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Butter Refrigerated or room temp?

10K views 87 replies 49 participants last post by  NCalHippie  
#1 ·
Been using Kerrrygold butter for the past couple of years, keep it in a tupperware bowl in the fridge. Problem is the stuff is hard as a rock, can't spread it on my cornbread or anything for that matter.

Is it going to kill me if I left it in a covered airtight container on the kitchen counter? Where do you leave your butter?
 
#11 ·
Like many have already said, stick it in a butter dish on the counter and be done with it. I use salted land-o-lakes butter and go through a stick every 2 weeks.

Conversely, my daughter sometimes makes homechurned butter and we put that in a French butter dish. Mostly out of convenience but it has never lasted long enough to go bad so who knows.

SO pick any of the previous posts and run with it :thumb::thumb:
 
#12 ·
There is no need to refrigerate salted butter in the time scale people use it in.

The butter we use stays on the counter, sometimes for a couple weeks at a time.

We have 10-20lbs of butter in the storeroom, that we do keep refrigerated but that may go six months or longer before being used.
 
#13 ·
i dont use butter much anymore at all since ive been changing the foods i eat, but on the rare occasions that i do, i'll take the butter out about the same time i take my meat out of the freeze to thaw ahead of time.. which being in a vacuum sealed bag, i thaw it out in water so it thaws very quickly, like in an hour or two and by time the meals done, the butters good to go
 
#15 ·
Leave 1 stick on a butter dish (uncovered - *gasp*) on the counter year round. I noticed a friend puts it IN the cupboard. Maybe a good idea. The rest is refrigerated until needed.

Been leaving uncovered butter stick on the counter since my childhood memory. No issues.

If you had rodents or insects, you'd obviously not practice this...
 
#16 ·
Growing up we kept it on the counter or in a cabinet in a covered butter dish.
Now we've mostly been keeping it in the fridge but sometimes leave it out. We used to keep a good stock of butter in the freezer but somehow got away from doing that.
We've been grooving on the European butters lately. Kerry Gold, Plugra, Finlandia. It's soooooo good but priced high for bulk buying. I guess that's why we don't stock much anymore.


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#30 ·
Growing up we kept it on the counter or in a cabinet in a covered butter dish.
Now we've mostly been keeping it in the fridge but sometimes leave it out. We used to keep a good stock of butter in the freezer but somehow got away from doing that.
We've been grooving on the European butters lately. Kerry Gold, Plugra, Finlandia. It's soooooo good but priced high for bulk buying. I guess that's why we don't stock much anymore.
Well, it's expensive in Europe too :p. Good butter is just expensive nowadays.

i also find it funny when i look up cooking recipes and it says "use unsalted butter" and two steps later it says "now add salt".. uuh.. okay.. if salted does last so much longer then it makes sense to just use that for longevity.. and as for freezing butter, i dont think you have to worry about too many odors permeating the package.. i havent had any issues
Guess that's so you can actually control howmuch salt goes into your recipy. With salted, some are mildly salted, others you really notice it. Can make a difference ;). Even changing when you put in the seasonings will affect the taste, so it's possible that otherwise the salt will change the recipy.
Generally always noticed that recipes always call for the most "pure" ingredients. (and given howmuch salt is in anything you buy, not a bad thing to use a bit less ;) )
 
#20 ·
i also find it funny when i look up cooking recipes and it says "use unsalted butter" and two steps later it says "now add salt".. uuh.. okay.. if salted does last so much longer then it makes sense to just use that for longevity.. and as for freezing butter, i dont think you have to worry about too many odors permeating the package.. i havent had any issues
 
#21 ·
We go through A LOT of butter, so going bad isn't an issue. We keep it in a butter dish on the kitchen counter. And I make ours at home. Cream skimmed off the milk, beaten slowly by my KitchenAid mixer, scooped out and flipped between two spatulas to finish drying off, then a bit of salt mixed it. If it was kept in the fridge, it would go rock hard.
 
#26 ·
Bulk is in the freezer. 2 pounds in the fridge, and a stick at room temperature most of the time.
During the summer swelter, the stick goes in the fridge, or it melts. The stick on the counter was for a long time just on a small plate, but now we use a small container with a lid due to pests.

Growing up in the northern Midwest, butter was always on the counter.

Unfortunately we missed the fall baking sale prices this year, so we'll be buying it on an as needed basis. Maybe Mrs will understand better why I try to load the freezer in the fall.
 
#27 ·
I dont know why, in pnw holiday baking supply prices were not great this year. Seattle is not too far, grocery prices are above national average, i guess that extends up here.
I'm amazed the average person uses less than 4 pounds a year. That make butter price less onerous. But i use way more and try for $2.50, sometimes as low as $1.99.
 
#31 ·
My grandma kept hers in a butter dish in her cupboard and didn't do her any harm... my folks kept it in the fridge, and other than being harder than heck, it was fine. I think it depends how much you go thru - if you keep a cube or pound so long it would go rancid, then keep it in the fridge, if you burn thru it like, well, a hot knife thru butter, then don't worry about it.
 
#33 ·
https://www.bedbathandbeyond.com/store/product/butterie-trade-flip-top-butter-dish-with-spreader/3300744?keyword=butter-dish
Image


In the store they had a video giving a whole spiel about how butter does not need to be refrigerated. I picked one up because it was on sale cheap and we like it a lot. Holds two sticks. Pretty sure it will not hold a whole pound at once but we don't see it sold that way much around here anymore. When we had all 13 of us at home we could easily wipe out a pound a day and always bought it on whole pounds because it was cheaper. :D: