In baking, can yoghurt replace butter?

In baking, can yoghurt replace butter? - A Product Photography of a Box of Danish Butter Cookies

By baking, I mean cakes / muffins / biscuits.

This is mainly to cut down on fat.

I've tried replacing butter with yoghurt in all of these and the results were OK.

Are there any cases where it's not a good idea?

I generally replace with equal ratios e.g 100 ml butter = 100 ml yoghurt.

Is this the best ratio?



Best Answer

I guess it depends on what the substitution is for.

Certainly if the butter is just for flavour, it's a reasonable substitute (I think I'd use slightly more yogurt). But 9 times out of 10, fat is the main reason the recipe is calling for butter! Yogurt cannot substitute for a fat (butter) because it has very little fat.

If you lower the fat content of a baked good then you'll generally end up with a product much denser and less flakey. So if you feel you must do this for some reason, then I would increase the sugar in the recipe to compensate (sugar inhibits gluten formation and will help to make the result less chewy).

The other thing you'd better keep in mind is that yogurt is naturally sour and will become even sourer when baked at a high temperature. The longer you bake, the more sour it will become, so you might need to amp up the sugar significantly to maintain the proper flavour.

So for the most part, no, yogurt is really not a substitute for butter or any other fat. Obviously this is partly a matter of personal taste, and if you're happy with the result, then continue doing what you're doing - but I think I'd definitely hesitate to eat a cake that was baked with yogurt instead of butter.




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What does yoghurt replace in baking?

From traditional comfort foods to fresh baked goods, Greek yogurt can substitute oil and mayonnaise. Oil: Replace oil with Greek yogurt when baking muffins, cakes and even waffles.

What is a good replacement for butter when baking?

In general, the following foods work best as butter replacements in cakes, muffins, cookies, brownies, and quick breads:
  • Applesauce. Applesauce significantly reduces the calorie and fat content of baked goods. ...
  • Avocados. ...
  • Mashed bananas. ...
  • Greek yogurt. ...
  • Nut butters. ...
  • Pumpkin pur\xe9e.


Can you use Greek yoghurt instead of butter in cake?

The easiest way to substitute Greek yoghurt is to replace half the butter or oil, with equal amount of yoghurt. Alternatively, you can substitute it all at a 1:1 ratio (i.e. 50g butter for 50g Greek yoghurt). But be careful in recipes that call for a lot of butter or oil.




More answers regarding in baking, can yoghurt replace butter?

Answer 2

I'll admit, I'd never tried it, but for muffins, I'll often replace 1/2 to 2/3 of the oil in a recipe with some sort of liquid-like fruit (either applesauce or mashed previously frozen banana), so I don't see why yogurt wouldn't work.

In those case, the oil went in as a liquid; if you had a baked good that required creaming the butter, or cutting it in, I would not try replacing it.

I would also be concerned with the increased acid; it's possible that you might want to experiment with cutting some of the baking powder and replacing it with 1/2 as much baking soda as you removed, so you're more pH neutral, but I have no idea how baking soda is needed to balance out yogurt.

As you're from NZ, I'm going to assume 'biscuits' in this case is what Americans call cookies -- I would not try replacing butter in what Americans call biscuits, as you add the fat solid (sometimes cold), to make the them flaky.

Answer 3

I do it all the time. Usually I swap out half the butter for half as much yogurt, either plain or vanilla, usually low fat. Sometimes I do Greek yogurt. I'm working on adjusting certain recipes so that it's ALL yogurt and I've had the best luck with banana bread and muffins. They are delicious and nobody knows the difference. If a recipe has more than 1/4 cup of butter, I definitely start swapping. I do the same for oil but it's closer to an even swap.

Answer 4

I substituted equal parts of yogurt for butter in my chocolate chip cookies and the structure of my cookie was completely flat like a pancake (possibly flatter with holes in the edges). But when you use your spatula to remove the cookie you can only remove the inside of the cookie so it created a sort of cookie dough ball look.

I was terrified but when compared to my normal cookies (made with the butter) they were ranked the exact same in my food science experiment in my college class. So taste wise my cookies were still delicious but appearance wise they were a little hideous.

P.S. I used the chocolate chip cookie recipe from smitten kitchen (I love them!).

Answer 5

It works awesome in banana bread, especially if you use vanilla yogurt.

Answer 6

You can replace it just fine - I read that the moisture butter provides simply acts to keep flour from forming long protein strands, and keeping baked goods from turning into rubber. So apple sauce or yogurt can replace butter any time! It just makes you bakes goods softer, so don't use that on crispy goods such as cookies.

Answer 7

Today I baked chocolate chip muffins with bananas and vanilla yogurt and were delicious! I didn't use any butter!

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