Difference in cookie texture if we use melted vs softened butter The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InHow can I get chewy chocolate chip cookies?What does an overnight chill do to cookie dough, that a 4 hour chill doesn't?Bake brownies by 2 different ways, what changes?Why are my cookies spreading too much? More flour?What is the purpose of creaming butter with sugar in cookie recipes?Cookie Biscuits: What happened?How to cream when there is more sugar than butter in the recipe?What does melted butter do in a swiss roll recipe?Why must I return the chilled chocolate cookie dough to room temperature before baking?Substitutions for “European style” butter in croissantsCan you use both melted and creamed butter for cookies?Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Like GravelSoftened butter vs over softened butterWhy are my cookies spreading too much? More flour?
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Difference in cookie texture if we use melted vs softened butter
The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InHow can I get chewy chocolate chip cookies?What does an overnight chill do to cookie dough, that a 4 hour chill doesn't?Bake brownies by 2 different ways, what changes?Why are my cookies spreading too much? More flour?What is the purpose of creaming butter with sugar in cookie recipes?Cookie Biscuits: What happened?How to cream when there is more sugar than butter in the recipe?What does melted butter do in a swiss roll recipe?Why must I return the chilled chocolate cookie dough to room temperature before baking?Substitutions for “European style” butter in croissantsCan you use both melted and creamed butter for cookies?Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Like GravelSoftened butter vs over softened butterWhy are my cookies spreading too much? More flour?
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
I would like to know the difference in the final result if we use softened butter or melted butter in an ordinary cookie recipe.
A few days ago i baked chocolate chips cookies i waited for the butter to get the room temperature and then i smoothed the butter with the mixer (...) and at the end i put the cookie dough in the frighe. I just wondered what if i melt the butter so i will not have to wait for the butter to get soft, anyway i will put the cookie dough in the frighe later. But what will change? Some recipes demand for butter in room temperature softened and to turn sugar and butter mixture into a fluffy outcome. Some other recipes demand to melt the butter and sugar in low heat.
What is the logic behind what each recipe demands? And why?
temperature butter cookies texture
add a comment |
I would like to know the difference in the final result if we use softened butter or melted butter in an ordinary cookie recipe.
A few days ago i baked chocolate chips cookies i waited for the butter to get the room temperature and then i smoothed the butter with the mixer (...) and at the end i put the cookie dough in the frighe. I just wondered what if i melt the butter so i will not have to wait for the butter to get soft, anyway i will put the cookie dough in the frighe later. But what will change? Some recipes demand for butter in room temperature softened and to turn sugar and butter mixture into a fluffy outcome. Some other recipes demand to melt the butter and sugar in low heat.
What is the logic behind what each recipe demands? And why?
temperature butter cookies texture
See cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/1/…
– SAJ14SAJ
Jan 20 '13 at 23:55
There are many questions & answers on getting optimum results for chocolate chip cookies but your question is about the difference between a soft butter cookie and a melted butter cookie so for that I'm upvoting your question.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 19:00
add a comment |
I would like to know the difference in the final result if we use softened butter or melted butter in an ordinary cookie recipe.
A few days ago i baked chocolate chips cookies i waited for the butter to get the room temperature and then i smoothed the butter with the mixer (...) and at the end i put the cookie dough in the frighe. I just wondered what if i melt the butter so i will not have to wait for the butter to get soft, anyway i will put the cookie dough in the frighe later. But what will change? Some recipes demand for butter in room temperature softened and to turn sugar and butter mixture into a fluffy outcome. Some other recipes demand to melt the butter and sugar in low heat.
What is the logic behind what each recipe demands? And why?
temperature butter cookies texture
I would like to know the difference in the final result if we use softened butter or melted butter in an ordinary cookie recipe.
A few days ago i baked chocolate chips cookies i waited for the butter to get the room temperature and then i smoothed the butter with the mixer (...) and at the end i put the cookie dough in the frighe. I just wondered what if i melt the butter so i will not have to wait for the butter to get soft, anyway i will put the cookie dough in the frighe later. But what will change? Some recipes demand for butter in room temperature softened and to turn sugar and butter mixture into a fluffy outcome. Some other recipes demand to melt the butter and sugar in low heat.
