Homemade Spreadable Butter (2024)

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Growing up, we didn’t keep butter in the refrigerator… we liked the spreadable texture of room temperature butter. A stick of salted butter was stored in a covered butter dish on the counter, available to anybody who wanted a smear on toast. It’s the old fashioned way, the way my grandma did it and her grandma before her. I’d spread it on my whole grain toast each morning (the way I usually start my day), watching that gorgeous yellow butter melt into the nooks and crannies of my golden slice of toast. Heaven.

When I got to college, I noticed that my friends all kept their butter in the refrigerator. I was perplexed. Why would you want to do that? Butter won’t spread straight from the fridge. It’s hard and cold, not soft and melty. They cited food safety as a concern– the refrigerator, they claimed, was safer for storing butter.I tried to jump on the chilled butter bandwagon, but it didn’t work for me. It was too hard, wouldn’t melt fast enough, and more often than not left a big chunk of semi-soft butter in the middle of my toast. Blech.

While searching for an alternative I transitioned to margarine, which was spreadable and salty and fine, but not as yummy as butter. I was willing to compromise– the “spreadable” factor was most important for me. Then I learned aboutthe many health concerns attached to most margarines on the market. They’re heavily processed and many contain trans fat, which increases blood cholesterol and the risk of heart disease. Yuck. While butter substitutes are good for certain things, like cooking dairy-free or serving with a kosher meat meal, I vastly prefer the flavor of natural butter.Over time I found some healthier butter substitutes, like Organic Earth Balance Buttery Spread. Trouble is most of them contain soy, which negatively effects my hormones.

I yearned to take my good old fashioned butter back to room temperature for that easy spreading texture… and really, there’s no reason not to have it that way. Butter will last for about 3 weeks in a covered butter dish at room temperature before it turns rancid. Even after it turns rancid, the taste is bad, but it won’t make you sick (though honestly, who wants to eat anything with the adjective “rancid” attached to it?). I bought a covered butter dish from a local vintage market and returned to my roots, keeping my butter at room temperature again. Unfortunately I’m the only butter fan in my house, and sometimes the stick would go rancid before I had a chance to finish it.

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My little jade-colored chicken butter dish.

The solution came in the comments section of another website (for the life of me I can’t remember which one), where people were discussing this subject of room temperature butter. A woman claimed that she made her own spreadable chilled butter by combining room temperature butter, olive oil, and salt. The resulting butter was spreadable straight from the fridge. I loved the idea, so I gave it a try. The first batch wasn’t very successful– it tasted way too much like olive oil. I tried again with a smaller quantity of light olive oil (which is less olive-y tasting). The light olive oil was better in terms of flavor, but it’s really just processed olive oil, sometimes mixed with other vegetable oils.

Eventually I settled on avocado oil, which is a healthy oil choice (less processed than seed oils), and has a nice, neutral flavor. This mixture is perfectly textured straight from the fridge. Nutritionally speaking, this Homemade Spreadable Butter is lower in saturated fat and cholesterol than pure butter. You can adjust the saltiness (and thereby the sodium) to taste. Olive oil will work too, but you should try to find one that has a neutral or buttery flavor profile – and even then, it may give the spreadable butter a hint of olive flavor. That doesn’t bother me, but if you’re looking for a traditional butter flavor, stick to avocado oil!

Now my butter dish sits on my kitchen shelf, a reminder of the good old days. Homemade Spreadable Butter for the win! How do you keep your butter– in the fridge, on the countertop, or not at all?

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Food Processor

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Homemade Spreadable Butter

Learn to make a healthier butter blend with avocado oil and sea salt. Spreadable when cold, lower in cholesterol and saturated fat.

PRINT RECIPEEmail Me Recipes

COURSE: Appetizer

Kosher Key: Dairy

Servings: 45 servings

Prep Time: 5 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 1 hour hour 30 minutes minutes

Total Time: 1 hour hour 35 minutes minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 cup unsalted butter (I prefer organic)
  • 3/4 cup avocado oil (you may substitute a neutral-flavored or buttery-flavored olive oil)
  • 1/4 teaspoon sea salt, or to taste

NOTES

You will also need:food processor

Instructions

  • Let the butter slowly come to room temperature. To speed this process, cut the butter into small chunks and separate them from each other. Do not try to speed things up in the microwave, even at half power... you’ll change the texture of the butter.

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  • Place the room temperature butter into a food processor along with the oil and sea salt.

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  • Process the butter, oil and salt for 1-2 minutes, scraping the sides of the processor periodically, till all lumps have disappeared and the mixture is smooth and soft. It will be quite liquid, but don't worry, it will firm up in the fridge.

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  • Pour the softened butter into a container that can be sealed airtight (like a Tupperware). Refrigerate for 1-2 hours until fully chilled and firm.

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  • This Homemade Spreadable Butter will last up to 3 months in the refrigerator. It is spreadable straight from the refrigerator. Do not leave the butter at room temperature too long or it will start to separate. If this happens, you can stir the oil back into the butter before refrigerating again.

