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Old Fashioned Butter Tarts

Indulge in some sweet Old Fashioned Butter Tarts. This popular Canadian classic dessert recipe consists of flaky homemade pastry shells filled with a rich, buttery caramel filling. Passed down from my Mom, this is the best butter tart recipe you will find!

Close-up of golden-brown butter tarts with flaky crusts and gooey caramel centers, stacked on a plate.

This best ever recipe for Old Fashioned Butter Tarts is always included in my Holiday baking. But these sweet tarts are so delicious you will want to bake them all year long! My Mom’s recipe for butter tarts has a perfect consistency of gooey, runny, sweet filling in made-from-scratch pastry shells. The tart shells are exceptionally buttery and flaky. Every family Christmas my Mom made Butter Tarts and they were always the first treat to disappear off her holiday baking tray!

Are Butter Tarts really Canadian?

Yes, Canada’s favorite dessert has origins which date back to the 1600’s! The Canadian Butter Tart is a small flaky pastry with a filling of butter, eggs, and brown sugar which are baked until the top is slightly crunchy and the filling is semi-solid.

Another incredible classic Canadian dessert you will love is my recipe for Nanaimo Bars.

Ingredients and Substitutions

The ultra flaky tart crust is a simple combination of flour, sugar, salt, butter, and ice cold water.

Can you use store bought tart shells?

Yes, although not as tasty and flaky as homemade tart shells, they do help make this recipe quicker and easier to prepare.

I love the filling exactly as my Mom made it in this recipe. A mixture of butter, brown sugar, corn syrup, eggs, vanilla and a pinch of salt.

Some tasty additions to try would be:

  • raisins
  • currants
  • nuts such as pecans or walnuts

Can you use maple syrup instead of corn syrup in butter tarts?

Yes, although I find them a bit more runny, and you will have the distinctive maple flavor.

Golden brown butter tarts with flaky crusts sit on a black cooling rack.

How to store Butter Tarts

Store in an airtight container at room temperature for 2 days, and up to 5 days in the refrigerator.

Can Butter Tarts be frozen?

Yes, butter tarts freeze well. Cool completely, place in an airtight container for up to 3 months.

How to make these tasty treats

For the pastry:

  • Sift flour, salt and sugar together. Using a pastry blender cut the chilled butter into the flour mix. Blend until it resembles course meal.
  • Add ice-cold water a bit at a time, just until the dough starts to hold together. Do not over-work the pastry dough or it will become tough. The same technique you use making pie crust.
  • Press dough together forming a disk, wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 30 minutes.
  • Next, roll out the dough on lightly floured surface, to about 1/4 inch thick.
  • Using a round cookie cutter, cut into 4-5 inch circles. Press dough into muffin pan, trying not to stretch the dough.

For the filling:

  • Mix together butter, brown sugar and corn syrup. Whisk until the butter is creamed and sugar dissolved.
  • Add egg, vanilla extract and pinch of salt. Mix well.
  • Fill the tart shells about 2/3 full.
  • Bake in the oven at 400º Fahrenheit for 15-20 minutes until golden brown. Cool for 10 minutes, then remove from baking pan to cooling rack.

Mom’s favorite baking treats

My Mom was an incredible baker and these are some of her most loved recipes!

Close-up of golden-brown butter tarts with flaky crusts and gooey caramel centers, stacked on a plate.

Old Fashioned Butter Tarts

Laureen King
The perfect butter tart recipe with sweet, slightly runny filling and flaky melt in your mouth pastry.
4.21 from 313 votes
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 50 minutes
Course Dessert
Cuisine Canadian
Servings 16
Calories 296 kcal

Ingredients
  

Tart Pastry

  • 2 2/3 cups all purpose flour
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup butter chilled and cut into pieces
  • 1/4-1/2 cup ice cold water

Butter Tart Filling

  • 1/2 cup soft butter
  • 1/2 cup brown sugar packed
  • 1/2 cup corn syrup golden
  • 2 eggs slightly beaten
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • pinch of salt

Instructions
 

Butter Tart Pastry

  • Sift flour, salt and sugar together.
  • Using a pastry blender cut butter into flour mix until it resembles course meal.
  • Add cold water a bit at a time until dough just starts to hold together. Adding too much water will make for a tough dough. Do not over-work the dough.
  • Press dough together forming a disk.
  • Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes.
  • Roll out the pastry dough to 1/4 inch thickness. Cut into sixteen 4-inch circles or twelve 5-inch circles.
  • Press the dough into muffin tins being careful not to stretch the dough.
  • Refrigerate until the filling is prepared.

