Adding more plant-based foods to your diet started as a fad, turned into a trend, and is now quietly edging into the mainstream. You can jump into this eating style with both feet (banana peel “pulled pork”), or one tippy-toe at a time (lightening your iced coffee with a splash of oat milk creamer).

Baking with only plant-based ingredients, however, can be a bit of a challenge. A tender, high-rising, fine-grained yellow cake with rich swirls of buttercream icing is hard to make without butter and eggs. And cheesecake without cream cheese? Nearly oxymoronic.

Still, baking without eggs and dairy — vegan baking — isn’t impossible; and thanks to improvements in substitute ingredients, plus discoveries of natural substitutes (aquafaba, anyone?), vegan baking is getting easier (and better) all the time.

My fellow blogger Kye has written a number of detailed articles about baking without dairy products. (If you’re taking the first step toward vegan baking by eliminating dairy, please read Kye’s post, How to bake dairy-free.) As Kye notes, an easy move toward plant-based baking is to substitute vegan butter for dairy butter. Still, you might be a bit worried. Will vegan butter act and taste the same as regular butter? Will it make tender cake and flaky pie crust? Do you have to make any recipe adjustments when you use it? Let’s find out.

Squares of baked pie pastry, made with three different types of butter, on a baking sheet.
Rather than bake three pies (and experience the added variable of bubbling pie filling), I test three butters against one another by baking the pie pastry in small squares.

The butter contenders

I decide to put two well-known vegan butters to the test in a number of butter-heavy baked goods, using regular dairy butter as the control. If the vegan butters produce good results — appearance, texture, and flavor — then we’ll know that they can successfully step in for dairy butter.

Earth Balance® Vegan Buttery Sticks have been the gold standard for vegan baking for many years. Based on a blend of vegetable oils (palm, canola, soybean, flax, and olive), Earth Balance sticks are available in many retail outlets and are offered at an entry-level price for vegan butters: $5.59/pound at my local supermarket.

Miyoko’s European-Style Cultured Vegan Butter has recently been appearing in more mainstream supermarkets, though it can still be challenging to find. With just two vegetable oils — coconut and sunflower — this all-organic vegan butter relies on cultured cashew milk for its flavor, which the manufacturer says is reminiscent of tangy European-style butter. What first distinguishes Miyoko’s from the competition, though, is its price ($6.99/8 ounces at my local Target): more than double that of Earth Balance. In addition, Miyoko's wouldn't be a good choice for anyone dealing with nut allergies.

Using Land O Lakes salted butter as the control, I decide to test both of these vegan butters against the real thing in several butter-heavy recipes: pie crust, biscuits, cookies, cake, and buttercream frosting. My fellow blogger, Rossi, offers to test the three in puff pastry, as well. 

And the result? Structurally, the two vegan butters perform very well in all applications, similarly to one another and to butter. The differences among the three mainly show up in flavor and appearance.  

Three small squares of pie pastry made with three types of butter, crushed slightly to show their flaky texture
All three butters create tender, flaky pie crust. The crust made with dairy butter is more thoroughly browned, top to bottom, than the vegan dairy crusts.

Dairy butter vs. vegan butter: pie crust

Tender, flaky pie crust, ready to shatter into buttery shards at the first sign of fork on plate. Can vegan butter produce this same signature consistency? And what about its flavor?

The recipe: All-Butter Pie Crust

Preparation: Miyoko’s makes very soft pastry, while Earth Balance’s consistency falls somewhere in between that of Miyoko’s and butter. In the end, though, all three butters create pastry that’s easy to roll and sturdy enough to handle without mishap.

Appearance: Dairy butter pie crust is golden brown all the way through; the two vegan butters are brown on the outside, paler within.

Texture: Flaky and tender across the board.

Flavor: Butter yields crust with classic buttery taste. Miyoko’s flavor isn’t buttery, but rather rich and nuanced (thanks to it’s being cultured). The Earth Balance crust has a mild but still somewhat off-putting burnt oil flavor.

