Knowing how to make buttermilk can be a time saver as well as being more friendly on your pocketbook! You can make the exact amount you need for almost any recipe that calls for buttermilk! I tested out 4 different ways to make homemade buttermilk and can’t wait to share my findings with you! (If you scroll all the way to the bottom you can see where I tested these buttermilk recipes on my mile-high Buttermilk Biscuits!)

How to Make Homemade Buttermilk

How to Make Buttermilk at Home

I have been baking for the last 15+ years and I have to tell you, I sure do feel foolish. I have been told time and time again to make homemade buttermilk you use 1 cup of milk and 1 tablespoon of vinegar or lemon juice. And that will replicate store-bought. I got to thinking… does it?

It all started with a simple taste test. I had some store-bought buttermilk on hand and I made up a cup of milk with vinegar and tasted each. What did I find? It tastes nothing like buttermilk nor does it measure up in texture and appearance. So why have I have making it this way for so long?

I set out to replicate store-bought buttermilk with the same standard ingredients. Milk + an acid. I was surprised to find out that 1 tablespoon is not enough. Two tablespoons were so much better! From this day on, if you ever need to make buttermilk at home, try adding 2 tablespoons of vinegar or lemon juice.

Why Use Buttermilk in Recipes?

Buttermilk brings a pleasant tang to cakes, bread, and biscuits. It helps tenderize gluten, giving baked goods a softer texture and more body. If baked goods have baking soda, then using buttermilk is a good option. Baking soda is a leavening agent that requires acidic ingredients such as buttermilk, lemon juice, or molasses to activate it.

The following variations of homemade buttermilk can be used in most recipes that call for buttermilk.

Homemade Buttermilk with Vinegar

Vinegar Homemade Buttermilk Recipe

This is the classic, one that everyone knows. After testing the standard recipe I changed it up a bit:

1 cup room temperature whole milk + 2 tablespoons vinegar

Whisk the ingredients together until incorporated. Let sit for at least 10 minutes, up to 2 hours.

When I added 2 tablespoons versus 1, the consistency changed from thin milk to a thicker, chunkier (or curdled) version. But the most important reason I made the change was for taste. When I tasted the standard milk plus 1 tablespoon vinegar, I could barely detect it was there. When I added TWO tablespoons of vinegar, the flavor was much more consistent with tangy store-bought buttermilk.

Simply put, 2 tablespoons of vinegar help to best replicate the thick, creamy, tangy storebought buttermilk.

Lemon Homemade Buttermilk

Lemon Juice Homemade Buttermilk Recipe

Probably the second most popular way to make buttermilk at home is with fresh lemon juice. Same as with the vinegar, I found that 1 tablespoon was not enough in a cup of milk. So, you guessed it, I tested using 2 tablespoons. I also tested using 3 tablespoons and found that it didn’t change the texture too much, but did add a bit of a lemony flavor. If you are making blueberry lemon quick bread or any recipe that would be complemented with a hint of lemon, you can certainly use 3 tablespoons in 1 cup of milk to create lemony homemade buttermilk! But for standard recipes calling for buttermilk, here is the formula.

1 cup room temperature whole milk + 2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice

Whisk the ingredients together until incorporated. Let sit for at least 10 minutes, up to 2 hours.

I didn’t have any store-bought lemon juice on hand so did not test its effectiveness. 

Homemade Buttermilk with Sour Cream

Sour Cream Homemade Buttermilk Recipe

This version of homemade buttermilk is not as common, but it sure is good! I know that I am more likely to have sour cream on hand (every Tuesday is Taco Tuesday dontchaknow) than buttermilk, so this option is a good one. To make sour cream buttermilk you need:

1/2 cup room-temperature whole milk + 1/2 cup sour cream

Whisk the ingredients together until smooth and creamy. Let sit for at least 10 minutes, up to 2 hours.

When it came to replicating the flavor and texture of store-bought buttermilk, this recipe was the clear winner. It is thick. It is creamy. And it is tangy! I tried adding in an additional tablespoon of vinegar and liked that version even better, but my taste testers thought it was just a bit too much. If you like extra tang, you might want to try adding the additional vinegar too!

