Mine looks like this, too. I believe its a normal condition that occurs in the winter time. If an engine is running perfectly, the products of combustion are CO2 + Water. Some of this water makes its way past the piston rings and then it ends up in the crankcase breather system. In the summer, this water just evaporates and is gone. In the winter, in some engines, it shows up as real water, like in your pictures.
My first experience with this was a 1967 Mercury Cougar (289 engine). I thought it had a bad head gasket, so I change the head gaskets outside, in the parking lot, in Indianapolis, in February. It still had that nasty white stuff on it after I changed the gaskets. And the nasty white stuff would return every winter, for the next 5 years that I owned the car. The white stuff never appeared in the summer.
Many years passed, and I bought a brand new 2000 VW Beetle. In the first winter, the nasty white stuff appeared, so I took it to the dealer to have if fixed under warranty. He told me they all did that, and since it was under warranty, I believed him. I drove that car for 80,000 miles, and the white stuff appeared every winter.
So to conclude this long story: If you don't have water in the oil and the white stuff disappears in the summer, don't worry about it.