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Baking 101: Why We Use Unsalted Butter

September 18, 2013 by Joy the Baker 133 Comments

Let’s talk about butter! It’s my go-to. It’s my boo. It’s my sweetheart.

I’m not shy about sharing my affection for butter, but you may have noticed in the recipes here  that I’m very specific about how I like my butter.  Sometimes melted and browned.  Sometimes cold and cubed.  Sometimes beaten with sugar and egg.  Always though… most almost always.. UNSALTED! Yea, I get opinionated about my butter. We should talk about why.

strawberry raspberry crisp

Butter is my go-to fat in the kitchen.  Olive oil is nice.  Coconut oil is lovely.  Butter gets the job done!

Butter is typically made from cow’s milk and consists of mostly butterfats.  Low-fat buttes are suspicious, at best.  Butter is generally about 80% fat, with the remaining 20% consisting of water and milk solids.

You have a choice when you go to the grocery:  salted or unsalted butter.  If you’re thinking about slathering your butter on a warm baguette, you’ll want to reach for the salted butter.  If you’re baking a cobbler, you’ll most definitely want to reach for the unsalted butter.

Brown Butter Banana Bread with rum and toasted coconut

Here’s why:

Most importantly: unsalted butter ensures that you can control the amount of salt you add to your cakes, cookies and Fig and Almond Breakfast Cake.  Different companies add different amounts of salt to their butter.  How are we to know how salty our butter is, and how we should adjust the salt in the recipe?  It’s too much of a guessing game.  Removing the salt from the butter equation puts us in control of salting. Control is very important when it comes to flavor.

When a recipe calls for unsalted butter, that means that the salt levels in the recipe account for no other salt source.  If all you have salted butter, try cutting the instructed salt amount in half.

Also, salt is a preservative.  Salted butter has a longer shelf life than unsalted butter.  That means that unsalted butter is typically fresher.

Salt can mask flavors!  We may not be able to taste or smell if our butter is off because clever clever salt can mask funky taste and odors.  Tricky.

Does butter really go bad? Heck yes it does!  Unsalted butter lasts about 1 month in the refrigerator.  Salted butter lasts for just over 3 months in the refrigerator (that’s so long, right?).  If you think your butter might be off, give it a good sniff.  The nose always knows.  Also, slice your butter.  Is the inside the same color as the outside… or is the outside a darker casing around the butter?  Bad butter is two different colors.

What happens if I use salted butter in baked goods?

Well… the world will end, and that’s that.

Baking 101: How To Read A Recipe

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. The Fashann Monster

    September 18, 2013 at 6:02 am

    It’s like the baking gods read my mind & asked you to write this post. I was standing in the butter section for minutes yesterday pulling out my hair over the salted & unsalted butter & which would be best for my cake experiment. Something told me you would be shaking your head at the salted option so I went for the other. So glad I did & I’m so glad you posted this. Thank you.

    The Fashann Monster

    Reply
    • Rodney jones

      December 31, 2015 at 8:55 pm

      Generally there is a little over 1/4 teaspoon of salt in one stick of butter. In one pound of butter there is 1 1/4 teaspoons,(this is Land O Lakes butter) or 1.26 teaspoons in a pound for those of you who want to get that extreme. I buy salted butter because it last I buy 4 to 5 pounds at a time and I just adjust my salt for my recipes and it works very well. The only time I will buy unsalted butter is when my recipe calls for a lesser amount of salt that is in salted butter.

      Reply
      • Chef Bob

        July 14, 2018 at 9:08 am

        EXACTLY RIGHT. The old argument that unsalted butter is usually “fresher” is a non-starter. The unsalted butter in the grocer’s fridge may be *newer*, but the salted butter will almost ALWAYS be fresher — that is, closer to just-made taste, lower in bacteria, and longer to go before it goes bad — all because of the preservative quality of the salt. Of course, there’s nothing wrong with using *fresh* unsalted butter and taking total control of the salt in the recipe, but many people do not cook or bake enough to use the entire package of unsalted butter before it DOES begin to go bad. A pound of butter can make a lot of recipes, depending on one’s coking/baking habits. So, what’s fresher after a couple of months in the home fridge — salted or unsalted? As you said, adjust the salt in the recipe accordingly — or leave it out until the end where it’s possible to adjust to taste. The difference in levels of salt between brands is small; find one you like and try to stick with it. I’ve cooked for over 55 years (and have had recipe input as cook, manager or owner of several restaurants) and have rarely felt the need to use unsalted butter. In MOST cases, **> as long as you have to add an equivalent amount of salt to the recipe, anyway <** there is no discernible difference in the finished product, whether you take advantage of salted butter's convenience or add the salt separately. Now… what I really want to know is, what came first: the cow (with her milk) or the calf?

