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Butter has a shelf life of around 3 months for unsalted and 5 months for salted butter. However, depending on storage conditions prior to and after purchase, the butter can deteriorate sooner and impart a rancid flavor to your baking and food. Read on for quick, easy instructions on how to tell if your butter is still good to use and cook with.
Steps
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Tips
- Purchase butter more frequently rather than stocking up. It is better to keep butter as fresh as possible in the household. Use half sticks or small blocks of butter if you don't get through butter very quickly.Thanks
- The life of butter can be prolonged by freezing it. However, frozen butter is not good for baking as it can impart moisture when thawed.Thanks
- This applies to butter from any dairy milk source, for example, cow milk or goat milk butter.Thanks
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Things You'll Need
- A kitchen knife for cutting the butter.
References
- ↑ https://www.tasteofhome.com/collection/long-can-keep-food-past-expiration-date/
- ↑ https://www.thekitchn.com/does-butter-really-need-to-be-refrigerated-224036
- ↑ https://www.doesitgobad.com/does-butter-go-bad/
- ↑ https://www.canitgobad.net/can-butter-go-bad/
- ↑ https://spoonuniversity.com/lifestyle/does-butter-expire-here-what-you-should-know
- https://www.joyofbaking.com/Butter.html – research source
About This Article
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Reader Success Stories
- "The part which explained the color of the butter. The inside vs. the outside when you slice it. That was how I knew that the butter I had was no longer any good." ..." more
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