The Ultimate Guide To Canning Butter At Home - Gubba Homestead (2024)

Take control of your food supply and protect your family in case of an emergency

Check My Emergency Food Storage Course

Did you know you can actually can butter?

Yes, you read that right, CAN butter! And this recipe is for canning butter with a pressure canner. I use this All-American pressure canner and would recommend it every day—it is high quality and is built to last.

Now, I know what you're thinking, why can butter when it freezes so beautifully? Well, let me tell you, there are a bajillion reasons why! But here are a few that are most important to me:

  1. Power outages are a serious problem. If the power goes out or a freezer goes bad, the butter will eventually go bad. Butter is expensive and that could result in a lot of wasted butter and money! Imagine if you were building your food storage of butter only in your freezer to find that an extended power outage has struck. Do you have a plan to use that butter quickly? If not, can it now!
  2. Soft butter is always at hand, and you don't have to deal with that cold, hard butter on your bread.
  3. Canned butter has a longer shelf life, so you don't have to worry about it going bad anytime soon. It can last up to 5 years on your pantry shelf.
  4. Canned butter is more convenient to travel with. If you go camping, you don’t have to worry about lugging around butter in a cooler. Just bring your canned butter in a jar.

Because canning butter is not an approved method, everyone has a different way of doing it. I personally felt safest using my pressure canner to can butter.

Some people let the jars self-can in an oven, while others use a water bath. You do whatever you feel comfortable with.

Are you ready to start canning some butter like a pro? Let's get to it!

The Ultimate Guide To Canning Butter At Home - Gubba Homestead (2)

Why Can Butter?

Canning butter is a popular way to preserve butter for long-term storage. Canning allows you to store dairy products without refrigeration, making them an excellent option for emergency preparedness or off-grid living. Additionally, canned butter has a longer shelf life than their refrigerated counterparts. Specifically, canned butter can last up to 5 years on your pantry shelf!

With my method of rotating through pantry storage, I would suggest to use it before the five years are up so you aren’t crammed with butter at the end of the five years. Make a plan to use it. Building a food storage is all about rotating your food and having a plan.

My freezer was filled to the brim with butter because I use it quite a lot, so I knew it was time to can up some butter.

Butter is a dairy product and has very low acidity, which means it needs to be pressure canned to keep it safe from things like botulism. However, you can make homemade ghee, which is a type of clarified butter that is shelf stable, by heating and removing the water from the butter as another option for canning. I didn’t do this because I wanted straight butter, but it is good to know that ghee is easy to make as well!

The Ultimate Guide To Canning Butter At Home - Gubba Homestead (3)

How to Can Butter and Ghee Safely

To make your own canned butter or ghee, you'll need unsalted or salted butter, 1/2 pint jars, a heavy-bottomed skillet, new lids, pot holders, and a cookie sheet. If you want to start with your own homemade butter, you can find a recipe here.

Here are the steps to make your canned butter or ghee:

  1. Unwrap your butter sticks.
  2. Heat your jars by heating them in the oven at 250F. We will be doing a hot pack, so the jars need to be hot.
  3. Melt the butter on low heat in a large pot.
  4. Stir to keep from burning.
  5. Fill your hot jars with the butter, leaving an inch of headspace.
  6. Wipe the rim of the jar with vinegar and put on a hot lid.
  7. Pressure can the jars for 75 minutes for pints and 90 minutes for quarts at the pressure required for your elevation.
  8. Let the canner cool down before removing the jars.
  9. Shake the jars every 15 minutes as they cool to mix the liquid back with any solids.
  10. Wipe off the jars and store them in a cool, dry place.

Your canned butter or ghee will last for about 5 years and is shelf stable, but you can store it in the fridge if you prefer. So, go ahead and give it a try!

The Ultimate Guide To Canning Butter At Home - Gubba Homestead (4)

Safety Tips for Canning Butter and Ghee

To ensure safety when canning butter and ghee, follow these additional safety tips:

  1. Use high-quality dairy products.
  2. Do not add any additional ingredients or seasonings to the butter or ghee.
  3. Use a pressure canner for canning butter or ghee at altitudes above 1,000 feet.
  4. Do not reuse lids or rings.
  5. Do not stack jars on top of each other during storage.
The Ultimate Guide To Canning Butter At Home - Gubba Homestead (5)
The Ultimate Guide To Canning Butter At Home - Gubba Homestead (2024)

FAQs

Does the USDA recommend canning butter? ›

botulinum and toxin formation in a sealed jar at room temperature.” She explained that fats can protect botulism spores and toxins from heat if they are in a product during a canning process. This is why canning milk, butter and/or the addition of milk or butter to other products to be canned is not recommended.

