What Makes Gourmet Butter Worth Buying
The difference between gourmet butter and standard supermarket butter comes down to three things: butterfat content, how the cream is cultured, and where the milk comes from. American butter is required by law to contain a minimum of 80% butterfat. French unsalted butter requires at least 82% — and the best French butters run higher than that, with Échiré reaching 80% butterfat under AOC rules that prioritize quality over yield. The culturing process matters as much as the fat content: French and European butters are made from cream that has been slow-cultured with live bacteria before churning, which develops a complex, slightly tangy flavor that uncultured butter doesn't have. The milk source matters too — Isigny AOP butter comes from cows grazing in the marshlands of Normandy, where the grass is rich in beta carotene and iodine, giving the butter its distinctive golden color and faint hazelnut flavor. It's the reason professional pastry chefs seek out specific European butters by name, and why Échiré on a piece of good bread is a different experience entirely from what comes in a standard grocery store stick.
The Best Gourmet Butters
For French butter, the two most important names in the collection are Échiré and Isigny — both carry AOC or AOP designations that govern exactly where and how they're made. Échiré Butter in a Basket, Unsalted is the benchmark for French cultured butter — made the same way for over a century in the Deux-Sèvres region, slow-churned in wooden barrels with 80% butterfat and a clean, nutty flavor that makes it exceptional for both baking and serving at the table. From Normandy, Isigny Unsalted Butter is golden, faintly hazelnut in flavor, and rich in Vitamin A — a butter with 400 years of reputation behind it. For an introduction to the range of French styles in a single order, the Favorite French Salted Butters Assortment includes Rodolphe Le Meunier's Beurre de Baratte from the Loire Valley, Échiré, Isigny, and a Le Gall Fleur de Sel butter from Guérande. The Best Selling Butters Assortment brings together the three most-ordered butters in the collection — the right starting point for anyone buying gourmet butter for the first time. For something entirely different, Black Truffle Butter and French White Truffle Butter deliver concentrated truffle flavor to pasta, risotto, steak, and sauce finishes — specialty butters with no real equivalent at a grocery store.
Butter Formats: Baskets, Assortments, Sheets, and Individual Portions
The collection covers several formats beyond the standard block. Basket-format butters — the classic wicker presentation associated with Échiré and Isigny — are the traditional French serving format, ready to go from refrigerator to table. Assortments let you taste three or four butters side by side: the Butters of the World Assortment covers Denmark, France, Belgium, and the US in a single order. The American Butters Assortment covers Ploughgate Creamery, Beurremont, and Velvet Bees honey butter — all domestic artisan producers making butter in the European cultured tradition. For professional bakers and pastry cooks, the collection also includes 82% Beurre de Tourage butter sheets — the laminating butter used for croissants and puff pastry, sold in large format. Individual portion butters for catering and service are also available in the collection grid above.
Also Worth Exploring
The French butter collection filters the full selection to French-origin butters only — the right starting point for anyone specifically looking to buy French butter online. For pairing, jams and spreads — particularly fruit preserves and honey — are the most natural companions for artisan butter on a breakfast or cheese board.
Gourmet Butter: Frequently Asked Questions
The most respected French butter brands are: Échiré (Deux-Sèvres, AOC — the benchmark for cultured French butter, slow-churned in wooden barrels for over a century), Isigny Ste Mère (Normandy, AOP — golden, faintly hazelnut, made from cows grazing in mineral-rich marshlands since the 16th century), Rodolphe Le Meunier (Loire Valley — one of France's most respected affineurs, whose Beurre de Baratte is featured in the Favorite French Salted Butters Assortment), Le Gall (Brittany — Guérande Fleur de Sel butter), and Beurremont (83% butterfat with Guérande salt). Lurpak from Denmark and Chimay from Belgium are also among the best European butters available.
Three main differences: butterfat content, culturing, and water content. American butter must contain at least 80% butterfat by law. French unsalted butter must contain at least 82%, and premium AOC butters like Échiré consistently run at 80–84%. That 2–4% difference translates to less water in the butter, which matters significantly in baking — less water means more fat, which produces flakier pastry and richer flavor. French butter is also cultured, meaning the cream is fermented before churning, producing the slightly tangy flavor most people associate with good French bread and butter. American commercial butter is made from sweet cream without culturing, giving it a milder, more neutral flavor. American artisan producers like Ploughgate Creamery use the same cultured cream process with domestic milk, producing butter that sits between standard American and traditional French in flavor profile.