Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone who bakes knows that they make butter flavored shortening. My MIL made all her cookies with it and the kids have a hard time saying that they like ones made with butter better. So much so that I was going to try her recipe this past Xmas with the butter flavored Crisco sticks but they were all sold out. So everyone ate the ones made with butter instead.
Honestly, I think that they come out a bit less flat with the shortening vs the butter but that could just be me.
It's not about flavor, butter is healthier and expensive, while Crisco is cheap, unnatural and makes you unhealthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone who bakes knows that they make butter flavored shortening. My MIL made all her cookies with it and the kids have a hard time saying that they like ones made with butter better. So much so that I was going to try her recipe this past Xmas with the butter flavored Crisco sticks but they were all sold out. So everyone ate the ones made with butter instead.
Honestly, I think that they come out a bit less flat with the shortening vs the butter but that could just be me.
It's not about flavor, butter is healthier and expensive, while Crisco is cheap, unnatural and makes you unhealthy.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone who bakes knows that they make butter flavored shortening. My MIL made all her cookies with it and the kids have a hard time saying that they like ones made with butter better. So much so that I was going to try her recipe this past Xmas with the butter flavored Crisco sticks but they were all sold out. So everyone ate the ones made with butter instead.
Honestly, I think that they come out a bit less flat with the shortening vs the butter but that could just be me.
Anonymous wrote:There are lots of baking recipes that substitute shortening, do a mix of shortening and butter, or use oil or another fat, in lieu of butter. There are lots of reasons someone might do that, from the cost of butter to wanting to experiment to simply being short on something needing to use a substitute.
You are loading a TON of obnoxious judgment into your assessment of free cookies though. Maybe now that I have answered your question for you, we should use this thread to "sus out" what psychological damage or impairment is causing you to do this.
Anonymous wrote:There are lots of baking recipes that substitute shortening, do a mix of shortening and butter, or use oil or another fat, in lieu of butter. There are lots of reasons someone might do that, from the cost of butter to wanting to experiment to simply being short on something needing to use a substitute.
You are loading a TON of obnoxious judgment into your assessment of free cookies though. Maybe now that I have answered your question for you, we should use this thread to "sus out" what psychological damage or impairment is causing you to do this.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. No need to be so hard on OP. Some people like to figure these things out. Kind of like detective work by using your sense of taste.