        Reply
        • Patrick

          March 7, 2019 at 8:29 am

          Nicely said Sir! ?

          Reply
        • Dina F

          November 9, 2021 at 2:18 pm

          The cow with her milk and a calf inside ;)

          Reply
    • Alexandrina

      July 21, 2016 at 7:36 am

      This is a cultural thing though too as in some countries and therefore their traditional recipes salted butter is the answer! Take France for example, most particularly Brittany and Normandy, they would always use salted butter. I for one always use salted butter!

      Reply
      • Jasmine

        March 17, 2018 at 11:05 am

        My mom is from France (grew up in Le Mans) and none of my french family use salted butter in their baking. I grew up with the firm belief that unsalted butter is the only acceptable butter to use in baking from my french mother. The standard butter in France is beurre doux (unsalted) and salted butter comes in two types – sel or demi-sel. French butter also has a higher fat content (82% fat compared to our 80% fat) which makes their butter better for pastries.

        Reply
    • Abhijit

      July 7, 2018 at 8:57 am

      If i clarify salted butter, will it remove the salt from it??

      Reply
      • joythebaker

        July 7, 2018 at 10:05 pm

        It will retain some of the saltiness!

        Reply
  2. Michelle @ A Healthy Mrs

    September 18, 2013 at 5:45 am

    Yes! Great reminder that not all butter is created equal :)

    Reply
    • Paul

      December 21, 2014 at 12:27 am

      … and all equal is not butter either… lqtm

      Reply
  3. Beth

    September 18, 2013 at 5:34 am

    Love this! Most people look at me blankly when I tell them about salted vs. unsalted. I always bake with unsalted and I think it makes a big difference in the quality of my baked goods. I didn’t know about the freshness angle, though – you’ve taught me something today!

    Reply
  4. Sienna

    September 18, 2013 at 3:08 am

    And I thought I loved butter. Clearly, you are on another level lol love it :) I never knew salted butter lasts so long, I’m a big fan of unsalted butter so I don’t really use anything else.

    Reply
  5. Whitney

    September 18, 2013 at 2:49 am

    I am confused by the second to last sentence. Should it say “salted” instead of “unsalted”?

    Reply
    • Peter Klatt

      July 23, 2016 at 7:39 am

      She’s saying that if you violate her article and use “salted” instead of unsalted the world will come to an end, but do what YOU may! It’s a light-hearted jab at violators

      Reply
  6. Hannah Jade

    September 18, 2013 at 2:45 am

    I totally got caught out by this! I picked up butter that didn’t say salted/unsalted so assumed it was unsalted…until I tasted my biscuit dough and it was like drinking seawater.

    Reply
  7. Rochelle

    September 18, 2013 at 2:16 am

    I don’t use butter enough, but I always agree with unsalted! I like that little bit of control in my cooking/baking :)

    Reply
  8. Belinda @themoonblushbaker

    September 18, 2013 at 2:04 am

    Yes! The salt often hides poor quality butter. To keep mine fresh I keep in a air tight dark box in the back of fridge, it helps the smells and light getting to it. Yay for a butter post!

    Reply
  9. Kim

    September 18, 2013 at 1:54 am

    Thank you for speaking out loud your butterlove! It’s the best, really <3

    Reply
  10. Sonja

    September 18, 2013 at 1:46 am

    Gosh I love this series :) I actually found some salted butter that mentioned the amount of salt in it (1.7%), which came in handy when I was just a tad short on my unsalted butter while in the midst of baking! But I agree that unsalted butter is definitely better for baking! Curious to see what you’ll write about next…

    Reply
  11. Britt

    September 18, 2013 at 12:56 am

    Butter really is the best! There’s NO substitute for it when making a pie crust. That’s when you bust out the fancy French/Irish butter.

    In a world of vegan substitutes (and believe me I thoroughly appreciate vegan food) it’s refreshing to hear one of my favorite Cooks give a shout out to butter!! :)

    Reply
  12. Averie @ Averie Cooks

    September 18, 2013 at 12:52 am

    I 100% only ever buy unsalted butter. I don’t think I’ve ever bought salted butter in my entire life for all the reasons you mentioned. Here’s to controlling salt levels and to fresher butter!

    Reply
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