Three biscuits side by side made with three different butters, showing how the one made with dairy butter rose a bit higher.
Biscuits made with dairy butter, Miyoko's, and Earth Balance (l to r) show a slight difference in rise and browning, but texture- and flavor-wise are quite similar.

Dairy butter vs. vegan butter: biscuits

My biscuit recipe of choice uses lots of butter and yields a biscuit that’s tangy, moist, and fine-grained (rather than flaky). It's also rather flat and wide compared to a typical biscuit — all of which makes it perfect for a breakfast sandwich.

The recipe: Buttery Sourdough Sandwich Biscuits

Preparation: All three butters perform the same as I work each into its bowl of flour, baking powder, and salt, then stir in sourdough starter to make a soft, easy-handling dough.

Appearance: Biscuits made with dairy butter are just slightly browner overall and rise a bit higher.

Texture: All three produce biscuits that are tender and moist, with a touch of crispiness in the crust.

Flavor: While neither of the vegan biscuits tastes buttery, the Miyoko’s biscuits offer their own compelling flavor; again, the extra step of culturing gives Miyoko’s a richer and more nuanced flavor profile than that of Earth Balance.

Three small slabs of baked puff pastry made with three different butters, arranged sideways to show their layers.
Look at these lovely layers! Flavor is really the only thing that distinguishes the dairy butter pastry (left) from the two made with vegan butter. (Photo by Rossi Anastopoulo)

Dairy butter vs. vegan butter: puff pastry 

Whether you’re making flaky pastry shells for a savory filling, or sweet pastries (think palmiers and Napoleons), the most buttery of all pastries — puff pastry, or pâte feuilletée — is a classic place to start.

The recipe: Classic Puff Pastry

Preparation: All three butters are fairly easy to work with when laminating the dough. The vegan butters, in particular Miyoko’s, are a little softer than the dairy butter, which makes the butter block a little more difficult to form. But the vegan butters’ softer texture actually makes rolling and folding the dough a bit easier. 

Appearance: Once baked, the three puff pastry sheets are almost identical: similarly browned with clear, high-rising layers. 

Texture: The three pastries are very similar in texture – light and flaky, with a crispy exterior.

Flavor: The vegan butter versions aren’t as flavorful as the version made with dairy. Is the difference stark? No. But when eaten alongside the dairy version, the vegan pastries just don’t have the same rich, rounded flavor that comes from butter’s caramelized milk sugars.

Stack of ultra-thin Buttersnap cookies on a baking sheet.
Buttersnaps are among the thinnest, crispiest cookies you can make. Both dairy and vegan butters will yield the same result, save slight differences in flavor.

Dairy butter vs. vegan butter: cookies

The best way to compare butters in a cookie recipe? Choose a plain cookie without distracting add-ins, where butter is the only fat and brown sugar the main flavor. These cookies rely on a massive (but still controlled) spread for their snapping-crisp texture; will vegan butter fill the bill?

The recipe: Buttersnaps

Preparation: This recipe uses an egg in addition to butter; to keep the cookies vegan, I replace the egg with 1/4 cup (50g) aquafaba. Compared to dairy butter, both batters made with vegan butter curdle when the aquafaba is added; but both smooth right out with the addition of flour. 

Appearance: All three butters produce cookies that spread a bit more than they should, though the spread is still within acceptable range. I assume this spread is due to the aquafaba, since it has only one-tenth the protein of an egg white — and protein is what helps set cookies’ structure.

Texture: All three cookies are snapping crisp; all three brown nicely.

Flavor: The flavor of all three is nearly identical: caramelized sweetness. There’s a tiny hint of burnt oil flavor around the brownest edges of the Earth Balance cookies.

Slice of triple-layer vanilla cake with buttercream frosting on a plate, showing the different colors of the three layers, each made with a different type of butter.
That's a layer made with butter on the bottom, Miyoko's in the center, and Earth Balance on top in this triple-layer vanilla cake. None of the three layers rise as they should, but that's due to using an egg substitute rather than the butter choice. Note the difference in color for the Miyoko's layer, however.

