Butter is one of the most frequently used baking ingredients, so when you are mid-way through a recipe and discover you’ve got none, a minor freak-out moment may ensue. However, put the freak-out on hold, because there are countless ways to replace butter in recipes.
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Try one of these many substitutes for both salted and unsalted butter, plus healthy butter substitutes that reduce calories and fat in your favourite recipes.
Salted butter substitutes:
For 1 cup salted butter, substitute:
- 1 cup margarine
- 1 cup shortening plus 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 7/8 cup vegetable oil plus 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 7/8 cup lard plus 1/2 teaspoon salt
Unsalted butter substitutes:
For 1 cup unsalted butter, substitute:
- 1 cup shortening
- 7/8 cup vegetable oil
- 7/8 cup lard.
More butter substitutes:
For half of the called-for butter, substitute applesauce, shortening, oil, or butter spreads and shortenings specially formulated for baking that don’t have trans fats. You can also substitute half for tofu or pureed white beans (cannellini, black beans, lentils).
For one-quarter of the called-for butter, substitute flaxseed meal.
Baking with butter substitutes:
To avoid dense, soggy, or flat baked goods, do not substitute oil for butter or shortening. Also, do not substitute diet, whipped, or tub-style margarine for regular margarine.
Healthy butter substitutes:
For half of the called-for butter, substitute baby food prunes.
- Cup for cup, prunes have about 85% less calories than butter. Using prunes to replace half the butter cuts cholesterol, sodium, fat, and saturated fat. One cup of prunes has about 6 grams of fibre, whereas butter has no fibre. Prunes add natural sugars and carbohydrates.
For half of the called-for butter, substitute mashed tofu.
- Ounce per ounce, tofu has about 90% less calories and 88% less fat than butter. Using tofu to replace half the butter reduces calories, fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, and sodium by about half.
For half of the called-for butter, substitute pureed white beans (cannellini, black beans, lentils).
- 1 cup of rinsed and drained canned beans is equal to 3/4 cup mashed beans.
- Cup for cup, beans have 84% less calories, 98% less fat, and 70% less sodium than salted butter. Replacing half the butter with beans reduces calories, fat, cholesterol, and saturated fat. One cup of beans has about 12 grams of fibre plus folate and iron, whereas butter has none.
For 1 tablespoon butter, substitute a 1/3-second spray of cooking spray for coating baking pans and sautéing.
- Using cooking spray omits virtually all added fat for cooking. Adding more than one serving (a 1/3-second spray) will start adding fat. For example, three servings (a 1-second spray) have about 1 gram of fat.
For one-quarter of the called-for butter, substitute flaxseed meal.
- Flaxseed reduces calories added by salted butter by 90% and fat by 93%. It also omits cholesterol and virtually all saturated fat and sodium.
- Flaxseed meal has nearly twice the amount of calcium than butter plus 8 grams of fibre.
- However, flaxseed meal will increase carbohydrates.
For half of the called-for butter, substitute unsweetened applesauce.
- Unsweetened applesauce has about 94% less calories and 99% less fat than butter. It has 0 grams cholesterol and saturated fat, plus 98% less sodium than salted butter.
- Applesauce has 3 grams fibre per cup.
- Using applesauce to replace half the butter reduces calories, fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, and sodium.
- However, applesauce will increase carbohydrates.
This article originally appeared on www.bhg.com.
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