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Nutrition

Nutrition Facts

Homemade Spreadable Butter

Amount Per Serving

Calories 68Calories from Fat 63

% Daily Value*

Fat 7g11%

Saturated Fat 2g13%

Cholesterol 10mg3%

Sodium 13mg1%

Potassium 1mg0%

Vitamin A 125IU3%

Calcium 1mg0%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

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Nutritional information should be considered an estimate only; please consult a registered dietician, nutritionist, or your physician for specific health-related questions. Read more here. Please note that the recipe above is published using a recipe card plugin, with preexisting software which can auto-calculate metric measurements, as well as change the number of servings. Metric conversions and changes to the number of servings (resulting in different ingredient amounts) will only appear in the ingredient list, and are not changed within the step-by-step directions of the recipe.

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Homemade Spreadable Butter (2024)

FAQs

What are the two ingredients in spreadable butter? ›

The only two ingredients necessary to make a basic butter spread is sticks of quality butter and oil. You can customize this to your taste preferences. We use salted butter, however, if you want to control the amount of salt in your butter spread, you can use unsalted butter and salt it yourself.

Why is my homemade butter not separating? ›

Sometimes, melted butter will be dispersed in the cream and won't separate. This happens if you churn butter in a hot or humid climate. Refrigerate the bowl with its contents for an hour or so. Upon refrigerating, you should see layers of butter floating on the buttermilk as the melted butterfat solidifies.

How do they make spreadable butter? ›

Spreadable butter is made from the same raw materials as is all butter - cream and salt. The secret to spreadable butter lies in physically removing those parts of the cream which make ordinary butter too hard to spread at fridge temperature. The development of spreadable butter has been a team effort.

Is it cheaper to make your own spreadable butter? ›

In fact, Live Pretty estimated that while a container of spreadable butter cost $3.79, making an equal amount at home came to $1.10 instead. Of course, the savings will vary depending on how much groceries cost in your area and what ingredients you use, but in general, it will always be cheaper to make it yourself.

What is the healthiest spreadable butter? ›

The healthiest butter brands
  • Smart Balance Original Buttery Spread.
  • Earth Balance Pressed Avocado Oil Spread.
  • Carrington Farms Organic Ghee.
  • I Can't Believe It's Not Butter Original Spray.
  • Benecol Buttery Spread (includes plant stanols)
  • 4th & Heart Ghee Oil (uses grass-fed dairy)

What happens if you don't rinse homemade butter? ›

Rinse the Butter

This step is very important, to keep the butter fresh. The final butter may have some lactose and milk proteins remaining in the liquid and if this is allowed to ferment, the butter may become rancid in a short time. The washing and folding is what removes most of this.

Can you overmix homemade butter? ›

Keep churning until you have one large chunk of butter (a few small floating pieces is OK). Once you have a large chunk of butter, stop churning! If you continue to mix you can actually separate your chunks again and ruin your butter.

When to add salt to homemade butter? ›

If you wish to add salt you will need ¼ teaspoon of plain dairy salt for every 110g (4oz) of butter. Before shaping the butter, spread it out in a thin layer and sprinkle evenly with dairy salt. Mix thoroughly using the butter pats, then weigh into slabs as before.

How do you increase the spreadability of butter? ›

More than 25 percent of solid fat often make~ the product too hard to spread. Since butter contains 40 percent or more of &olid fat in many cases (3), reducing the amount of crystalline fat it contains should improve its spreadability.

Why is my butter not spreadable? ›

Storing it in the wrong container.

With these containers the butter is kept in a small pot that is immersed in water, creating an airtight seal. Both a dish and crock also help keep the butter soft and spreadable while at a steady temperature.

What is the most spreadable real butter? ›

Kerrygold Pure Irish Butter

Kerrygold is good for cooking (it doesn't add too much salt to any dish, just enough to elevate it), but it's also good slathered onto a piece of bread. It's also the best spreadable butter—it spreads like an absolute dream.

Is Land O Lakes spread real butter? ›

Since the concept of squeeze spread isn't new, we found a way to make LAND O LAKES® Soft Squeeze butter spread stand out: It contains real butter. And that plays well with our target consumer segment.

Why is butter no longer spreadable? ›

To explain it simply, palm oil given to dairy cows increases the proportion of saturated fat in milk compared to unsaturated fat, thus increasing the melting point of butter. This explains why butter made from cows fed with palm oil remains difficult to spread at room temperature.

What are the ingredients in mainland spreadable butter? ›

Organic butter (65%) [organic cream (from milk), salt], organic oil (29%), water, salt, vitamin D.

What are the ingredients in Western Star spreadable butter? ›

Cream (From Milk), Vegetable Oil, Water, Butteroil (From Milk), Salt, Buttermilk Powder (From Milk), Emulsifier (476), Preservative (202), Flavour, Vitamins (A, D), Colour (160a).

What is the difference between pure butter and spreadable butter? ›

butter is the pure taste of cream with a touch of salt, made the traditional way without any additives. Spreadable butter is also additive-free and made purely from cream and salt. The only real difference is that it's made in a way that captures the softer layers of the butter.

Is spreadable butter just margarine? ›

Land O' Lakes makes a spreadable butter that is cream, salt, and olive oil. It doesn't have the same ingredients as margarine. The olive oil prevents the butter from getting hard since it is a different kind of fat.

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