What is the logic behind what each recipe demands? And why?
temperature butter cookies texture
temperature butter cookies texture
asked Jan 20 '13 at 23:47
FelissaFelissa
2462510
2462510
See cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/1/…
– SAJ14SAJ
Jan 20 '13 at 23:55
There are many questions & answers on getting optimum results for chocolate chip cookies but your question is about the difference between a soft butter cookie and a melted butter cookie so for that I'm upvoting your question.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 19:00
add a comment |
See cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/1/…
– SAJ14SAJ
Jan 20 '13 at 23:55
There are many questions & answers on getting optimum results for chocolate chip cookies but your question is about the difference between a soft butter cookie and a melted butter cookie so for that I'm upvoting your question.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 19:00
See cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/1/…
– SAJ14SAJ
Jan 20 '13 at 23:55
See cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/1/…
– SAJ14SAJ
Jan 20 '13 at 23:55
There are many questions & answers on getting optimum results for chocolate chip cookies but your question is about the difference between a soft butter cookie and a melted butter cookie so for that I'm upvoting your question.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 19:00
There are many questions & answers on getting optimum results for chocolate chip cookies but your question is about the difference between a soft butter cookie and a melted butter cookie so for that I'm upvoting your question.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 19:00
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
There are many factors in play such as the type of sugars, amount of eggs or other sources of hydration, amount and type of leavening and so forth, but as an overall generalization:
- Melting the butter will lead to chewier cookies
- Creaming colder/room temperature butter with sugar will lead to cookies with a higher, more cake like texture.
- Refrigerating the dough before baking will help inhibit spread because the butter is colder, and takes longer to melt. It is also gives time for the liquid in the recipe to hydrate the flour. See What does an overnight chill do to cookie dough, that a 4 hour chill doesn't?
See the transcript of Alton Brown's Three Chips for Sister Marsha episode for a good treatment of chocolate chip cookies and their variations.
add a comment |
My experience is that every cookie I've baked that has a base of:
- softened butter
- white & brown sugar
- egg
- baking soda
flour
(which are most chocolate chip recipes), melted butter (or even too soft, almost melted butter) will result in very flat, almost toffee-like cookies. Not that they're bad, they can be quite tasty if you can get past the look of them (like a lunar landscape).
I'm sure there are others on this site that can give the exact chemical and molecular reason for the need for softened, not melted butter, but from my many years experience as a cookie baker, that is my observation.
@Felissa - glad to help - good luck with your cookies! :-)
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:10
5
The exact reason is that leavening does not create new bubbles in dough, but increases the ones made by creaming butter with crystal sugar. If you use melted butter (or powdered sugar), you get non-leavened, chewy cookies despite including baking powder. And yes, there are recipes for those too, and they do indeed prescribe melted butter.
– rumtscho♦
Jan 21 '13 at 20:20
Thanks @rumtscho! I knew you'd be at the forefront of the experts! Excellent explanation. I've made many varieties of cookies over the years, including those with melted butter, and there's a beauty and uniqueness to each of them, for sure.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:25
add a comment |
If we are using melting butter in cookies then the cookies will become chewer in taste.There are some ingredients that are used while baking cookies to make them perfect in taste and texture.These are baking powder,softened butter,egg,brown sugar,white sugar.
But in what proportions?
– logophobe
Nov 5 '15 at 15:26
add a comment |
I did my science research project on this and found that the softened butter will result in chewier, and smaller cookie than with melted butter. The cookie with melted butter will also be thinner. I also figured out that if you use double the melted butter you get a WIDE, thin, and crispy cookie and with half the butter you get a small, chewy, and what I found very appealing to most people in taste, texture and appearance.
P.S.
I used the toll house recipe without nuts and with choc. chips.
