The Very Compelling Case for Baking With Melted Butter (2024)

I present to you two equally frustrating butter-based baking scenarios. In the first, it’s 8 p.m. on a cold winter night and you want to make holiday cookies, but the butter is frozen, and even if you move it to the counter now, it won’t be room temperature for, um, three years. In the second, you want to make pie on the hottest day of the summer, but the butter starts melting as soon as you take it out of the refrigerator (and considering that the key to flaky crust is cold butter, you’re doomed). Call it the Rule of Butter: No matter what you want to bake, butter will never be at the correct temperature.

Enter, from stage right, melted butter. It can be made from rock-solid butter and droopy-oozy butter alike, and in a matter of minutes. Melted butter can also be incorporated into a batter or dough with just a spatula—no need to dig out the pastry cutter or stand mixer.

It’s because melted butter is so low-maintenance—quick to make, easy to use—that it’s an essential ingredient in Jessie Sheehan’s new cookbook Snackable Bakes, in which all of the recipes can be prepared in 20 minutes. “I’m always thinking about time and speed and how to make a dessert as easy and as quickly as possible,” Sheehan tells me. “So I’m the person who will develop a recipe starting with melted butter. And if it can work, I’m going there.” Within the book, Sheehan “goes there” with peanut butter cookies, shortbread, and cakes—all of which often call for creaming room-temp butter with sugar until fluffy. And, get this, she even uses melted butter in her Easiest Ever Crust. A typical pie dough recipe will instruct you to rub cold butter into flour before quickly stirring in cold water and giving the mixture time to chill and hydrate, but Sheehan’s version takes about five minutes: Stir together flour, sugar, and baking powder, mix in melted butter and milk, and then press it into the pie plate. You don’t even need to get out a rolling pin.

Of course, melted butter can’t achieve exactly what cold butter can. In the case of pie dough, cold butter steams in the oven, creating the air pockets that make for flaky layers; melted butter, on the other hand, creates a tender, more shortbread-like crust—buttery and delicious all the same, but firmer and more compact. In recipes that rely on creamed butter for structure, like cakes and cookies, melted butter won’t provide the same fluffiness. “While you can get away with melted fat in more places than you would think,” says Sheehan, who has even tried it in scones and biscuits, it’s about “managing your expectations.” Your pie crust may not turn out as flaky as one you’ve rested and folded, but what you lose in multiple, shattering layers you’ll save in time. And, sometimes, melted butter actually produces a more desirable texture. If, for example, the idea of a cakey or fluffy cookie makes you cringe, seek out recipes that call for melted butter, which produces denser, lower-profile results.

But what about the cases where you really do need room temperature butter, like buttercream? Sheehan is a big advocate of the microwave. Place an unwrapped whole stick of butter straight from your fridge in the microwave and heat in 10-second increments, flipping it over to a new side between zaps until it’s soft enough to yield easily to your fingertip. See? There’s always a faster way.

Melt Away

The Very Compelling Case for Baking With Melted Butter (2)

A simple yet impressive pie with a tender cookie-like press-in crust and crumb topping? Amateur bakers, this one’s for you.

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The Very Compelling Case for Baking With Melted Butter (2024)

FAQs

The Very Compelling Case for Baking With Melted Butter? ›

In the case of pie dough, cold butter steams in the oven, creating the air pockets that make for flaky layers; melted butter, on the other hand, creates a tender, more shortbread-like crust—buttery and delicious all the same, but firmer and more compact.

How does melted butter affect baking? ›

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.

What happens if you use melted butter instead of softened for bread? ›

The results of the three methods were pretty much the same. They all worked well and there were no issues. So, the conclusion would be that it is ok to add butter right at the beginning of the mix; and it could be softened, cold, or melted.

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

“Room temp butter is able to hold onto air,” Szewczyk says. “You can mechanically shove air into it by creaming. Warm butter is not able to hold onto it, so you're going to get a denser dough.” When using warmer or melted butter, cookies will struggle to lift and lighten, resulting in a cakier texture, like brownies.

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.

Does melted butter make cookies chewier? ›

It's the ratios and temperature of those ingredients that make this recipe stand out from the rest. Melted butter: Melted butter produces the chewiest cookies. It can, however, make your baked cookies greasy, so I made sure there is enough flour to counteract that.

Is it better to use melted or softened butter for cake? ›

Room temperature butter is what you want to use in a cake mix. If it's too melted, it could set the cake up for a disaster. If it's straight out of the refrigerator, it won't mix in properly. The best thing to do is take butter out of the refrigerator 30–40 minutes before you plan to make the cake.

Does melting butter make cookies crispy? ›

White sugar creates crispier cookies and brown sugar creates chewier cookies. Why use melted butter? Melted butter creates cookies with a different texture compared to cookies made with softened or creamed butter. When butter is melted, it coats the flour more evenly, resulting in cookies that are chewier and denser.

Why use melted butter in muffins? ›

Lesson three: melted butter Because melted butter has already released much of its water content, it makes the finished treats soft and dense, as well as flavourful.

What are the disadvantages of using butter in baking? ›

Disadvantages of Using Butter

Cookies made with butter can spoil more quickly than those made with shortening. If you want your cookies to last as long as possible (and who doesn't?), you should opt for Shortening.

Can butter be too soft for baking cookies? ›

If used in baking recipes, overly softened butter will create frothy air bubbles that will eventually collapse. When the air bubbles collapse, you'll be left with a greasy batter that will bake into heavy, dense, and flat baked goods.

Can I add melted butter to cake mix? ›

Melted butter serves the same purpose as oil, while also adding richness and depth to the cake. Unsalted butter is the best choice, unless you have a salt tooth, like me, and prefer desserts with a little extra salt to balance out the sweetness. In that case, you can use salted butter.

Why is my melted butter and sugar not creaming? ›

The temperature of your butter is critical when creaming butter and sugar. Too cold, and your sugar won't properly dissolve into your butter. Too hot, and your cakes will end up flat and greasy. The magical temperature of softened butter is actually around 65℉, slightly cooler than the ambient temperature of your home.

Will butter harden again after melting? ›

When heated to the melting point, however, these crystals are destroyed. They can be reestablished but only if the butter is rapidly chilled. (Returning it to the refrigerator will cool it too slowly and fail to reestablish the tiny crystals.)

What change could happen to a butter when it melted? ›

Also, by melting butter, the butter gets converted from its solid to the liquid state, which includes the change in physical properties. The process can also get reversed by again solidifying the melted butter.

Does butter weigh different when melted? ›

However, the melting of a solid fat does affect the weight. The impurities and air in the solid fat are separated out when melted.

Does melting butter change it? ›

“Even if the butter is melted, chilled and resolidifies, it will not behave in the same way as before it has been melted.” Think of butter as similar to chocolate, she says. Temperature consistency is extremely important. Butter's plasticity can also be affected by the level of butter fat in a dish.

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