2. Match the Fat to the Bake
Most times when you’re following a recipe you’ll see it specify if the butter or shortening is cold, room temperature, or melted. I cannot emphasize this enough: the temperature DOES matter, and it WILL affect the outcome of your bake.
Cold, solid butter is ideal for flaky, layered bakes. Cold butter creates steam and separates the dough into flaky layers. Use this for pie crusts, biscuits or scones.
Room-temp fat is creamy. Soft vegan butter blends smoothly into cakes, cookies, and frostings. It mixes well with other ingredients and creates emulsion that helps trap air. keeping everything tender and creamy.
Use melted butter for fudgy results. Think brownies. Melted butter mixes smoothly with other ingredients, not leaving any room for air. This creates a dense, chewy texture.
Now if you’re a beginner you don’t need to be figuring out what temperature butter you’re going to use yourself, but this should help illustrate the importance of following what is in the recipe, and may help with troubleshooting if your bakes haven’t been turning out right.