New contributor
user74027 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
There are many factors in play such as the type of sugars, amount of eggs or other sources of hydration, amount and type of leavening and so forth, but as an overall generalization:
- Melting the butter will lead to chewier cookies
- Creaming colder/room temperature butter with sugar will lead to cookies with a higher, more cake like texture.
- Refrigerating the dough before baking will help inhibit spread because the butter is colder, and takes longer to melt. It is also gives time for the liquid in the recipe to hydrate the flour. See What does an overnight chill do to cookie dough, that a 4 hour chill doesn't?
See the transcript of Alton Brown's Three Chips for Sister Marsha episode for a good treatment of chocolate chip cookies and their variations.
add a comment |
There are many factors in play such as the type of sugars, amount of eggs or other sources of hydration, amount and type of leavening and so forth, but as an overall generalization:
- Melting the butter will lead to chewier cookies
- Creaming colder/room temperature butter with sugar will lead to cookies with a higher, more cake like texture.
- Refrigerating the dough before baking will help inhibit spread because the butter is colder, and takes longer to melt. It is also gives time for the liquid in the recipe to hydrate the flour. See What does an overnight chill do to cookie dough, that a 4 hour chill doesn't?
See the transcript of Alton Brown's Three Chips for Sister Marsha episode for a good treatment of chocolate chip cookies and their variations.
add a comment |
There are many factors in play such as the type of sugars, amount of eggs or other sources of hydration, amount and type of leavening and so forth, but as an overall generalization:
- Melting the butter will lead to chewier cookies
- Creaming colder/room temperature butter with sugar will lead to cookies with a higher, more cake like texture.
- Refrigerating the dough before baking will help inhibit spread because the butter is colder, and takes longer to melt. It is also gives time for the liquid in the recipe to hydrate the flour. See What does an overnight chill do to cookie dough, that a 4 hour chill doesn't?
See the transcript of Alton Brown's Three Chips for Sister Marsha episode for a good treatment of chocolate chip cookies and their variations.
There are many factors in play such as the type of sugars, amount of eggs or other sources of hydration, amount and type of leavening and so forth, but as an overall generalization:
- Melting the butter will lead to chewier cookies
- Creaming colder/room temperature butter with sugar will lead to cookies with a higher, more cake like texture.
- Refrigerating the dough before baking will help inhibit spread because the butter is colder, and takes longer to melt. It is also gives time for the liquid in the recipe to hydrate the flour. See What does an overnight chill do to cookie dough, that a 4 hour chill doesn't?
See the transcript of Alton Brown's Three Chips for Sister Marsha episode for a good treatment of chocolate chip cookies and their variations.
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:33
Community♦
1
1
answered Jan 21 '13 at 0:03
SAJ14SAJSAJ14SAJ
67.9k12129203
67.9k12129203
add a comment |
add a comment |
My experience is that every cookie I've baked that has a base of:
- softened butter
- white & brown sugar
- egg
- baking soda
flour
(which are most chocolate chip recipes), melted butter (or even too soft, almost melted butter) will result in very flat, almost toffee-like cookies. Not that they're bad, they can be quite tasty if you can get past the look of them (like a lunar landscape).
I'm sure there are others on this site that can give the exact chemical and molecular reason for the need for softened, not melted butter, but from my many years experience as a cookie baker, that is my observation.
@Felissa - glad to help - good luck with your cookies! :-)
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:10
5
The exact reason is that leavening does not create new bubbles in dough, but increases the ones made by creaming butter with crystal sugar. If you use melted butter (or powdered sugar), you get non-leavened, chewy cookies despite including baking powder. And yes, there are recipes for those too, and they do indeed prescribe melted butter.
– rumtscho♦
Jan 21 '13 at 20:20
Thanks @rumtscho! I knew you'd be at the forefront of the experts! Excellent explanation. I've made many varieties of cookies over the years, including those with melted butter, and there's a beauty and uniqueness to each of them, for sure.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:25
add a comment |
My experience is that every cookie I've baked that has a base of:
- softened butter
- white & brown sugar
- egg
- baking soda
flour
(which are most chocolate chip recipes), melted butter (or even too soft, almost melted butter) will result in very flat, almost toffee-like cookies. Not that they're bad, they can be quite tasty if you can get past the look of them (like a lunar landscape).
