

Your favorite sugar cookie recipe calls for butter. But you're baking for a dairy-free friend: can you use vegetable shortening instead?
Your Aunt Sue's handwritten sugar cookie recipe calls for "a stick of oleo" – i.e., margarine. Can you safely substitute butter?
Cookie chemistry to the rescue!
The answer to these two questions is yes, and yes. You won't end up with the exact same cookies, of course – but they'll taste good.
What about substituting other fats? Say, vegetable oil? Or even cream cheese?
Well, not so much.
So, how did the test work? I made our basic recipe for Sugar Cookies, a recipe that results in a typical flat, palm-sized sugar cookie that, depending on how long you bake it, the weather, and how you store it, will be a bit soft with crisp/crunchy edges; or soft all the way through.
The recipe calls for butter; or a butter/cream cheese combination, for a slightly puffier cookie. I tested it using butter; vegetable shortening; margarine ("I Can't Believe it's Not Butter"); low-fat cream cheese; the butter/cream cheese combination, and vegetable oil.
Fats were all measured by volume, not weight, since this is how most bakers will choose to do it. If your recipe calls for 1/3 cup butter and you want to try Crisco, you'll probably just scoop out 1/3 cup Crisco, right?
At the dough stage, all of the batches except the one made with vegetable oil looked pretty much the same; the oil batch was "wetter."
I scooped the cookies onto a parchment-lined baking sheet, using a tablespoon cookie scoop. I baked them for exactly 11 minutes in a 350°F oven; the recipe calls for a baking time of 10 to 12 minutes, so I split the difference.
The result?
All of the cookies looked almost exactly the same, save for the cream cheese cookie (#4) – which was lighter-colored and didn't spread as much. The vegetable oil cookie (#6) was a bit darker.
The cookies made with butter, margarine, and the butter/cream cheese combination were a bit crunchy around the edges, and soft in the center. Those made with cream cheese were unappealingly hard; which makes sense, given the fact that cream cheese is lower fat than any of the other choices to begin with, and I used a lower-fat cream cheese to boot.
The cookies made with shortening were crunchier/crumblier. Unlike those made with butter/margarine, they weren't at all "bendy." Those made with vegetable oil were tender/crumbly, but unappealingly greasy.
Hooray for real butter! While taste is certainly subjective, I feel that butter-based sugar cookies have the best, most balanced flavor.
That said, the margarine cookies had a certain nostalgic appeal, flavor-wise. If you're a Boomer, your mom probably did a lot of baking with margarine, which was the low-cost butter alternative back then; at one point, it was even positioned as a healthy substitute for butter. When I tasted the margarine-based cookies, I experienced a big dose of déjà vu: Mom putting a plate of sugar cookies on the kitchen table after supper.
How about the rest of the fats? Vegetable shortening, as expected, yielded neutral sugar flavor. Cream cheese was rather odd and flat; while the cream cheese/butter combination tasted exactly like 100% butter – which makes sense, given the ratio was 4 parts butter to 1 part cream cheese.
And the vegetable oil cookies? YUCK. They tasted like old cooking oil. So not only were they greasy, they didn't taste good.
At the end of the day, I'd avoid sugar cookies made with either 100% low-fat cream cheese, or 100% vegetable oil.
But the remaining fats? The choice is yours to make; they all yield delicious cookies.
Oh, and by the way, were you wondering how I got all of my cookies to be so perfectly round?
Not via any special scooping or shaping skills!
I positioned the cookies too close together on the cookie sheet; as always, I was in a hurry. So when the big blobby cookies came out of the oven, having all run together, I used a large (2 3/4") biscuit cutter to trim off the misshapen edges.
And all those leftover edges? Perfect sweet nibbles for me and my extended family as we enjoyed a languid evening at my niece's softball game.
Consensus? The scraps from this cookie chemistry test are just fine – especially with ice-cold lemonade on a hot summer night at the ballfield.
See more tips, tricks, and techniques for making cookies in our other blog posts on cookie skills.
September 14, 2024 at 8:21pm
which is the chemistry part of the article
September 16, 2024 at 9:27am
In reply to which is the chemistry part… by max johnson (not verified)
Hi Max, all baking involves chemistry, but in this case the chemistry has to do with how different forms of fat perform in the same cookie recipe.
January 4, 2022 at 5:11pm
Using butter vs. margarine, makes for a mound, harder chocolate chip cookie but I didn't notice a diff in the flavor (i.e. a more buttery flavor if using butter) If margarine is used.. the cookies spread alot. So.. I use half shortentin and half margarine and the cookie turns out perfect. However, yesterday I made them and I THOUGHT I was using 2/3 cup Crisco shortening (the kind in "stick" packaging) but, long story short... I think I used 2/3 cup CREAM CHEESE from a leftover package I had in the fridge. At least I thought it was Crisco... I am now thinking it was cream cheese, however I never buy cream cheese except for frosting and I haven't done frosting in a while so I am not sure if it was 2/3 cup cream cheese or Crisco (they are both in silver wrappers!). But the cookies taste really good, just not my usual flavaor and they have spread, (due to the margarine) however, they are still moist. Question: what have you learned about substituting cream cheese for Crisco in cookies? Thanks for the info!
January 8, 2022 at 10:57am
In reply to Using butter vs. margarine,… by Cheri (not verified)
Hi Cheri, we haven't tested substituting cream chesse for shortening in cookies, but the issue you will likely run into is that cream cheese has a lot less fat than shortening (which is 100% fat), while cream cheese is generally only 33% fat and also contains water and milk solids, so it's definitely going to impact the texture and spread of the cookies significantly. Butter and cream cheese are slightly more comparable, but butter is still quite a bit higher in fat (80%). When we incorporate cream cheese into a cookie recipe it's usually only a small portion of the fat content, and we find that this results in a puffier, cakier cookie.
December 1, 2020 at 9:51pm
Any chance you could post your full recipe? I'm trying to compare the difference in spread and softness between palm oil and butter, both made with liquid lecithin, and am trying to find the right baker percents (% to flour). If you could post the quantities of other ingredients you used that would be great! Thanks!
December 2, 2020 at 1:32pm
In reply to Any chance you could post… by Olivia (not verified)
Hi Olivia! The cookie recipe used in this article is linked at the top of the post just under the header. You can find the recipe here. Happy baking!
October 1, 2019 at 12:17am
Oil can work perfectly well, the trick is to mix the oil with your eggs or egg substitute then add this liquid mix to the sugar and beat. Voila! No oiliness
December 20, 2018 at 12:03pm
December 20, 2018 at 4:48pm
In reply to For the last few years, my chocolate chip oatmeal cookies faile… by Suzanne (not verified)
August 10, 2018 at 10:57am
Pagination