Butter is one type of shortening. Use a cup of butter.
It depends on the recipe. Butter has a lower melting point than shortening. In frosting, this means would cause the frosting to loose body and become soft. Cookies would tend to spread a little further when baked. The is usually a reason for the shortening. Sometimes it doesn't matter, some times it does.
Use the same amount of butter as you would shortening. In bread, a tablespoon of butter can be used instead of a tablespoon of shortening. The same amount of canola oil is even healthier.
Substitutes for shortening are butter and margarine in sticks. Use the same amount as called for in your recipe. Keep in mind, plain shortening will NOT be as flavorful as butter or margarine. Do not use soft margarine in a tub as it contains too much water.
I'll show my ignorance or my age. Never heard of cannabis butter. If this is actual butter with cannabis in it, you could use the amount of shortening the recipe calls for. For any recipe, there is a ratio of shortening to flour and other ingredients that should be followed fairly closely to get the finished product. Too much shortening and you will end up with something like runny fudge instead of a brownie. If what you are talking about is what used to be referred to as Honey Oil, just the good stuff in an oil or paste, then you could add quite a lot and get away with it. Flavor would be the issue at some point.
If the recipe calls for 1 cup of butter and Angie wants to triple the recipe, she will need three times the amount of butter. So, she will need 3 cups. To find out how much butter she will need to borrow, subtract 1 5/8 from 3. She needs to borrow 1 3/8 cups of butter.
A kostka of butter is approx. 250 grams by weight/ 8 ounces/ or 1 cup.
The typical stick of butter is about a 1/2 C., so I would guess 2 sticks is 1 C. of butter
Butter is not a substitute for butter extract. Butter extract is a fat-free flavoring used when for some reason butter cannot be used. When butter is used, it should replace the fat in the recipe - shortening, oil or lard - and the butter extract will not be needed.
Yes, and it is probably better for you. Shortening is made with hydrogenated fat, which we probably all should try to reduce in our diets. The results will be a bit different. Butter will add a bit more moisture to your recipe. If you are baking your recipe, such as cookies, you might want to add an egg. The egg will prevent the cookies from spreading too much and add a cake like texture to them, similar to the "crisp outside, chewy inside" results from shortening.
You can substitute an equal amount of butter for the shortening; just keep in mind that the frosting will be much less resistant to heat, so if your cake will be in a warm environment, you may end up with puddles of buttercream on the table! If your recipe doesn't already call for egg whites, I would add a tbsp of meringue powder (or one egg white) to the recipe, to help the buttercream crust a bit; this may help with the stability of the frosting.
Lard is not needed to make yeast bread. You can make excellent bread with just yeast, flour, water, and salt for flavoring. If your recipe calls for shortening or butter, substitute the same amount of lard for each. (Except for brushing the tops of the dough; butter or egg wash still works best for that.)
The number sign (#) stands for pound. That would be 1 1/2 pounds.