ghee Khanum est un classique des garde-manger. Sa texture fondante et sa saveur ronde subliment aussi bien les plats salés que certaines préparations sucrées.

Un beurre clarifié polyvalent pour relever vos recettes maison.

Questions fréquentes sur le beurre ghee

Pourquoi le ghee est-il meilleur que le beurre ?

Le beurre clarifié ghee KHANUM a un point de fumée beaucoup plus élevé que le beurre ordinaire (autour de 250°C contre 150°C pour le beurre classique), ce qui signifie qu'il ne brûle pas lors des cuissons à haute température. Il est donc idéal pour saisir des viandes, faire revenir des épices ou préparer des fritures légères. Sa saveur de noisette apporte aussi une touche aromatique que le beurre normal ne possède pas au même degré.

C'est quoi le beurre de ghee ?

Le ghee est du beurre clarifié : on fait fondre le beurre à feu doux jusqu'à ce que l'eau s'évapore et que les protéines de lait (lactosérum et caséine) se séparent et soient retirées. Il ne reste alors que la matière grasse pure, dorée et parfumée. Ce procédé, traditionnel dans les cuisines indienne, africaine et orientale, donne au ghee son goût de noisette caractéristique et lui permet de se conserver plusieurs mois sans réfrigération.

Quels sont les inconvénients du ghee ?

Comme tout corps gras, le ghee est riche en lipides et doit être consommé en quantité raisonnable dans le cadre d'une alimentation équilibrée. Bien qu'il soit débarrassé de la plupart des protéines de lait, les personnes sévèrement intolérantes aux produits laitiers ou allergiques aux protéines de lait de vache doivent rester prudentes et demander l'avis d'un professionnel avant consommation. Pour le reste, son usage en cuisine dans les quantités habituelles est généralement bien toléré.

Est-ce que le ghee est bon pour le cholestérol ?

Le ghee, comme le beurre, est principalement composé d'acides gras saturés. Son impact sur le cholestérol dépend de la quantité consommée, de l'alimentation globale et du profil de santé de chaque personne. Consommé en petites quantités dans le cadre d'une alimentation variée, il est généralement toléré. Pour tout conseil nutritionnel lié au cholestérol ou à une pathologie cardiovasculaire, consultez impérativement un médecin ou un diététicien.

