Beyond Flavor: The Science of Butter | Institute of Culinary Education (2024)

Beyond Flavor: The Science of Butter | Institute of Culinary Education (1)

I am constantly asking my students at ICE, “What role does this ingredient play in the recipe we are making?” In the case of butter—an ingredient most cooks take for granted—there are many answers. Most students immediately respond that butter adds flavor and richness to a recipe, which is correct. But did you know that butter could also be considered a leavening agent? (Think about puff pastry!) Let’s take a closer look at what—beyond flavor—butter is adding to all the fabulous baked goods ICE students are making in our classrooms.

Butter in Batters

Cake, muffin and other similar batters get mixed in one of two ways: the creaming method or the all-in-one method. The creaming method calls for beating room temperature butter and sugar together until it is light and fluffy. This mixing method creates air pockets in the butter and increases the volume of the batter. When eggs are incorporated, they add a significant amount of liquid to the batter and these air pockets fill with egg. As the ingredients are mixed, an emulsion of fat and water is created.

This emulsion is essential for creating stability in the dough. It allows for steam and carbon dioxide to be trapped in the batter as it is bakes, which causes your cake to rise. The butter also helps to create a light and tender texture in cake batter. In the all-in-one method, liquid butter and other liquid ingredients are mixed with dry ingredients in a single step. In this case, the butter is not whipped, but it serves to aerate the cake batter as the fat in the butter helps retain the gases released (steam and carbon dioxide) during baking. The liquefied butter also aids in creating a cake that is particularly moist.

Pie Crusts, Flaky Pastry and Biscuits

In biscuits, pie and pastry dough, butter is rubbed or cut into the flour. This causes the particles of flour to be coated in fat molecules, preventing excess liquid (like water or eggs) from absorbing into the flour, which creates an overdevelopment of gluten.

Have you ever heard of overworked pie dough being tough? That’s from the overdevelopment of gluten. The butter in the dough helps to create the light, flaky texture desired in these pastries. As the dough is baked, the butter melts and creates steam, trapping it in the dough and creating air pockets. Once the dough has cooled, these air pockets become delicate layers of flaky dough.

Viennoiserie

By this point, you’ve realized that butter adds more than flavor—it develops texture. When making croissants, butter and dough are folded into hundreds of individual layers. As a croissant bakes, the butter melts and the water content in the butter turns into steam. It’s that steam being trapped by the gluten in the dough that creates the delicate, flaky layers in a perfect croissant.

The fat in butter can also extend the shelf life of your baked goods. Consider a baguette and a loaf of brioche. The baguette contains absolutely no fat, so it goes stale and becomes dry within a day. Brioche, on the other hand, is loaded with butter and, in turn, will stay moist and soft for several days.

Choosing Your Butter

Now that we know what butter does, how does one choose the best butter for the task at hand? There are multiple factors to consider, but the most important is butterfat content. Butter is nothing more than an emulsion of butterfat, water and 1% or so of milk fat solids.

In the United States, there is a minimum federal standard of 80% butterfat content needed to label and sell a product as butter. Your average supermarket brands will go no further, squeaking in at 80% butterfat.

Butter labeled “European-style” generally has more butterfat, upwards of 83%. And artisanal butters—usually made by very small, local dairy farms—will produce butter with even higher amounts of butterfat, sometimes between 85% and 86%. One might immediately think the butter with the highest butterfat content is probably the best. It certainly is the most expensive!

But that’s not always the case. Sure, if you’re spreading butter on a slice of freshly baked bread, go for the extra rich 86% butter. It’s going to taste delicious. But for baking, your best bet is to use butter in the middle range of butterfat content.

Butter on the lower end of the spectrum (with the minimum 80% of butterfat) typically produces baked goods that are acceptable but not outstanding. Just a few extra percentage points of butterfat content can make a world of difference in flavor and texture.

On the other hand, butter with a very high butterfat percentage tends to cause cakes and bread to rise less and pastries to be less light and flaky. At ICE, our butter of choice is President. This European-style butter is made in Normandy—the crème de la crème of dairy-producing regions in France—has about 83% butterfat. It provides richness, but offers enough versatility for use across a wide range of baking techniques. Beyond butterfat, what makes President butter even better than other European-style brands is the addition of natural lactic ferments to the butter before churning.

This provides a subtle, tangy quality that enhances the butter’s natural flavor. When you’re considering your next baking endeavor, don’t skimp on the butter. It’s easy to overlook the ingredients we use most often, but they are the most worthy of special consideration. Just like flour, salt, milk or sugar, choosing a phenomenal butter transforms your pastries from merely good into something truly special.

Ready to master pastry production with Chef Jenny? Click here to learn more about ICE’s Pastry & Baking Arts program.