Does butter need to be pressure canned? ›

Butter, milk and cream (like meat and vegetables) are low-acid products that will support the outgrowth of C. botulinum and toxin formation in a sealed jar at room temperature. Low-acid products have to be pressure-canned by tested processes to be kept in a sealed jar at room temperature.

How long will canned butter last? ›

Canned butter has a longer shelf life, so you don't have to worry about it going bad anytime soon. It can last up to 5 years on your pantry shelf. Canned butter is more convenient to travel with. If you go camping, you don't have to worry about lugging around butter in a cooler.

Can butter be water bath canned? ›

Water bath canning is safe for high acid foods only. Because butter is a low acid food, a simple boiling water bath canner will not be able to get hot enough to kill botulism and other toxins in the final product. This means that if you are canning butter, you must pressure can it.

What are the USDA requirements for butter? ›

Butter shall possess a fine and highly pleasing butter flavor. A plug will be removed from each sample and evaluated for body characteristics, color, and salt. Butter shall have an attractive appearance and be free of moisture on the front and backside of the trier. Color shall be even shades of yellow.

How long can butter sit out FDA? ›

The FDA recommends butter only go unrefrigerated for a day or two — a major sticking point for the L.A.-based “butter evangelist" whose own lab tests found no signs of spoilage after 30 days at temperatures up to 77 F.

What happens if you leave too much headspace when canning? ›

If too much headspace is allowed, the food at the top is likely to discolor. Also, the jar may not seal properly because there will not be enough processing time to drive all air out of the jar.

How to preserve butter long term? ›

Freeze butter in an airtight container or freezer bag, and label the container with the date of freezing. When you're ready to use the frozen butter, defrost it overnight in the fridge. In the refrigerator: Keeping fresh butter in the fridge is the best method for long-term, day-to-day use.

How can you tell if butter has gone bad? ›

How do you tell if butter is bad? Check for changes in the butter's look, feel, smell, and taste. Any visible discoloration, change in texture, bad smell, or bitter or sour taste indicates bad butter.

How to can butter without a pressure canner? ›

Stirring the melted butter from the bottom up to the top with a soup ladle,and using a canning funnel pour butter CAREFULLY into heated jar. Leave 3/4" head space,which allows room for shaking process. CAREFULLY wipe off the top rim of jar, then get a warm lid w/ ring tighten securely. Lids will seal as they cool.

How does canned butter work? ›

Canning is a preservation method that involves putting food in a sealed container and then heating it to a temperature that destroys microorganisms that cause spoilage. So as long as the can or jar is sealed, it will not go rancid.

Is there such a thing as canned butter? ›

Red Feather canned butter, for example, has a shelf life of 10 years and requires no refrigeration. "I must say this is really very good," says one five-star reviewer. "When opened at room temp it spreads very easy, and tastes like the real thing as it is the real thing.

Can butter be left out USDA? ›

Butter and margarine are safe at room temperature. However, if butter is left out at room temperature for several days, the flavor can turn rancid so it's best to leave out whatever you can use within a day or two.

Is there shelf stable butter? ›

Additionally, Better Butter craft butters contain salt, which acts as a preservative, making our butters more shelf-stable than other butters that do not contain salt.

Is homemade butter shelf stable? ›

Homemade butter's shelf life depends on how thoroughly you extract the buttermilk. If a substantial amount of buttermilk remains, it will sour within a week, otherwise homemade butter can keep for up to 2-3 weeks in the fridge.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Geoffrey Lueilwitz

Last Updated:

Views: 6653

Rating: 5 / 5 (80 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Geoffrey Lueilwitz

Birthday: 1997-03-23

Address: 74183 Thomas Course, Port Micheal, OK 55446-1529

Phone: +13408645881558

Job: Global Representative

Hobby: Sailing, Vehicle restoration, Rowing, Ghost hunting, Scrapbooking, Rugby, Board sports

Introduction: My name is Geoffrey Lueilwitz, I am a zealous, encouraging, sparkling, enchanting, graceful, faithful, nice person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.