Homemade Buttermilk with Cream of Tartar

Cream of Tartar Buttermilk Recipe

This version of homemade buttermilk was not as familiar to me, and I didn’t have high hopes for it as I started testing. The recipe is simple:

1 cup room temperature whole milk + 2 teaspoons cream of tartar

Whisk the ingredients together until incorporated. Let sit for at least 10 minutes, up to 2 hours.

When you whisk the cream of tartar into the milk it disintegrates quickly leaving you with homemade buttermilk the texture of… milk. After letting this version sit for about 15 minutes, I poured it into a different container and found that the cream of tartar had almost solidified at the bottom of the jar. Make sure that if you use this version to WHISK WELL immediately before use.

Room Temperature Buttermilk

Does the milk temperature matter?

In all the research I did no one mentions whether or not using warm milk or cold milk makes a difference. So I wanted to know, does it?

Homemade Buttermilk

I did a simple test. In one bowl I added 2 tablespoons of vinegar to milk that I had heated in the microwave for 20 seconds. This version was instantly different; curdling and creating a thicker texture.

Homemade Buttermilk Temperature Testing

In the second bowl, I added 2 tablespoons of vinegar to cold milk. The vinegar didn’t seem to have the same effect on texture or thickness.

Conclusion: The warm milk version seemed to accept the acidity of the vinegar better, which makes perfect sense! We adhere to that rule (room temp ingredients) all the time in baking, why not apply it to our homemade buttermilk?

BUT MY TESTING WASN’T DONE THERE!

After doing all of this I wanted to know, does it make a difference in the final product? So, I whipped up a batch of my Buttermilk Biscuits. Well, four batches.

Testing 4 Versions of Homemade Buttermilk in Biscuits

Here is what we discovered:

  • Sour Cream – these biscuits were great, were as tall as they should be, and soft. This was my favorite version of homemade buttermilk as I love buttermilk biscuits to have a golden crust on top and be delicate and sweet inside.
  • Cream of Tartar– this was a surprise, but it really shouldn’t have been! The biscuits were more of a cakey texture. Still tall and delicious, but not as distinguishable in the individual flakey layers. This makes perfect sense! We add cream of tartar to baked goods all the time as it helps cookies and cakes rise as well as produces carbon-dioxide gas bubbles that break gluten apart and make it soft. If you want a biscuit that will melt in your mouth, this is the version to try.
  • Lemon Juice– these biscuits tasted great, were as tall as they should be, and had flakey layers. We saw no difference between these biscuits and the vinegar buttermilk biscuits.
  • Vinegar – these biscuits tasted great, were as tall as they should be, and had flakey layers. We saw no difference between these biscuits and the lemon juice buttermilk biscuits.
Homemade Buttermilk test with Buttermilk Biscuits

In this picture, the order from left to right: sour cream, cream of tartar, lemon juice (I made 5 instead of 6, so it was bigger), and vinegar-based biscuits.

homemade buttermilk
4.87 from 15 votes

Homemade Buttermilk

Prep Time 5 minutes
Resting Time 10 minutes
Total Time 15 minutes
Four options for how to replicate buttermilk at home!

Ingredients

Vinegar Buttermilk

  • 1 cup whole milk, room temperature
  • 2 tablespoons vinegar

Lemon Juice Buttermilk

  • 1 cup whole milk, room temperature
  • 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice

Sour Cream Buttermilk

  • ½ cup whole milk, room temperature
  • ½ cup sour cream

Cream of Tartar Buttermilk

  • 1 cup whole milk, room temperature
  • 2 teaspoons cream of tartar

Instructions

Vinegar Buttermilk

  • Whisk the ingredients together until incorporated. Let sit for at least 10 minutes, up to 2 hours.

Lemon Juice Buttermilk

  • Whisk the ingredients together until incorporated. Let sit for at least 10 minutes, up to 2 hours.

