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Butter
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====United States==== In the United States, butter has traditionally been made into small, rectangular blocks by means of a pair of wooden butter paddles. It is usually produced in {{convert|4|oz|lb g|adj=on|frac=4}} sticks that are individually wrapped in waxed or foiled paper, and sold as a {{convert|1|lb}} package of 4 sticks. This practice is believed to have originated in 1907, when [[Swift and Company]] began packaging butter in this manner for mass distribution.<ref name="parker">{{cite web |first = Milton E. |last = Parker |title = Princely Packets of Golden Health (A History of Butter Packaging) |year = 1948 |url = http://drinc.ucdavis.edu/research/butter.pdf |access-date = 15 October 2006 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20061006150533/http://drinc.ucdavis.edu/research/butter.pdf |archive-date = 6 October 2006 |url-status = dead |df = dmy-all }}</ref> Due to historical differences in butter printers (machines that cut and package butter),<ref name="cooksill"/> 4-ounce sticks are commonly produced in two different shapes: {{multiple images|total_width=350px |image1=Stick-of-butter-salted.jpg |caption1=Eastern-pack shape salted butter |image2=Western-pack-butter.jpg |caption2=Western-pack shape unsalted butter }} * The dominant shape east of the Rocky Mountains is the Elgin, or Eastern-pack shape, named for a dairy in [[Elgin, Illinois]]. The sticks measure {{convert|4+3/4|x|1+1/4|x|1+1/4|in}} and are typically sold stacked two by two in elongated cube-shaped boxes.<ref name="cooksill">{{Cite journal | title=A Better Stick of Butter? | journal=Cook's Illustrated |issue=77 |date=November–December 2005 | page=3 }}</ref> Most US butter dishes are designed for Elgin-style butter sticks.<ref name="cooksill"/> * West of the Rocky Mountains, butter printers standardized on a different shape that is now referred to as the Western-pack shape. These butter sticks measure {{convert|3+1/4|x|1+1/2|x|1+1/2|in}}<ref>{{cite web|title=Commercial Butter Making and Packaging Machines|url=http://www.schiercompany.com/ButterEquipment.html|website=Schier Company, Inc.|access-date=19 May 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180520054543/http://www.schiercompany.com/ButterEquipment.html|archive-date=20 May 2018|url-status=dead}}</ref> and are usually sold with four sticks packed side-by-side in a flat, rectangular box.<ref name="cooksill"/>
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