Butter Tart Filling

  • In a large bowl, mix together butter, brown sugar and corn syrup. Stir until the butter is creamed and the sugar is dissolved.
  • Add eggs, vanilla and pinch of salt. Mix well.
  • Fill the tart shells about 2/3 full with the filling.
  • Bake at 400º Fahrenheit for 15-20 minutes.
  • The filling should be lightly browned and bubbling.
  • Let the butter tarts cool in pan for about 10 minutes. Transfer to rack to cool completely.

Notes

Store bought pastry tart shells will work as well. Add raisins or pecans if you like.

Nutrition

Calories: 296kcalCarbohydrates: 32gProtein: 3gFat: 18gSaturated Fat: 11gPolyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 5gTrans Fat: 1gCholesterol: 66mgSodium: 299mgPotassium: 45mgFiber: 1gSugar: 16gVitamin A: 562IUCalcium: 19mgIron: 1mg
Keyword butter tarts
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!
Golden brown butter tarts with flaky crusts sit on a black cooling rack.

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98 Comments

  1. Wow! wonderful recipe, so yummy! My tarts are sticking in the tins though, is there a way I can avoid this from happening?

  2. Oh my, I had given up trying to make good gluten free pastry but, thought I would give it one last try. I’m so glad I did. This pastry is so perfect that I will use it for all my baking, it’s flaking and, better than any store bought or homemade pastry. I did use shortening instead of butter and will be making it again and again. Thank you for sharing. Can you tell me if it should be refrigerated after baking and can it be frozen?

  3. Hi there,
    I am wanting make this recipe but could you please tell me how many cups of raising and nuts to use for this?
    Thank you kindly,
    Marj

  4. They may taste good to eat but Corn Syrup is bad for you plus my mother who is long gone use to make them with butter, brown sugar, egg & vanilla there was no corn syrup back in the day now that’s old fashion butter tarts.

    1. Hi Heather, you are confusing regular corn syrup, invented in 1898, with high fructose corn syrup, invented in the 60’s – they are very different and it is the high fructose corn syrup that is bad for you. Regular corn syrup is metabolized similar to sugar, high fructose corn syrup is hard on your liver etc. Just wanted you to know! All the best!

  5. I had my first butter tart a few years ago at the Toronto Christmas market on my way to Ottawa for a hockey game and today I DM’d my best friend and was like “What if I made butter tarts?” and she said do it, so I did it. I’ve never made pastry cases before but it was really easy and it did come together pretty well for me!!! These really taste like pecan pie filling and my mom was really skeptical but she loved them!! I will definitely try this recipe again!!

  6. Hi there I’m so excited about making knees are used to live in Canada so they were stable now I’m making them for a birthday gift here in Florida! I’m nervous about the tart shells ….when you say to put them in a disc before you refrigerate what do you mean by that?

  7. 5 stars
    I haven’t had butter tarts in years! I had a pack of frozen shells and wasn’t sure what to do with them – then I came across this recipe. These turned out awesome! And best part is that I had all the ingredients already in the house. Though I am so glad I thought to put them on a parchment lined cookie sheet…..I was a bit too generous with the filling in a few and they spilled over lol. Definitely will be making again!

          1. 5 stars
            This is probably a long shot as I’m trying to make these for Xmas tomorrow but I’m curious about the corn syrup. Your recipe calls for corn syrup (golden) when I google corn syrup vs corn syrup golden it says they are two different things, that it’s not called corn syrup golden it’s just golden syrup. One is from corn and very mild and the other golden syrup is derived from sugar and it’s stronger in taste of butter and carmel. Just curious which one you use?

          2. Hi Elizabeth,
            Just plain white corn syrup will work as well if you can’t find golden, and I am pretty sure just golden syrup will work, just not pancake syrup as it isn’t as thick.

4.21 from 313 votes (297 ratings without comment)

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