Honey Butter
Submitted by Holland
Two-ingredient honey butter: softened butter creamed with honey for a silky spread that turns plain biscuits, muffins, or cornbread into something special. No mixer needed.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
20 minREADY
10 minHoney butter is the kind of small luxury that takes about three minutes to make and elevates everything it touches. Softened butter creamed with honey, full stop. No mixer, no muss, just a fork or a wooden spoon and a small bowl.
Use real butter, not margarine. The recipe is firm on this point and so is reality, the texture and flavor of cultured dairy butter is half the appeal here. European-style butter (higher fat content) gives the silkiest spread.
The softening step is critical. The butter needs to be fully at room temperature before you start, neither cold nor melted. Cold butter refuses to absorb the honey and you’ll end up with a streaky mess; melted butter separates and won’t set up into a spreadable consistency.
For the honey, the kind you choose matters more than you might think. A neutral wildflower or clover honey is the safe choice; orange blossom adds floral notes; buckwheat brings deep, almost molasses-like complexity; chestnut goes savory. Match it to what you’ll spread it on.
Pro Tips
- Whip it longer than you think necessary, 3-4 minutes of energetic stirring incorporates air and gives a fluffy, mousse-like texture.
- Pipe through a star tip onto serving dishes for a bakery-style presentation.
- Press into a small jar for keeping. It will firm up in the fridge but soften back to spreadable at room temperature.
- A tiny pinch of flaky sea salt elevates this from sweet to memorable.
Variations
- Stir in 1 teaspoon of grated orange or lemon zest for a citrus version that’s incredible on biscuits.
- Substitute peanut butter for some or all of the butter for a kid-friendly sandwich spread.
- Add a pinch of cinnamon and a few drops of vanilla for warm-spice honey butter perfect for fall mornings.
Ingredients
Directions
Soften butter and cream in HONEY.
Serve on breads, muffins or crackers.
Variations: add 1 teaspoon grated orange or lemon rind or substitute peanut butter for butter.
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