Fresh herb butter is a small recipe with outsized usefulness — if you have basil, parsley, dill, chives, or a mix of herbs that need a job, this is one of the easiest answers, turning loose market herbs into something you can spread, melt, and actually finish before they go.
Fresh herb butter
A simple compound butter that turns a handful of loose herbs into something you can spread, melt over hot food, and keep in the freezer for weeks — one of the most useful ways to use market herbs.

- Time
- 10 min
- Serves
- 8
Fresh herb butter
Makes About 1/2 cup
Scaled 1×. Ingredients adjusted — but cook time, pan size, and oven temperature don't scale linearly. A bigger batch usually needs a bigger pan and a few extra minutes; a smaller batch often finishes sooner. Trust your eyes, not the timer.
Ingredients (6)
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 tablespoonWhat to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Flat-leaf (Italian) parsley — more flavor than curly; the most versatile herb butter base
- French chives — thin and delicate; pairs with almost everything
- Genovese basil — classic summer herb; excellent with lemon zest
- Dill — anise-forward; excellent with fish, potatoes, and eggs
Ripeness
Herbs should smell strong when rubbed or torn. No yellowing, sliminess, or dry crispy tips. Market-fresh bunches are almost always more fragrant than refrigerated clamshells.
Imperfections are fine
Wilted or slightly bruised leaves still work when chopped into butter — the fat captures the flavor even from herbs that are past their prime for garnishing raw.
Good substitutions
- Tarragon and shallot for a French beurre composé style
- Rosemary and thyme (use sparingly) for a savory roasting butter
- Cilantro and lime zest for a Mexican-style finish on fish or corn
In season
Fresh herbs are available spring through fall; basil and dill peak in summer. Herb butter is a strategy for preserving surplus herbs before they fade.
How much to buy
About 1 large market bunch (1–2 oz) gives enough herbs for 1–2 full batches of butter.
Find your herb grower on CollectiveCrop
- In season Spring through fall (basil: summer only)
- For this recipe 1 large bunch (about 1/4 cup chopped)
- While you're there Local unsalted butter · Garlic · Lemon
At the market
About 1 large market bunch (1–2 oz) gives enough herbs for 1–2 full batches of butter.
Best varieties
- Flat-leaf (Italian) parsley more flavor than curly; the most versatile herb butter base
- French chives thin and delicate; pairs with almost everything
- Genovese basil classic summer herb; excellent with lemon zest
Good to know
Tips
- Use tender herbs (parsley, basil, chives) in larger amounts; use stronger herbs (rosemary, thyme) more sparingly.
- A little acid like lemon zest or a splash of wine keeps the butter from tasting flat or heavy.
- Mix two herbs for more depth — parsley + chives or basil + lemon zest are reliable combinations.
Storage
- Refrigerator: up to 1 week, wrapped tightly or in a covered container.
- Freezer: up to 2 months; slice frozen rounds directly onto hot food without thawing.
Make ahead
- The whole recipe is make-ahead by design — mix, roll into a log, wrap, and refrigerate or freeze.
- Slice rounds off the frozen log as needed; they melt directly onto hot vegetables, fish, or steak.
Variations
- Blue cheese butter: swap the herbs for 2 tablespoons crumbled blue cheese.
- Miso herb butter: add 1 teaspoon white miso for quiet umami depth.
- Citrus herb: use zest of 1 lemon or orange for brightness; excellent on fish.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you make fresh herb butter ahead of time?
What can you serve with fresh herb butter?
Can you swap one of the main ingredients?
Know what's worth cooking this week
Get one recipe a week — always timed to what's actually in season near you. No filler, no fluff.