Sour Cream Buttermilk

  • Whisk the ingredients together until smooth and creamy. Let sit for at least 10 minutes, up to 2 hours.

Cream of Tartar Buttermilk

  • Whisk the ingredients together until incorporated. Let sit for at least 10 minutes, up to 2 hours.

Video

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Thank you for making my recipe! You took pictures, right? Well go ahead and post them on Instagram! Be sure to mention me @iambaker and use the hashtag #YouAreBaker.

Final conclusion?

All four recipes for homemade buttermilk work! Just be sure you try adding TWO tablespoons next time you make the vinegar or lemon juice version. 🙂

And while they all seem to work beautifully, they do seem to produce different results. But not enough that anyone would notice! We were scrutinizing every detail and that’s how we came to our conclusions, but if you were serving any of these to friends and family they would only have one reaction… “that’s a great biscuit!”

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Meet Amanda Rettke

Amanda Rettke is the creator of I Am Baker, and the bestselling author of Surprise Inside Cakes: Amazing Cakes for Every Occasion – With a Little Something Extra Inside.Over the course of her 15+ year blogging adventure, she has been featured in and collaborated with the Food Network, New York Times, LA Times, Country Living Magazine, People Magazine, Epicurious, Brides, Romantic Homes, life:beautiful, Publishers Weekly, The Daily Mail, Star Tribune, The Globe and Mail, DailyCandy, YumSugar, The Knot, The Kitchn, and Parade, to name a few.

Reader Comments

  1. I am so glad to find your homemade buttermilk recipes because I’m having a really hard time finding whole milk buttermilk. I only use full fat dairy products for anything I bake or eat but it’s very rare that I would find a whole milk buttermilk and I’ve looked at many different

  2. Do you add the lemon juice or vinegar
    after adding a full cup of milk or do you start out with the addition and bring the total to one cup.
    Thank you from a novice baker.

  3. I love buttermilk, but I am an insulin dependent diabetic and the lactose in any milk product shoots my blood sugar up way too high and lasts for hours, so I use lactose free milk. I suppose that can also be made into buttermilk, so happy I found your recipe! Will be trying them!

    1. I added 4 different ingredients in 4 different tests to make homemade buttermilk. Please do read the post for more information. (not just the recipe card)

  4. Thank you for this buttermilk substitutions.

    Before I read your post, I had already bought a package of buttermilk powder. I never buy dairy milk or buttermilk, but thought it would be perfect to keep on hand for the occasional recipe I might need. I’m just wondering if you have ever tried using the powder buttermilk and if so, could you share your experience with using that.

    I want to try making your cream cheese pound cake recipe for Christmas dinner that you posted on Facebook. Wish me luck😅

    Thanks again for sharing your very thorough testing of buttermilk substitutes!

    1. Maria, I also I have the powdered buttermilk. Did she ever give you an answer? I would like to know myself.
      Thank you for a reply

  5. Hi Amanda, thanks for sharing this!

    Here in Brazil it’s not very common to use buttermilk in recipes, but as sometimes we try out foreign ones, I was wondering if the lemon juice version would work well if we sub for lime juice (which is way more common to find here).

    Curious to know if you have tested that also.. maybe next Taco Tuesday? 🙂

    Tks,
    Ana

  6. Hello Amanda. Thank you for the great tips. I have a concern however…your recommendation is: 1 cup room temperature whole milk + 2 tablespoons vinegar.
    That would = 1 cup + 2 tbsp liquid. When making buttermilk biscuits that extra 2 tbsp could end up creating a very wet dough (speaking from years of experience) I always add the liquid slowly until it reaches that “ball” stage. But for those individuals who are just learning baking techniques this could create some frustrations. Have you tried adding the vinegar/lemon juice first and then adding the milk to make one cup or would that be too strong with the 2 tbsp.
    Thank you from BC Canada

  7. Wonder if using two of the buttermilk methods combined would work or make any difference? (Such as the sour cream buttermilk and the vinegar buttermilk)

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