I'm sure there are others on this site that can give the exact chemical and molecular reason for the need for softened, not melted butter, but from my many years experience as a cookie baker, that is my observation.
@Felissa - glad to help - good luck with your cookies! :-)
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:10
5
The exact reason is that leavening does not create new bubbles in dough, but increases the ones made by creaming butter with crystal sugar. If you use melted butter (or powdered sugar), you get non-leavened, chewy cookies despite including baking powder. And yes, there are recipes for those too, and they do indeed prescribe melted butter.
– rumtscho♦
Jan 21 '13 at 20:20
Thanks @rumtscho! I knew you'd be at the forefront of the experts! Excellent explanation. I've made many varieties of cookies over the years, including those with melted butter, and there's a beauty and uniqueness to each of them, for sure.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:25
add a comment |
My experience is that every cookie I've baked that has a base of:
- softened butter
- white & brown sugar
- egg
- baking soda
flour
(which are most chocolate chip recipes), melted butter (or even too soft, almost melted butter) will result in very flat, almost toffee-like cookies. Not that they're bad, they can be quite tasty if you can get past the look of them (like a lunar landscape).
I'm sure there are others on this site that can give the exact chemical and molecular reason for the need for softened, not melted butter, but from my many years experience as a cookie baker, that is my observation.
My experience is that every cookie I've baked that has a base of:
- softened butter
- white & brown sugar
- egg
- baking soda
flour
(which are most chocolate chip recipes), melted butter (or even too soft, almost melted butter) will result in very flat, almost toffee-like cookies. Not that they're bad, they can be quite tasty if you can get past the look of them (like a lunar landscape).
I'm sure there are others on this site that can give the exact chemical and molecular reason for the need for softened, not melted butter, but from my many years experience as a cookie baker, that is my observation.
answered Jan 21 '13 at 19:06
Kristina LopezKristina Lopez
2,36111120
2,36111120
@Felissa - glad to help - good luck with your cookies! :-)
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:10
5
The exact reason is that leavening does not create new bubbles in dough, but increases the ones made by creaming butter with crystal sugar. If you use melted butter (or powdered sugar), you get non-leavened, chewy cookies despite including baking powder. And yes, there are recipes for those too, and they do indeed prescribe melted butter.
– rumtscho♦
Jan 21 '13 at 20:20
Thanks @rumtscho! I knew you'd be at the forefront of the experts! Excellent explanation. I've made many varieties of cookies over the years, including those with melted butter, and there's a beauty and uniqueness to each of them, for sure.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:25
add a comment |
@Felissa - glad to help - good luck with your cookies! :-)
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:10
5
The exact reason is that leavening does not create new bubbles in dough, but increases the ones made by creaming butter with crystal sugar. If you use melted butter (or powdered sugar), you get non-leavened, chewy cookies despite including baking powder. And yes, there are recipes for those too, and they do indeed prescribe melted butter.
– rumtscho♦
Jan 21 '13 at 20:20
Thanks @rumtscho! I knew you'd be at the forefront of the experts! Excellent explanation. I've made many varieties of cookies over the years, including those with melted butter, and there's a beauty and uniqueness to each of them, for sure.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:25
@Felissa - glad to help - good luck with your cookies! :-)
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:10
@Felissa - glad to help - good luck with your cookies! :-)
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:10
5
5
The exact reason is that leavening does not create new bubbles in dough, but increases the ones made by creaming butter with crystal sugar. If you use melted butter (or powdered sugar), you get non-leavened, chewy cookies despite including baking powder. And yes, there are recipes for those too, and they do indeed prescribe melted butter.
– rumtscho♦
Jan 21 '13 at 20:20
The exact reason is that leavening does not create new bubbles in dough, but increases the ones made by creaming butter with crystal sugar. If you use melted butter (or powdered sugar), you get non-leavened, chewy cookies despite including baking powder. And yes, there are recipes for those too, and they do indeed prescribe melted butter.
