Adding melted butter to cold milk in baking

Adding melted butter to cold milk in baking - Person Mixing Yellow Eggs in a Bowl

I've seen a lot of recipes, particularly for things like quick breads, that call for combining melted butter with milk and eggs before mixing with dry ingredients.

Of course, if the milk and eggs are cool the melted butter will immediately solidify. Is there a technique for this that recipe writers are assuming I know? Or is it just intended that there be little droplets of solid butter suspended in the batter or dough?



Best Answer

Melting the butter and mixing it with milk or other liquid ingredients is almost always done as part of the muffin method, where a muffin, cake or quick bread batter is formed by mixing dry ingredients together, wet ingredients together, and then quickly combining the two.

In practice, the butter is not going to mix with the milk. It is going to mostly float on top, and stay liquid. You will have sufficient time to combine the wet and dry mixes, and create the batter.

Putting them together just makes it easier to form the final batter. It would work just as well if you made a dry mix, then added the remaining liquid ingredients (usually milk, eggs, and maybe some flavoring), and then the melted butter. When you stir the dry and wet mixes together, the butter is going to become fairly uniformly mixed into the batter.

Note that many quick breads are made with oil, which is treated the exact same way, even though melting is not an issue. The only reason to use butter is because the flavor is desired for whatever item is being made.




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Quick Answer about "Adding melted butter to cold milk in baking"

If you add, say, cold milk or eggs to room temperature butter, the butter will immediately harden, creating shards of butter and pockets of air when baked—ideal for flaky pie crust, but not for soft-crumbed cookies.

Can you add melted butter to milk?

The only reason to use butter is because the flavor is desired for whatever item is being made. Show activity on this post. There are actually some recipes I've found that specifically call for adding melted butter to ice cold milk or buttermilk, intentionally creating little butter globs.

What happens if you mix milk and butter?

3/4cup of milk and 1/4cup of melted butter is used in this recipe.....and as they said in the tutorials (even showed) that the milk and butter mix together and when refrigerated forms a creamy texture,which is not too thick or fluffy like whipped cream....but a bit liquidy like normal heavy cream.....

How do you combine milk and melted butter?

Add butter to bowl and heat until butter is mostly melted. Remove bowl from heat, and continue to whisk until butter is smooth and just melted. Slowly stream milk into butter while whisking. Continue whisking until mixture is smooth, 2 to 3 minutes.

What happens if you bake with cold milk?

When you're making a cake with the creaming method, adding cold eggs can curdle the batter\u2014once cold eggs (or milk!) hit the butter, the butter will become firm, leaving you with a lumpy texture. \u201cCurdled cake batters tend to rise poorly, so the finished cake will be rather dense,\u201d says Parks.



Soften Butter Quickly with this Trick | Sally's Baking Recipes




More answers regarding adding melted butter to cold milk in baking

Answer 2

There are actually some recipes I've found that specifically call for adding melted butter to ice cold milk or buttermilk, intentionally creating little butter globs.

For example, in this America's Test Kitchen recipe for "Lighter Chicken and Dumplings" they do this.

  1. FOR THE DUMPLINGS Whisk flour, baking soda, sugar, and salt in large bowl. Combine buttermilk and melted butter in medium bowl, stirring until butter forms small clumps; whisk in egg white. Add buttermilk mixture to dry ingredients and stir with rubber spatula until just incorporated and batter pulls away from sides of bowl.

If you watch the video, the reasoning is explained (starting at 3:20):

These little clumps of butter, once they are in the dough, they are going to melt in the dumplings and form little bursts of steam that are going to help the dumplings rise.

Now, while this may be an unusual method, the results will be similar in other applications. Because butter is partially water, when that water heats up, it turns into steam, which expands and creates airy space in the dough. With the dumplings, the effect is a nice, light dumpling that floats (as you would hope).

In general, however, as rumtscho pointed out in a comment, all ingredients should be room temperature unless otherwise instructed, so even after melting your butter, you will need to allow it to cool and allow your eggs and milk to come to room temperature. Doing so will prevent butter from forming clumps in recipes when they are unwanted.

Answer 3

Egg yolk or citric acid are emulisifying agents readily available and oftentimes used in cooking. I haven't experimented with these.

However, you may add a small (around 1 teaspoon per 200g smelted butter) amount of flour to the liquid butter, this prevents the butter from stagnating in large globules. Add the flour to the butter and mix in promptly to avoid clumping of flour. Then, add the Butter(+flour)-mixture to the liquid batter. Be careful with adding too much flour as it may reduce the butter's temperature below stagnation before mixing it into the liquid batter.

Source: Experience and engineering degree in physics with minor in polymer technology (which includes knowledge on emulsions).

Answer 4

You can whisk the eggs, add melted butter, whisk again to emulsify, then add the milk, it will all be emulsified.

Answer 5

When I make pancakes, which has the same problem of mixing eggs, (butter)milk, and melted butter - what I usually do is separate the eggs, mix the butter with the yolks, and mix the whites with the milk - and only then whisk everything together.

The emulsifiers in the egg yolk help keep everything mixed together, rather than the butter just solidifying and separating out.

Answer 6

IMHO butter acts as a spacing agent. Maybe I'm not using the right term but essentially butter is the reason your baked good is nice and fluffy. It goes away in the baking process.

You want the butter globules in your dough. Here's why:

When the dough is heated in the oven, the butter evaporates or gets absorbed and leaves behind little air holes in the bread.

A great example is croissants which requires an obscene amount of butter but comes out super flakey and holey.

It turns into stream which assists in leavening.

Source: http://www.completelydelicious.com/2012/02/ingredient-spotlight-how-fats-are-used-in-baking.html

Personally, for a healthier alternative I usually substitute 1:1 apple sauce because it provides a similar result, though slightly denser baked bread/muffin/spongey thing. With apple sauce you can also reduce the amount of added sugar plus the result will not taste "apple-y".

This was already discussed in better detail here:

Why can applesauce be used in place of oil?

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