What to Do With Leftover Buttermilk

Buttermilk has a wide array of sweet and savory applications. Here are a few ideas for using up that extra half-quart hanging out in your fridge.

By
Sho Spaeth
Sho Spaeth
Senior Editor
Sho Spaeth has worked in publishing and media for 16 years. Prior to joining Serious Eats, he worked at The New York Times for a decade. Sho has written for Time Magazine, The New York Times, The Baffler Magazine, Conde Nast Traveler, among other publications.
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Updated November 15, 2023
Closeup of roasted broccoli soup.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

In This Article

When my colleague Stella published her cheddar biscuit recipe recently, I tried it out right away—not once but twice. But even after making a double batch, I still had about half a quart of buttermilk left in my fridge, which sent me on a hunt for recipes that call for the stuff. Sure, we're all familiar with buttermilk's usefulness in pancakes and waffles on the sweet side, and in savory recipes like Southern fried chicken, ranch dressing, and plain old flaky buttermilk biscuits. But it turns out that buttermilk has a wider array of both sweet and savory applications than most people think.

Sweet Recipes

Buttermilk Cappuccino Cake

Closeup of a buttermilk cappuccino cake, sprinkled with shaved chocolate.

Serious Eats / Lauren Weisenthal

This rich buttermilk espresso cake is a perfect way to use up that excess buttermilk and please the coffee fanatics in your life at the same time. The buttermilk lends a subtle tang to balance out the sweetness, and soaking the layers in a coffee syrup helps keep the cake moist. The whole thing gets coated with an espresso-flavored Swiss buttercream frosting.

Get the recipe for Buttermilk Cappuccino Cake »

Apple Buttermilk Muffins

Closeup of an apple buttermilk muffin set next to a mug of tea.

Serious Eats / Carrie Vasios Mullins

Buttermilk is what gives these muffins their super-moist and pillowy crumb, while the diced apples sprinkled throughout get a flavor assist from a hefty dose of cinnamon and nutmeg.

Get the recipe for Apple Buttermilk Muffins »

Gluten-Free Buttermilk Pound Cake

Closeup of a glazed and sliced loaf of gluten-free buttermilk pancake.

Serious Eats / Elizabeth Barbone

The delicate flavor of this easy-to-make loaf makes it excellent as a light dessert that just happens to be gluten-free. It's especially good with berries mixed into the batter, if they're in season. A note of caution: Add the buttermilk in stages, to ensure that it emulsifies correctly.

Get the recipe for Gluten-Free Buttermilk Pound Cake »

Lemon Sunshine Cookies

Three lemon sunshine cookies, shingled in front of a bunch of yellow roses.

Serious Eats / Carrie Vasios Mullins

The perfect treat for perking up a gloomy rainy day, these buttery cookies double up on lemon flavor with zest in the batter and lemon juice in the glaze. The buttermilk lends a hand by keeping the cookies tender.

Get the recipe for Lemon Sunshine Cookies »

Savory Recipes

Cornbread

Overhead view of a cast iron skillet full of brown butter cornbread. A wedge has been cut, broken into chunks, and placed next to a puddle of honey.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Buttermilk is a standard addition to many cornbread recipes; depending on the other ingredients, its acidity can contribute flavor and tenderness to the finished product or help with the rise. We've got recipes for the basics, of course—a classic Southern-style unsweetened cornbread, and a more cake-like Northern-style version for those who like theirs sweet and moist. But if you have some jalapeño and pepper Jack lying around, or the smoky-sharp-savory combination of cheddar, scallion, and bacon, it's easy to turn this basic skillet bread into something special. For my money, it's worth it to expend a little extra effort on the tender, nutty brown butter cornbread pictured above.

Get the recipe for Moist and Tender Brown Butter Cornbread »

Roasted-Broccoli Soup

Closeup of roasted broccoli soup.

Serious Eats / Daniel Gritzer

Daniel came up with this recipe to use up some broccoli that was withering in his fridge, but it's good enough that you'll find yourself buying a bunch specifically for this purpose. The buttermilk provides a dose of bright acidity, a necessary component in most soups, and the addition of pepitas roasted with olive oil and spices makes this an unusual yet welcome dish on chilly nights.

Get the recipe for Creamy Roasted-Broccoli Soup With Buttermilk and Spiced Pepitas »

Meatballs

A bowl of tomato sauce-enrobed meatballs, dusted with parmesan. A bite has been taken of a meatball to reveal the moist, tender interior.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Buttermilk is key to both flavor and tenderness in these hefty meatballs: The slight acidity boosts the flavor of the ground meat mixture, even as it balances out the richness of the fat. These might just end up being the juiciest meatballs you've ever had.

Get the recipe for Juicy and Tender Italian-American Meatballs in Red Sauce »

February 2017

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