Melted, Cold, Room-Temperature: Here’s How Butter Temperature Affects Cookies (2024)

Meghan Splawn

Meghan Splawn

Meghan was the Food Editor for Kitchn's Skills content. She's a master of everyday baking, family cooking, and harnessing good light. Meghan approaches food with an eye towards budgeting — both time and money — and having fun. Meghan has a baking and pastry degree, and spent the first 10 years of her career as part of Alton Brown's culinary team. She co-hosts a weekly podcast about food and family called Didn't I Just Feed You.

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updated Dec 1, 2022

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Melted, Cold, Room-Temperature: Here’s How Butter Temperature Affects Cookies (1)

In a never-ending quest to find the most perfect chocolate chip cookies of all time — seriously, we’ve ranked both high-effort and classic recipes — we learned that one of the most magical factors in cookie flavor and texture is also one of the most common baking ingredients: butter. While most recipes call for bringing butter to room temperature for creaming, some standout cookies call for melted or even cold butter to cut down on prep time or improve the texture of the finished cookies.

So let’s geek out for a bit on our favorite cookie ingredient and learn what melted, cold, and room-temperature butters do in our favorite cookie recipes.

What Does Butter Do in Cookies?

While butter is primarily fat that gives flavor, tenderness, and flaky layers to baked goods, it also has a bit of liquid (some water, some milk bits) that also contribute to structure and rise. For example, in a classic chocolate chip cookie, creaming together the butter and sugar incorporates air into the cookie dough. That air works with the baking soda or powder to puff or rise the cookie along with the steam created within the cookie thanks to the butter and egg’s moisture.

Butter also plays a critical role in cookie structure; the fat and moisture can enhance or inhibit gluten development, which directly impacts the shape, spread, and texture in your cookies. In short, the temperature of your butter for cookies directly impacts how cakey, crispy, or flaky your cookies will be.

What Does Softened Butter Do in Cookies?

Most cookie recipes call for beating room-temperature butter. At a temperature between 70 and 72 degrees F, butter is soft enough to incorporate air, but not so soft that it will melt immediately in the oven and result in super-thin cookies. This semi-soft form of butter also helps the fat coat proteins in the cookie dough, preventing gluten development — making a cookie that has a finer texture and is more cake-like than chewy.

What Does Melted Butter Do in Cookies?

Tara O’Brady’s Great Basic Chocolate Chip Cookie is a delicious example of a chewy cookie that is near perfect in texture, thanks to melted butter. O’Brady is specific that the butter be melted slowly, over low heat to prevent any evaporation. In its liquid state, butter mixes readily with both the sugar and flour, making for a softer dough that actually develops more gluten (thanks to the butter’s moisture hydrating the flour). If the just-mixed dough is baked straight away, cookies made with melted butter spread more than those made with room-temperature butter — good news for lovers of thin-and-crispy cookies. On the other hand, if you scoop cookie dough made with melted butter into rounds and then chill the dough before baking, you’ll end up with a cookie that is soft, chewy, and crispy only on the edges.

What Does Cold Butter Do in Cookies?

There is a case to be made for making some cookies with cold butter. When incorporated in its harder, from-the-fridge state, butter makes baked goods flaky by creating layers in the dough and cutting through gluten development. Pie crust and croissants are prime examples of butter’s cold, hard form being used to make a better texture. Sarah Copeland’s Thousand Layer Cookies are a good example of manipulating butter while cold: The dough is made with room-temperature butter but then chilled to harden the butter, then the dough is rolled and folded to create a flaky layered chocolate chip cookie. This cold butter technique makes for a super-crispy cookie with a tender center.

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Now that you know how butter impacts your cookie recipes, you can go forth and make your favorite chocolate chip cookies just the way you like them!

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Melted, Cold, Room-Temperature: Here’s How Butter Temperature Affects Cookies (2024)

FAQs

Melted, Cold, Room-Temperature: Here’s How Butter Temperature Affects Cookies? ›

Most cookie recipes call for beating room-temperature butter. At a temperature between 70 and 72 degrees F, butter is soft enough to incorporate air, but not so soft that it will melt immediately in the oven and result in super-thin cookies.

How does melted butter affect cookies? ›

Using melted butter in cookies helps you achieve a similar fudgy-yet-cooked texture and prevents any unwanted cakiness. Instead of the rise coming from both chemical and physical leavening agents (baking soda/powder + creamed butter), it now comes almost exclusively from chemical agents alone.

How does temperature affect cookies? ›

A lower temperature will require more cooking time and will ultimately result in a thinner, crisper chocolate chip cookie. For those ooey, gooey chocolate chip cookies, 375 degrees Fahrenheit is your sweet spot.

What to do if you melted butter instead of softened? ›

If the recipe calls for softened butter and you accidentally melted butter instead of softening it, it's best that you set aside the melted butter for future use. Both kinds of butter will yield a very different final result in every baked good.

What happens if you use cold butter instead of room temperature? ›

If the butter isn't at room temperature, it won't blend smoothly with the sugar and you'll end up with a bunch of butter shards with crystallized sugar instead of a nice creamy whip. In other words, not softening your butter may result in your cookies going splat instead of puffing up.

What happens when butter is cold? ›

Butter that's straight from the fridge doesn't get fully incorporated into a batter; instead it gets broken down into small pieces throughout your dough. Since butter is about 18 percent water, steam is released in those pockets during baking, which helps create flaky layers.

Is cold butter good for cookies? ›

Just like using cold butter in biscuit recipes, using it in cookies helps to form small flakes and layers within the dough. When you want cookies that are flakey rather than chewy and soft, use cold butter to help break through the gluten that builds up during the mixing process, as noted by King Arthur Baking Company.

What will happen to butter when cooled? ›

There is a slow decrease in temperature as the butter is cooled. During cooling, the nuclei formed in the cream during tempering grow and may decrease spreadability. Chilling too rapidly can promote a short, brittle body and texture. Ideal spreadability develops somewhere in between.

What happens when you use butter fat at a cold temperature? ›

When to use cold butter: Flaky laminated pastries. If you're looking for flakiness, cold butter is the way to go. You want the butter to be as solid as possible before working with it in the dough, so that it will keep its shape in layers rather than seeping into the dough and tenderizing it.

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