Butter Tarts

Butter tarts are the kind of dessert that looks humble until you bite into one and realize you should have grabbed two. They’re small, buttery pastry cups filled with a brown sugar and syrup filling that bakes up bubbly, glossy, and rich.

A close-up of a butter tart cut in half, revealing its gooey, golden filling and flaky pastry crust, sitting on a cooling rack against a plain background.

What Exactly Is A Butter Tart?

A butter tart is a small tart baked in a muffin tin, with a flaky pastry shell and a sweet filling that sets somewhere between gooey and firm, depending on how long you bake it. Some people like the center loose enough to run a little. Others want it set like soft caramel. Both camps will defend their preference with their whole chest.

Traditionally, butter tarts are plain, but many versions include raisins or chopped nuts. Your recipe keeps it classic and lets the filling do the talking.

A person’s hand sprinkles flour over a large, uneven sheet of rolled-out dough on a wooden surface, with a floured rolling pin nearby.

What Is Butter Tart Filling Made Of?

Butter tart filling is built from simple pantry ingredients that bake into something bigger than the sum of its parts. Most versions include:

  • Brown sugar for that deep sweetness
  • Corn syrup to help with the glossy set
  • Egg to bind and give structure
  • Butter for richness
  • Vanilla and a pinch of salt to round things out
  • Sometimes vinegar, which sounds strange until you realize it keeps the sweetness from feeling heavy

In your recipe, vinegar shows up twice, once in the dough and once in the filling. In the dough, it helps keep the pastry tender. In the filling, it adds a tiny bit of balance so the sweetness tastes cleaner.

A muffin tin filled with unbaked mini pie crusts, each holding a smooth yellow filling, sits on a marble countertop.

Are Butter Tarts A Canadian Thing?

Yes, butter tarts are widely considered a Canadian classic. They’re one of the most iconic desserts in Canada, especially in Ontario, where butter tart festivals and bakeries take them very seriously. They show up at holiday tables, church suppers, and local cafés, and people have strong opinions about which bakery makes the best ones.

That said, the reason they’ve stuck around is not just tradition. They’re genuinely easy to love. Small, handheld, sweet, and a little messy in the best way.

A close-up of batter being poured from a bowl into unbaked pie crusts in a muffin tin, preparing mini pies or tarts. A whisk is visible in the bowl.

Do They Have Butter Tarts In The USA?

You can absolutely find butter tarts in the United States, especially in places close to the Canadian border, or in bakeries that focus on Canadian or British-style baking. They’re not as common as pecan pie or chess pie in most parts of the U.S., but once people try them, they usually get why Canadians won’t stop talking about them.

If you’ve never seen one in person, making them at home is honestly the easiest way to understand the hype.

Close-up of a muffin tin holding several golden brown butter tarts, with flaky pastry crusts and caramelized filling, some filling slightly overflowing onto the tin.

Why This Dough Works

This dough uses both lard and butter, which is a classic move for flaky pastry. Butter gives you tenderness and richness. Lard helps create a crisp, flaky structure that holds up to a gooey filling.

A few small details in your dough method make it more reliable:

  • Ice water keeps the fat cold so it stays in little pieces
  • Egg yolk adds richness and helps the dough come together
  • Vinegar supports a tender crust and helps prevent toughness

Chilling the dough is not optional here. Cold dough rolls cleaner and bakes up flakier.

Close-up of several golden brown butter tarts with flaky pastry crusts and gooey filling, displayed on a white plate.

Getting The Center Just Right

Butter tarts bake fast at a high temperature. That high heat helps the crust set and the filling bubble quickly.

If you like a gooier center, pull them when they are bubbly and just turning golden. If you want a firmer center, bake a couple minutes longer. The filling will also continue to set as it cools, so don’t judge them when they are piping hot.

One important note: let them sit for a minute in the pan before removing. The filling is molten right out of the oven, and moving them too fast can lead to sticking or cracking.

Two butter tarts are shown on a marble surface, one cut in half to reveal a gooey, golden caramel filling inside a flaky pastry shell.

Storage Instructions

Butter tarts store well, which is good news because they are even better the next day with coffee.

  • Room temperature: Store in an airtight container for up to 2 days.
  • Refrigerator: Store for up to 5 days. Let them come to room temperature before serving for the best texture.
  • Freezer: Freeze up to 2 months. Wrap individually and store in a freezer bag. Thaw at room temperature.
  • Reheat option: Warm briefly in a low oven if you want them a little soft and gooey again.

Butter tarts are simple, old-school, and completely addictive. Once you bake a batch, they tend to become a permanent holiday request.

Five butter tarts with golden, flaky pastry crusts and caramelized, glossy filling are arranged on a white plate.
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Butter Tarts

Butter Tarts are a beloved sweet treat across Canada with a slightly caramelized, gooey, sweet center encased in a buttery flakey crust. To make this even easier, buy premade pie dough.
Prep Time1 hour 30 minutes
Active Time12 minutes
Total Time1 hour 42 minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: Canadian
Keyword: butter tart
Yield: 12 tarts
Calories: 194kcal
Author: Author: Maddy & JD – Them Bites

Equipment

  • 1 muffin tin

Materials

For the Dough*

  • cups all purpose flour
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • ¼ cup lard
  • ¼ cup unsalted butter cold and cut into small cubes
  • 1 tsp vinegar
  • 1 egg yolk
  • ice water

Filling

  • ½ cup brown sugar
  • ½ cup corn syrup
  • 1 egg
  • 1 tsp vinegar
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 2 tbsp unsalted butter softened
  • pinch of salt

Instructions

Make the Dough

  • Fill a small cup with water and a couple ice cubes. Set aside.
  • Whisk together flour and salt in a large bowl. Cut in butter and lard using two knives or your hands. The mixture should have course crumbs with a few larger pieces.
  • In a liquid measuring cup, add the egg yolk and vinegar and mix together. Next, add enough of your cold water (strain the ice) to the egg mixture so it makes ⅓ cup.
  • Pour this over the flour mixture, stirring with a fork or your hands until the pastry comes together. Press together into a disc and wrap in plastic wrap. Refrigerate until chilled for at least 1 hour. Can make up to three days ahead of time.

For the Filling

  • Whisk together all of the filling ingredients until smooth. Set aside.

To Assemble

  • Preheat oven to 450℉.
  • On a lightly floured surface, roll out dough until ⅛ inch thick. Use a 4 inch round cookie cutter (or glass, jar etc.) to cut out 12 circles. Reroll the scraps if necessary to get all 12.
  • In a lightly greased muffin tin, carefully place the dough circles into the tin, gently pressing them in with your hands or a small ramekin. Give the filling another quick whisk, and then carefully pour into the dough cups, about ½ – ¾ the way filled.
  • Bake until bubbly and golden, about 12 minutes. Bake 2 minutes longer for a firmer center. Be careful to watch so they don't burn. Remove from the oven and let stand for a minute. Then, use a knife or metal spatula to loosen and carefully remove them to a rack to continue to cool.

Notes

*You can sub premade pie dough. Personally, it’s worth making the dough from scratch.

Nutrition

Calories: 194kcal | Carbohydrates: 32g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 7g | Saturated Fat: 4g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.4g | Monounsaturated Fat: 2g | Trans Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 45mg | Sodium: 67mg | Potassium: 40mg | Fiber: 0.5g | Sugar: 20g | Vitamin A: 256IU | Vitamin C: 0.3mg | Calcium: 19mg | Iron: 1mg

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