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Decision guide

Ghee vs butter: which is better, and when

Ghee is butter, taken further. Here’s how they differ in cooking, nutrition and shelf life — and which one belongs in your kitchen.

HomeGhee guideGhee vs butter

The short answer

Ghee is clarified butter — butter that’s been simmered so the water evaporates and the milk solids are removed, leaving pure golden fat. That single step gives ghee a much higher smoke point, a longer shelf life, and almost no lactose or casein — while butter keeps its water and milk solids.

Side by side

Ghee vs butter

 ButterGhee
Smoke point~150°C (burns easily)~250°C (great for frying/tadka)
Milk solidsPresentRemoved
Lactose/caseinContains someNearly none
Shelf lifeShort, needs fridgeMonths at room temp
FlavourCreamy, mildNutty, aromatic
Best forSpreading, bakingHigh-heat Indian cooking

Lactose-sensitive?

Because the milk solids are removed, A2 ghee is usually tolerated far better than butter — one reason it’s the traditional first fat for babies.

The verdict

Which should you use?

For Indian cooking, high heat, and anyone lactose-sensitive, ghee is the clear pick — it won’t burn, lasts longer, and carries more nutritional benefits. Butter still wins for spreading on toast or certain bakes. Many kitchens simply keep both.

FAQ

Is ghee healthier than butter?
For high-heat cooking and lactose sensitivity, yes — ghee has a higher smoke point and almost no lactose/casein.
Can I replace butter with ghee?
In cooking and frying, easily. For baking that needs butter’s water content, results may differ slightly.
Does ghee need refrigeration?
No — pure ghee stays good for months at room temperature with a dry spoon.
Is ghee just Indian butter?
It’s clarified butter made the bilona way in the Indian tradition — related, but taken a step further.

Keep exploring

Go deeper into ghee

Ghee that earns its place in your kitchen

Aromatic, high-smoke-point A2 bilona ghee — hand-churned and lab-verified.