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Salted vs. Unsalted Butter

Posted on 11/16/23 at 8:51 am
Posted by mmmmmbeeer
ATL
Member since Nov 2014
7446 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 8:51 am
Was at my brother's house for Christmas a few years back and, as is tradition with our family, had steak and lobster for our holiday dinner. Sit down, dig into my lobster, dipping it in the butter, and something was just way off. After spending 10 mins trying to figure out why the hell my lobster didn't taste as good as usual, I realized he put unsalted butter in the warming dishes.

I never buy unsalted butter. I read recipes and they call for unsalted butter so that you have more control over salt content in your dish. Do people really find salted butter that ridiculously salty that they find it oversalts their cooking? I cook with salted butter and still find myself adding a good bit of salt to the dish throughout the course of making the recipe.

I guess, maybe, it's important with baking? I don't really bake so perhaps the salt content could throw off the way foods rise/bake?

Is it just a preference thing? Am I a weirdo for only using salted butter?
Posted by Mo Jeaux
Member since Aug 2008
59128 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 8:52 am to
quote:

I guess, maybe, it's important with baking?


The only thing that I really use it for. I go through a lot of butter, but a stick of unsalted butter will last for a while in my house simply because it's only used for baking.
Posted by patnuh
South LA
Member since Sep 2005
6753 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 8:52 am to
I only use unsalted butter. Which one of us is the freak????

If I need to add salt, I add salt. I don’t need the butter to do that.
This post was edited on 11/16/23 at 8:54 am
Posted by Mo Jeaux
Member since Aug 2008
59128 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 8:57 am to
quote:

I only use unsalted butter. Which one of us is the freak????



You. You're definitely in the minority.

Posted by patnuh
South LA
Member since Sep 2005
6753 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 9:00 am to
quote:

You. You're definitely in the minority.


Most of my cookbooks call for unsalted butter. Maybe Donald Link knows a thing or two.
Posted by Mister Bigfish
Member since Oct 2018
946 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 9:06 am to
Boy, people getting riled up over a damn butter question.
Posted by Shexter
Prairieville
Member since Feb 2014
13979 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 9:13 am to

Best butter IMO

Posted by Epic Cajun
Lafayette, LA
Member since Feb 2013
32779 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 9:15 am to
quote:

Most of my cookbooks call for unsalted butter. Maybe Donald Link knows a thing or two.

And I’m sure all of his recipes also include salt
Posted by MeridianDog
Home on the range
Member since Nov 2010
14263 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 9:22 am to
May or may not be true:

I read somewhere that they use salt to cover the flavor of off taste butter and butter that is getting old.

It just seems to make more sense to me to use unsalted and add my own salt.
Posted by SpotCheckBilly
Member since May 2020
6574 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 9:28 am to
quote:

I only use unsalted butter. Which one of us is the freak????

If I need to add salt, I add salt. I don’t need the butter to do that.


We only buy unsalted (US) butter. The wife bakes a lot, and it's just easier to get one pack at Sam's. If something needs more salt, the shaker is right there.

Now, we will sometimes buy some brand of Irish butter for rolls or biscuits, but that's almost a "dessert" butter.

I don't eat a lot of salt anyway, so it's not an issue.
Posted by marcus3000
The nice part of Gardere
Member since Jan 2018
848 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 9:29 am to
The main reason I buy salted butter is that it doesn't spoil as quickly at room temperature as unsalted. I keep half a stick in a butter dish at room temp for spreading on toast, muffins, etc. and it stays good for a couple of weeks vs. a couple of days for unsalted.
Posted by The Levee
Bat Country
Member since Feb 2006
10765 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 9:31 am to
quote:

Most of my cookbooks call for unsalted butter. Maybe Donald Link knows a thing or two.


Most chefs will go with unsalted to have complete control of the taste.

Especially with seafood that can quickly be over salted

Salted butter is used as a spread for toast or finishing tool
Posted by Roy Curado
Member since Jul 2021
999 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 9:43 am to
I used salted butter in a dessert that I made on time. It came out disgusting.

I think of salted butter as a finishing butter/spreader and unsalted butter as a cooking/baking butter.
Posted by SpotCheckBilly
Member since May 2020
6574 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 9:55 am to
quote:


The main reason I buy salted butter is that it doesn't spoil as quickly at room temperature as unsalted. I keep half a stick in a butter dish at room temp for spreading on toast, muffins, etc. and it stays good for a couple of weeks vs. a couple of days for unsalted.


My (future) wife started making a pound cake one time and realized the butter had soured in the summer heat. She went ahead and finished the cake, but warned me that it might not be good.

I thought it was the best pound cake I had had since my grandmother last made one. My grandmother was from south Florida and didn't believe in AC. Her pound cakes were great and had a bit of a twang to them that made them unique.
Posted by DaBeerz
Member since Sep 2004
17002 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 10:57 am to
I only buy unsalted, also only unsalted stock if using boxed. Sodium/salt content of everything is out of control in America
Posted by deeprig9
Unincorporated Ozora, Georgia
Member since Sep 2012
64268 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 11:22 am to
quote:

vs. a couple of days for unsalted.



Posted by heatom2
At the plant, baw.
Member since Nov 2010
12815 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 11:51 am to
I usually buy the tub if salted kerrygold for bread/biscuits.

I only specifically buy unsalted for baking.
Posted by The Levee
Bat Country
Member since Feb 2006
10765 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 11:55 am to
quote:

I only buy unsalted, also only unsalted stock if using boxed. Sodium/salt content of everything is out of control in America


True, but if I buy stock I love the flavor of Emerils and it’s got a lot of salt in it.

So when I use that in a gumbo, I just don’t add any salt until the end when I’m trying to get it perfect. Usually doesn’t need any.

You have to approach salting with the mindset that everything you add to a dish has salt content. So you might not need additional salt.
Posted by mmmmmbeeer
ATL
Member since Nov 2014
7446 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 12:21 pm to
quote:

Most chefs will go with unsalted to have complete control of the taste.


That's the thing I don't get...I've never used salted butter in a savory dish and thought, "damn, this is way too salty and I didn't add any salt! must be the butter." Maybe chefs are just incredibly anal or that's what they do being that's what they were taught.
Posted by riverdiver
Summerville SC
Member since May 2022
1249 posts
Posted on 11/16/23 at 12:46 pm to
I use salted butter for everything except baking.

I keep a stick of salted in a butter dish so it’s always soft, can’t do that as much with unsalted. At least I wouldn’t do it.
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