3 teaspoons in 1 tablespoon 8 tablespoons in 1 stick of butter. 3x8=24x2=48 48 teaspoons in 2 sticks. 2 sticks equals 1 cup.
There are two sticks of butter in a cup.
1 TBSP shortening = 1 TBSP butter
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.
3 level tablespoons of cocoa powder plus 1 tablespoon of butter or shortening equals 1 square cube of unsweetened baking chocolate.
Butter is one type of shortening. Use a cup of butter.
One tablespoon of butter equals 14.25 grams. So to calculate how many tablespoons 65 grams is, you would divide 65 by 14.25. This would be approximately 4.5 tablespoons of butter.
There are approximately 12 almonds in one tablespoon of almond butter.
Because both butter and shortening are fats that are solid at room temperature, they work much the same in baked products. Advertisers promoting vegetable shortening do claim that products baked with shortening rise more or will have better appearance and texture. These claims may or may not be true. It is certain that butter produces a taste that most people prefer to the taste of shortening.
The same amount.
1 tablespoon of fats is 1 tablespoon of fats.Butter, shortening, oil, cocoa butter, coconut oil, lard, tallow ... etc. all weigh, with very slight variation, about 76% as much as the equivalent amount of water. Butter is a slight mixture of fats and milk solids, about 95 to 97% fats and weighs essentially the same as any food oils.
That is approximately 8 tablespoons
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.
Whipped butter will have a lot of air in it, so you would have to use more of it to get the same result. To get the proportions as accurate as possible, melt a Tablespoon of the whipped butter and see how much is there once it melts. If there is 1 1/2 teaspoons remaining once it melts, you know you need to add twice as much whipped butter as regular butter. Note: 1 Tablespoon equals 3 teaspoons.
Yeah you can. Because you can replace oils for oils and fats for fats, and shortening is both, you can use butter as it is a fat. But since butter has about 15% water, you would have to use a tiny bit less butter or a tiny bit more of dry ingredients. :)