A solid or liquid fat can replace vegetable shortening in baking, but each substitute’s water content, melting point, and flavor profile require a specific ratio and technique to avoid a ruined batch of cookies or a dense pie crust.
You open the pantry for a pie crust recipe and the shortening can is empty. A swap is possible — butter, coconut oil, lard, even applesauce — but a 1:1 pour-and-mix approach fails more often than it works. The choice depends on whether the recipe needs solid fat for flakiness or liquid fat for tenderness, and each option brings a fixed rule: how to measure, what to adjust, and where the result lands.
The One Rule That Changes Every Shortening Swap
Shortening is 100% fat with zero water. Butter and most margarines contain roughly 20% water. That difference is the main source of baking failures. When you substitute by volume without adjusting the recipe’s liquid, the extra water makes cookies spread too thin, pie crusts turn tough, and cakes get a denser crumb than intended. The fix is consistent: for every cup of butter or margarine you use as a substitute, reduce the added water, milk, or other liquid in the recipe by about two tablespoons.
The solid-vs-liquid question is the second gate. Shortening stays solid at room temperature. A recipe that creams shortening with sugar — typical in cookies and biscuits — needs a solid fat. Using vegetable oil there produces a greasy, flat dough. A recipe that calls for melted shortening — many muffins and quick breads — works with a room-temperature liquid fat.
The Best Shortening Substitutes And How To Use Them
The table below covers the six most reliable pantry options. The ratio column is the only safe starting point.
| Substitute | Per 1 Cup Shortening | Key Adjustment |
|---|---|---|
| Unsalted butter | 1 cup + 2 tbsp | Reduce recipe liquid by ~2 tbsp |
| Coconut oil (solid) | 1 cup (1:1) | Use refined for neutral flavor; measure while solid |
| Lard (rendered pork fat) | 1 cup (1:1) | None; best for savory pies and biscuits |
| Margarine | 1 cup + 1 tbsp | Reduce recipe liquid by ~2 tbsp |
| Vegetable oil | 7/8 cup | Only for recipes using melted shortening |
| Applesauce | ½ cup | Denser crumb; longer bake time; reduce sugar slightly |
The water adjustment is the first thing to get right. Butter and margarine add roughly two tablespoons of water per cup, which changes cookie spread and pie flakiness. The Pioneer Woman’s guide to shortening substitutes confirms the same liquid-reduction principle across different baking styles. Coconut oil can be swapped 1:1 if you scoop it solid — if it’s already melted, treat it like vegetable oil and use a smaller ratio.
Lard and bacon grease are the closest structural match to shortening because they contain zero water. They work exactly 1:1 by volume. The trade-off is flavor: lard adds a mild savory note that works beautifully in pie crusts and biscuits but reads wrong in a sweet birthday cake. Bacon grease carries a stronger smoke-and-pork profile and belongs only in savory baking.
Flavor Transfer And Vegan Considerations
Coconut oil leaves a distinct coconut scent even in baked goods that don’t call for it. Refined coconut oil solves this — the label will say “refined” or “deodorized,” and it tastes neutral. Lard, bacon grease, and butter are not vegan. For plant-based baking, coconut oil, margarine, and vegan butter are the primary solid options. Vegan butter behaves similarly to dairy butter and needs the same liquid adjustment (cut roughly two tablespoons of liquid per cup used). Applesauce works for low-fat vegan cakes but produces a much denser crumb than shortening does.
Commercial vegetable shortening sold in the U.S. now contains zero trans fat — the reformulation that happened in the 2000s means todays shortening behaves differently than what older cookbooks describe. Recipes written before 2005 may assume a higher trans fat content that no longer exists, but the swap ratios here work with the current product.
FAQs
Can I use olive oil instead of shortening?
Yes, but olive oil’s strong flavor and low smoke point limit it to savory baking and low-temperature recipes. Use a 7/8 cup per cup of shortening, and avoid using it in sweet pastry or cookies.
Does using butter instead of shortening change the texture of cookies?
Yes. Butter’s lower melting point causes cookies to spread more and become thinner with a crispier edge. Reduce the added liquid slightly and chill the formed dough for 30 minutes to control spread.
Is margarine a healthier substitute than shortening?
Modern margarine contains less saturated fat than traditional shortening, but many types contain partially hydrogenated oils. Check the label for “0g trans fat” and compare the ingredient list to decide which fits your dietary needs.
References & Sources
- The Pioneer Woman. “Shortening Substitute: All The Best Alternatives For Baking.” Covers the liquid-adjustment principle for butter and margarine swaps.
- MasterClass. “Shortening Substitute Guide: 8 Best Substitutes for Shortening.” Provides the full ratio table and best-use-case descriptions.
- The Spruce Eats. “The Best Shortening Substitutes.” Offers handling notes for coconut oil, lard, and vegetable oil.

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