Yes, just know there may be some difference in texture. Shortening has less water so melts slower allowing more rise time and a higher and lighter product. Butter has more flavor but melts at a lower temperature so will spread out quicker and add a crispier texture. If you do interchange do so in equal amounts 1 cup of for 1 cup of the other. Make sure you read the recipe closely in case it says anywhere "Do Not Substitute". If you have this in the recipe there is a reason so do not try it.
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.
Yes. You can also use olive oil, margarine, or veggie oil. I actually prefer using butter when baking bread because it makes the bread taste like its already "buttered".
In bread, shortening coats the starch molecules, which slows down staling after the bread is cooled. Shortening can also be used to lubricate the baking pans. In cakes, shortening helps prevent too much gluten formation, which gives a softer, lighter cake. Shortening also helps incorporate air bubbles into the cake to help with rising.
Yes, melted shortening can replace vegetable oil in zucchini bread, although shortening is not a healthy choice.
Shortening or butter is used to make cake or pastry light or flaky.
When you are mixing the dough for bread, if you do not melt or soften the shortening or butter, it will stay in small clumps and won't mix evenly into the dough. Mmmmmm...warm bread Hi, you can melt your shortening for bread depending on what you are using. If you are making a short bread such as short bread cookies, you would cream your shortening asnd sugar togethher, but not melt it. biscuits and pastry breads usually ask for the flour to bind with the shortening to produce flakiness. For most regular white/ sandwich type bread recipes i make. You can melt it completely and add it with your water and yeast, but you want to be careful not to have the temperature too high, or you can kill the yeast if your water is too hot. You can add it softened also, you just want to be sure that it is soft enough, like room temperature margarine or butter, so it will mix in fully. Shortenings do not have any flavors to compliment the bread, and that is another reason ehy i use butter or margarine. I hope this helps you.
lard
Shortening is the same as lard, so the ratio is 1:1.
All fats can be removed from bread formulas and recipes; very good bread can be made with nothing more than flour and water, yeast and salt. Fat-free breads will have different tastes and textures than breads with some sort of fat, but they will still be proper bread.
Yes, butter can be substituted for shortening in most recipes. The resulting product will have more intense flavor, but may be a bit flatter or thinner. When using salted butter, one should also reduce the additional salt called for in the recipe.
All yeast bread doughs require some sort of fat. Fat imparts the flavor to bread, and helps develop the dough to make it more elastic. Fats that can be added range from shortening, to oils (vegetable or peanut), or margerine or butter.
shortening adds lipids or fats to tenderize the flour.