Cowboy butter is a memorable name for a simple but bold blend of butter, garlic, herbs and spices. True to its name, this compound butter is a dependable workhorse for grilling and roasting — adding savory, garlicky, slightly spicy depth to a wide range of dishes.

Whenever I add cowboy butter to burgers, steaks, seafood or sandwiches, it lifts the whole dish. The components are straightforward — butter, garlic, herbs, mustard, smoked paprika, a touch of acid and a little cayenne — but together they create an umami-forward flavor bomb that complements grilled meats and seafood exceptionally well. If you want an extra boost, try pairing your homemade butter with a complementary granular cowboy butter seasoning applied before grilling.
For versatility, this butter works melted, softened, or frozen as a chilled compound butter. I often shape softened cowboy butter into a log, wrap it tightly, and freeze it so I can slice rounds to top hot steaks or toss with vegetables whenever I need a quick hit of flavor.
Table of Contents
- Why You’ll Love Cowboy Butter
- What You’ll Need for Your Cowboy Butter
- How to Make Clarified Butter
- My Favorite Cowboy Butter Recipes
- What to Serve with Cowboy Butter
- Leftovers and Reheating
- For More Butter
- FAQs
- Flavor X Fire & FOOD X Fire
Why You’ll Love Cowboy Butter
“Cowboy butter” is a flexible label for a spicy, garlicky herb butter that can be adjusted to suit many cuisines. Tweak the herbs, heat, or acid to complement whatever you’re cooking — cilantro for Mexican or Asian-inspired dishes, parsley and thyme for classic European flavors, or extra cayenne for a bold kick. It’s an ideal finishing touch that elevates simple grilled proteins, roasted vegetables, and breads.

You can serve cowboy butter three ways:
- Softened/room temperature: Easy to spread on bread, cornbread or rolls.
- Melted/warm: Use as a dipping sauce for shellfish or a finishing drizzle for grilled meat.
- Cold/chilled: Slice rounds from a frozen log to melt over hot steaks or burgers.

Want more compound butter ideas? Try garlic butter burgers, surf-and-turf with butter, or explore a list of classic butter recipes to inspire variations.
What You’ll Need for Your Cowboy Butter
These are the basic elements to build a balanced cowboy butter. Adjust quantities and ingredients to taste.
- Butter: Start with unsalted butter so you can control seasoning.
- Herbs: Fresh herbs give the best flavor — parsley, chives, thyme, or cilantro depending on the direction you want.
- Garlic: Fresh cloves deliver the best punch. Mince or grate for even distribution.
- Spices: Red pepper flakes or cayenne for heat; smoked paprika for warmth and color; ground black pepper if you prefer floral heat.
- Acid/brightness: Lemon juice, lemon zest or a touch of Dijon mustard to lift the flavors.
These components combine to create a compound butter that enhances grilled steaks, seafood, sandwiches and more.

How to Make Clarified Butter
Clarified butter is easy and useful in some cowboy butter preparations. Melt butter slowly over low heat, allowing the milk solids to separate. After a short rest, pour the clear golden layer into a new container, leaving the white solids behind. That clear yellow liquid is clarified butter and has a higher smoke point for cooking.
Bring the Flavor Home

My Favorite Cowboy Butter Recipes
Here are a few favorite ways to use cowboy butter — versatile recipes that shine with that garlicky, herby, spicy finish.

Grilled Salmon Fillets with Cowboy Butter
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Cowboy Butter Arayes
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Steak and Eggs with Cowboy Butter
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Cowboy Butter Steak and Shrimp
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Steak Pinwheels with Cowboy Butter
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Cowboy Butter Burgers
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Cowboy Butter Steak Tacos
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Cowboy Butter Sliders
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Grilled Ribeye with Cowboy Butter
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What to Serve with Cowboy Butter
Cowboy butter works with just about everything, so the real question is what not to pair it with. It’s ideal on grilled steaks, surf-and-turf, tacos, grilled seafood, and as a spread for cornbread or rolls. It also makes a great dipping sauce for shellfish or a flavorful toss for roasted vegetables.
- Room temperature/softened: Best for spreading on bread; let sit 30–60 minutes to soften.
- Melted/warm: Use as a dip or drizzle for seafood and grilled meats; heat gently on the stovetop.
- Cold/chilled: Slice rounds from a chilled log to place on hot steaks; they’ll melt into a rich finishing sauce.

Leftovers and Reheating
Store cowboy butter in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to a week, or freeze for up to three months. For freezing, form the butter into a log using softened (not melted) butter, wrap tightly and freeze. Reheat gently on low heat to melt, or slice chilled rounds directly onto hot food so they melt naturally.
For More Butter

Herb Butter American Lamb Steaks

Sriracha Butter Grilled Lobster Tails

Dirty Lobster Tails with Hatch Chile Butter Sauce

Parmesan Garlic Butter Mussels

Cilantro Lime Butter Scallops

Steakhouse Ribeyes with Horseradish Butter
FAQs
Yes. Dried herbs will work if fresh aren’t available, though fresh herbs give a brighter flavor.
Absolutely. Store it in the refrigerator for up to a week or freeze for up to three months. Making it a day or two ahead allows the flavors to meld.
It depends on the size of your protein and how bold you want the flavor. For two steaks, a range of 2 tablespoons to 1/4 cup of seasoning is a good starting point — adjust to taste.

Get The Cookbooks!
Flavor X Fire & FOOD X Fire
By Derek Wolf
These books explore the major tastes — salty, sour, sweet, bitter and umami — and how aroma, heat and texture impact flavor. They’re a great resource for anyone who wants to understand and build bold, balanced dishes.