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Beyond Flavor: The Science of Butter | Institute of Culinary Education (2024)

FAQs

What is the science behind butter in baking? ›

It allows for steam and carbon dioxide to be trapped in the batter as it is bakes, which causes your cake to rise. The butter also helps to create a light and tender texture in cake batter. In the all-in-one method, liquid butter and other liquid ingredients are mixed with dry ingredients in a single step.

Does butter make a difference in baking? ›

The job of butter in baking (besides being delicious) is to give richness, tenderness and structure to cookies, cakes, pies and pastries. We alter the way butter works in a recipe by changing its temperature and choosing when to combine it with the other ingredients.

What is butter in culinary? ›

Butter is a dairy product made from separating whole milk or cream into fat and buttermilk. The fat is compressed and chilled into blocks of butter. It can be used directly as a condiment or melted for frying or coating. Butter is also used in baking, such as in classic sponges and pastries, or for enriching sauces.

What happens when you reduce butter in cupcakes? ›

Butter, like sugar, helps prevent the development of gluten in cake. The inside could turn out rubbery if the amount of butter is reduced by too much. Butter also keeps the inside of a cake from hardening after it is baked.

What are the scientific facts about butter? ›

The typical composition of butter is: 80-82% fat, 16-17.5% water, 1.5% salt, and 1% milk solids (vitamins, minerals, and lactose). While butter is a simple product made from only a couple of ingredients, the physical changes that take place during butter production are more complex.

How does butter get its flavor? ›

It may contain diacetyl, acetylpropionyl, or acetoin, three natural compounds in butter that contribute to its characteristic taste and smell.

What is the best butter in the world? ›

Why Cabot Creamy Won Best Butter. At the World Championship, all entries are evaluated by a panel of skilled experts from around the world. They examine the taste, look, texture, saltiness, and more before awarding a score out of a possible 100 total points.

Does homemade butter taste better than store bought butter? ›

Flavor: Homemade butter is striking: It tastes unbelievably fresh. I tested my first batch of homemade butter against my favorite supermarket brand, and the difference was clear: Freshly made butter tastes FRESH, unlike butter that's sat at the supermarket for a while.

What is the best butter to use for baking? ›

Unsalted butter is better suited to baked goods like cookies that are sensitive to salt content and rely on butter's creamy flavor profile, helping ensure that you don't end up with an overly-salty baked good.

What are the four types of butter? ›

Types of Butter
  • Salted. Salted butter is all-natural butter, readily available at any grocery store. ...
  • Unsalted. Because many baking recipes are an exact science, added salt (which helps extend freshness) can sometimes mess with the chemistry. ...
  • Clarified. ...
  • European Style. ...
  • Whipped. ...
  • Ghee. ...
  • Cultured. ...
  • Spreadable.

What is the flavor profile of butter? ›

What Does It Taste Like? Butter has a flavor all its own. Generally, butter is soft, creamy, and rich, with just a hint of sweetness, which is why the word "buttery" is often used to describe other foods.

Can butter go bad? ›

Although not as perishable as other kinds of dairy, butter most definitely does go bad. That said, butter's fat content also means it's at risk of going rancid when exposed to heat, light, and oxygen.

Why did my cupcakes sink in the middle while baking? ›

If you add too much batter to the tin, the mixture will rise too much, and ultimately deflate in the centre. Most recipes will tell you how much to fill the tins, so make sure to follow these instructions.

Why do my cupcakes go flat after baking? ›

Opening the oven door too early can let cold air in. The cold air can cause the cupcakes to contract or collapse. As a result, maybe the cupcakes just lose some lift, or become denser, or maybe too much cold air got in there, and the temperature change caused the middle of the cupcakes to sink.

What happens if I put too much butter in my cake? ›

Too Much or Too Soft of Butter

If the butter yields too easily to pressure and appears melted and oily, it will produce a silky batter that rises too soon and collapses. Your cake will have big air pockets and an uneven texture.

What is the chemistry behind making butter? ›

Butter is a mixture of milk fat and water called an emulsion. By shaking the cream the fat molecules start to stick together. Over time more and more fat molecules will stick together forming one single lump of butter. Adding a pinch of salt not only tastes good but it can help preserve the butter.

What happens to butter when baking? ›

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.

What is the principle of butter making? ›

Foam is created during the churning period. The fat globules, due to surface tension effects, tend to concentrate and clump on the foam bubbles. The foam-producing substance assumes a solid character and causes the foam to collapse. The fat globules then coalesce and butter is formed.

What is the science behind butter cake? ›

An endothermic reaction absorbs heat. t Heat helps leavening agents produce tiny gas bubbles that make the cake light (by rising). t Heat causes egg proteins to firm, helping to give the cake structure. t Heat dries cake batter (fats are still able to keep the cake moist).

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