If you have been researching platforms for your cottage food or home bakery business, you have probably come across Butterbase. It has a clean interface, it helps you cost out recipes, and it keeps orders organized. Those things matter. But before you commit to any platform, it is worth understanding exactly what problem each one solves — and what it leaves on the table.
What Butterbase Does Well
Butterbase is a back-office management tool built specifically for home bakers and cottage food vendors. Its core features are recipe costing — enter your ingredients and batch sizes, get a cost-per-unit breakdown — alongside basic inventory tracking, order management, and client records. The free plan covers up to 20 recipes, 10 clients, and 20 orders per month. Paid plans run up to $29 per month.
If you have ever wondered whether your shortbread is actually profitable after ingredients, packaging, and market fees, Butterbase gives you a clear answer. That is genuinely useful. Knowing your numbers is the difference between a hobby and a business.
What Butterbase Does Not Do
Here is the gap: Butterbase is a private, back-office tool. It has no public marketplace. There is no place where customers browse and discover you. No storefront your neighbors can find. No map where someone searching for a local cottage baker in your town sees your name.
Butterbase helps you understand your costs and manage your existing workflow. It does not help new customers find you. You still have to build that bridge entirely on your own — through social media, word of mouth, or another platform. That is a meaningful limitation if growing your customer base is any part of your goal.
What Butter and Sage Market Does
Butter and Sage Market is built around a different core problem: discovery. It is a marketplace — like Etsy, but built exclusively for small and cottage food businesses. Vendors open a shop page, list their products, and show up when local shoppers are looking for exactly what they make.
Beyond the marketplace, BAS includes a farmers market directory so vendors can connect their shop to the local markets they attend, an events feature for cooking classes and pop-up appearances, and a food blog that builds organic search traffic from shoppers already thinking about local food. The platform was built around the idea that running a food business involves more than tracking ingredient costs — it involves getting found.
The Real Question: Tools vs. Discovery
Butterbase and Butter and Sage Market are solving different problems. A recipe costing tool and a marketplace are not the same thing, and which one you need depends on where you are in your business.
If you are still figuring out whether your prices make sense, a costing tool is a useful first step. But if you are ready to sell — or you have been selling at the farmers market and want to reach customers beyond market day — what you actually need is a place where customers can find you.
Butter and Sage Market gives you a public storefront, local discovery, and the community context that makes people want to buy from a real person. And it is the only platform that combines all five things at once: marketplace, vendor tools, farmers market directory, events, and editorial content. Because knowing your costs is only half the job. The other half is making sure someone actually shows up to buy.
Butter & Sage Market
Get the Marketplace AND the Business Tools in One Place
Unlike back-office-only tools, Butter & Sage Market gives cottage food vendors a public storefront where new customers can discover you — plus the tools to run your business. Because knowing your costs is only half the job.
Fresh. Local. Sustainable.





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