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Scott Charles
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
LOVED This Read! Blew Me Away
Format: Hardcover
What a fantastic read! Woah. All of the Americas have an extraordinary history. I was mesmerized from beginning to end. If you like knowing your history, you will love this book. Well researched and smartly written. Couldn't put it down. Books like this are why people love to read. If you think you know the Americas, you might be surprised to find that there's more, and be prepared for a bit of a shake up. This book was a real eye opener.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2025
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James Ferguson
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 4
A Brave New World
Format: Hardcover
It wasn't quite what I expected, but Charles Mann leads the reader on a fascinating journey in the wake of Columbus, focusing mostly on the environmental impact of his "discovery" of the New World. Mann literally spans the globe, as the establishment of Spanish colonies in the Americas would have far reaching consequences. Most interesting to me was how silver came to be the currency of exchange, allow Spain to trade with China, when it established its trading outpost in the modern-day Philippines. Along with silver, came corn, rubber and potatoes which would radically alter the landscape of the world. Mann discusses how corn came to replace rice for many Chinese, and how rubber trees would be transplanted to Indochina, bringing with them unsuspected pests that would wreak havoc on ecosystems. In this sense, the book has similarities with Jared Diamond's but explores different terrain. One of the most interesting chapters was on the highly profitable mining of bird guano and how the British cornered the market in this new fertilizer. Mann describes how the shift to mono-cultures had a tremendous impact on agriculture. At first, these new crops seemed to solve much of the world's food shortages, but then as the Irish famine made all too painfully aware, putting all your "eggs in one basket" can lead to devastating consequences as an unforeseen blight wiped out much of Ireland's food supply. Mann also offers a long study on how slavery evolved and re-shaped the ethnic identity of many countries, particularly those in Central and South America. The miscegenation that took place, with particular focus on Brazil, reshaped cultural patterns and changed the political dynamics in these countries. He offers a number of intriguing case studies, and discussed the long term impact of this human cross-pollination. 1493 is a fascinating study and meditation on life after Columbus. We don't fully realize how rapidly the world changed after this fateful "discovery," and how continents became so interdependent, where before they had been relatively isolated from each other.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2012
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Russell C.
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Great History book
Format: Paperback
This book was a gift for husband. He loves it. He is a slow reader, but he can’t put book down. New and interesting history facts and stories.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2026
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John D. Cofield
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
Consequence After Consequence
Format: Hardcover
"In Fourteen Hundred Ninety Two, Columbus Sailed The Deep Blue Sea" is a ditty sung by generations of school children. Most of those students learned and believed that Columbus was the only man in Europe who believed the world was round and proved it by sailing three ships west to find the East. In 1493, Charles C. Mann dismisses these legends and goes on to demonstrate that Columbus (or as he refers to him, Colon) and the other Europeans who sailed across the Atlantic in the 1400s and 1500s did far more than just discover a New World, they helped create a planet wide system in which people, plants, animals, and diseases travelled further and were linked in more ways than had ever before been possible. In other words, 1493 was the beginning point of a new age of globalization. This is not a new theory. Alfred W. Crosby developed the term Columbian Exchange back in the 1970s to describe the changes that took place after 1492. Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel and Collapse also detailed some of the consequences of the European "discovery" of the Americas. What makes Mann's new book so appealing is his ability to tell an engrossing story that ably explains how one consequence led to another, fundamentally changing society after society and helping to creat our modern world. This is global history at its best, jumping from Ming and Qing China's opulent but troubled societies to the fast growing but still relatively backwards European states to the myriad African and Native American cultures, all of them to be affected by the transfer of peoples, plants, diseases, and ideas. Mann has a keen eye for an appealing and informative anecdote which really details the consequences of seemingly small decisions, such as how the introduction of the sweet potato to China led to deforestation, or how the Little Ice Age was affected by the abandonment of the Native American practice of burning off underbrush in North American forests. Its books like 1493, as well as Mann's earlier and equally excellent 1491, which make studying history so fascinating. I taught Advanced Placement World History to high school students for many years before retiring, and I regularly amused them (at least I hope I did) with many references to Jared Diamond and Alfred Crosby's ideas. With 1493 Charles C. Mann deserves equal recognition by global historians.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2011
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Victor Vögel
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Mesmerizing; shows the butterfly effect in action
Format: Paperback
Charles Mann’s “1493” is about globalization and the Homogenocene epoch. Unlike the plenitude of other recent books about globalization, however, “1493” is about biological globalization rather than economic globalization. The book traces the results of the Columbian Exchange, with chapters devoted to tobacco, the earthworm, malaria, silver, potatoes and sweet potatoes, guano and rubber. The book is in four parts, and is written in an accessible, non-academic style. I found the first three parts of the book, which cover the impact of the Columbian Exchange on the Atlantic, the Pacific and Europe, respectively, to be captivating. These parts of the book demonstrated the fascinating interconnectedness of all things in a globalized society (in other words the “butterfly effect”) – for example, how transporting the sweet potato to Western China led to population migrations from Eastern to Western China, deforestation and overflowing of the Yellow River. The general result of such biological globalization is the creation of the Homogenocene epoch, a term which Mann uses to describe the biological homogenization that has replaced biological diversity since the time of Columbus. In the first three parts of the book, Mann demonstrates how history, biology and chemistry are all interrelated, and how today’s world continues to be influenced by the Columbian Exchange. I found the last part of the book to be less impressive than the first three parts. Part Four is called “Africa in the World,” but confusingly it is about South America, not Africa. Parts of it read more like travel writing than history. Still, the book deserves five stars for the first three thrilling parts, which successfully trace the mesmerizing history of various everyday biological substances.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2017

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