Dairy butter vs. vegan butter: cake

In order to really put vegan butters to the test, I choose a cake recipe that calls for creaming butter with sugar, adding eggs, then mixing in flour and milk to create a thick, light, airy batter. This is probably one of the most challenging types of cake to make vegan, since three of its key ingredients are non-vegan.

The recipe: Classic Vanilla Bundt Cake

Preparation: I substitute vegan butters for the butter, aquafaba for the eggs, and oat milk for the dairy milk. Surprisingly, all three batters look as they should — light and fluffy — though the Miyoko’s batter is slightly but noticeably thinner.

Appearance: The cake made with dairy butter is browner, both top and edges, than either of those made with vegan butter. The Miyoko’s cake is particularly pale, probably the result of Miyoko’s paler appearance to begin with: compared to the yellowish color of both butter and Earth Balance, Miyoko’s butter is cream-colored, almost white.

Texture: Although the results are acceptable, none of the three cakes rise as high as they should. Again, I attribute this to aquafaba’s relative lack of protein compared to eggs, rather than anything to do with their butters.

Flavor: The cake made with dairy butter tastes nicely buttery; the Earth Balance cake is mildly flavored. The Miyoko’s cake tastes slightly tangy, as if perhaps a touch of lemon had been added.

Buttercream frosting in three small bowls, each made with a different type of butter to show differences in color and texture.
See how the buttercream made with Miyoko's (upper right) settles more than those made with Land O Lakes or Earth Balance? Miyoko's initial softness compared to the other two butters translates to softer frosting.

Dairy butter vs. vegan butter: buttercream frosting

While classic buttercream frosting relies on egg whites for much of its structure and stability, simpler American-style buttercream omits the egg whites. Will vegan butter, which is softer than dairy butter, make frosting stable enough to hold up under warmer storage temperatures?

The recipe: Easy Vanilla Buttercream Frosting

Preparation: All three frostings come together quickly and easily.

Appearance: The Miyoko’s frosting is a whiter white than the dairy butter or Earth Balance frostings.

Texture: The Miyoko’s frosting is noticeably softer than either of the other two. When I use all three frostings to stack the three cake layers I’d made previously, the Miyoko’s frosting is so soft that the cake layer above it slides off.

Flavor: The frosting made with dairy butter tastes buttery; that made with Miyoko’s tastes a bit tangy, in a lemony way. The frosting made with Earth Balance is neutral-flavored.

Containers of Earth Balance, Miyoko's, and Lane O Lakes butters on a wooden table, frosted valilla cake alongside.
Choices, choices ... Thankfully, both of these vegan butters are a good substitute for dairy butter in baking.

Testing takeaways

Miyoko’s European-Style Cultured Vegan Butter and Earth Balance Vegan Buttery Sticks are both highly recommended substitutes for dairy butter. In recipes where they’re the only vegan substitute, both vegan butters will produce baked goods with texture similar to that of dairy butter, with flavor being the main difference. When substituting additional vegan ingredients (mainly eggs), the recipe may not turn out the same, texture-wise, as originally intended.

Both vegan butters are softer than dairy butter, both cold and at room temperature. Neither needs to be “softened” to room temperature before using like dairy butter sometimes does.

Neither vegan butter tastes like dairy butter. Earth Balance tastes neutral (similar to margarine), while Miyoko’s has rich, slightly tangy flavor. When deeply browned, as in pie crust or some cookies, Earth Balance baked goods can taste slightly burned. This may be due to Earth Balance’s canola and/or soy oils, both of which can produce “off” notes for some people when heated to a high enough temperature.

When used in buttercream, expect to use more sugar in Miyoko’s than in Earth Balance or dairy butter in order to produce nicely spreadable frosting.

If price is an important consideration for you, Miyoko's is at least twice as expensive as Earth Balance.  

Looking for top-notch vegan cake and cookie recipes? Check out our Vegan Desserts recipe collection.

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About PJ Hamel

PJ Hamel grew up in New England, graduated from Brown University, and was an award-winning Maine journalist (favorite topics: sports and food) before joining King Arthur Flour in 1990. Hired to write the newly launched Baker’s Catalogue, PJ became the small but growing company’s sixth employee.&nbsp...
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