– rumtscho♦
Jan 21 '13 at 20:20
Thanks @rumtscho! I knew you'd be at the forefront of the experts! Excellent explanation. I've made many varieties of cookies over the years, including those with melted butter, and there's a beauty and uniqueness to each of them, for sure.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:25
Thanks @rumtscho! I knew you'd be at the forefront of the experts! Excellent explanation. I've made many varieties of cookies over the years, including those with melted butter, and there's a beauty and uniqueness to each of them, for sure.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 20:25
add a comment |
If we are using melting butter in cookies then the cookies will become chewer in taste.There are some ingredients that are used while baking cookies to make them perfect in taste and texture.These are baking powder,softened butter,egg,brown sugar,white sugar.
But in what proportions?
– logophobe
Nov 5 '15 at 15:26
add a comment |
If we are using melting butter in cookies then the cookies will become chewer in taste.There are some ingredients that are used while baking cookies to make them perfect in taste and texture.These are baking powder,softened butter,egg,brown sugar,white sugar.
But in what proportions?
– logophobe
Nov 5 '15 at 15:26
add a comment |
If we are using melting butter in cookies then the cookies will become chewer in taste.There are some ingredients that are used while baking cookies to make them perfect in taste and texture.These are baking powder,softened butter,egg,brown sugar,white sugar.
If we are using melting butter in cookies then the cookies will become chewer in taste.There are some ingredients that are used while baking cookies to make them perfect in taste and texture.These are baking powder,softened butter,egg,brown sugar,white sugar.
answered Nov 5 '15 at 7:09
cookiesfromhomecookiesfromhome
11
11
But in what proportions?
– logophobe
Nov 5 '15 at 15:26
add a comment |
But in what proportions?
– logophobe
Nov 5 '15 at 15:26
But in what proportions?
– logophobe
Nov 5 '15 at 15:26
But in what proportions?
– logophobe
Nov 5 '15 at 15:26
add a comment |
I did my science research project on this and found that the softened butter will result in chewier, and smaller cookie than with melted butter. The cookie with melted butter will also be thinner. I also figured out that if you use double the melted butter you get a WIDE, thin, and crispy cookie and with half the butter you get a small, chewy, and what I found very appealing to most people in taste, texture and appearance.
P.S.
I used the toll house recipe without nuts and with choc. chips.
New contributor
user74027 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
I did my science research project on this and found that the softened butter will result in chewier, and smaller cookie than with melted butter. The cookie with melted butter will also be thinner. I also figured out that if you use double the melted butter you get a WIDE, thin, and crispy cookie and with half the butter you get a small, chewy, and what I found very appealing to most people in taste, texture and appearance.
P.S.
I used the toll house recipe without nuts and with choc. chips.
New contributor
user74027 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
I did my science research project on this and found that the softened butter will result in chewier, and smaller cookie than with melted butter. The cookie with melted butter will also be thinner. I also figured out that if you use double the melted butter you get a WIDE, thin, and crispy cookie and with half the butter you get a small, chewy, and what I found very appealing to most people in taste, texture and appearance.
P.S.
I used the toll house recipe without nuts and with choc. chips.
New contributor
user74027 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I did my science research project on this and found that the softened butter will result in chewier, and smaller cookie than with melted butter. The cookie with melted butter will also be thinner. I also figured out that if you use double the melted butter you get a WIDE, thin, and crispy cookie and with half the butter you get a small, chewy, and what I found very appealing to most people in taste, texture and appearance.
P.S.
I used the toll house recipe without nuts and with choc. chips.
New contributor
user74027 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
user74027 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
answered 11 mins ago
user74027user74027
1
1
New contributor
user74027 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
user74027 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
user74027 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
add a comment |
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See cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/1/…
– SAJ14SAJ
Jan 20 '13 at 23:55
There are many questions & answers on getting optimum results for chocolate chip cookies but your question is about the difference between a soft butter cookie and a melted butter cookie so for that I'm upvoting your question.
– Kristina Lopez
Jan 21 '13 at 19:00