- Emergency
Kitchen Substitutions
BY DEBORAH
TAYLOR-HOUGH
Do you ever
find yourself all geared up and ready to make a favorite recipe
but then discover you're staring at an empty container of a needed
ingredient? Ugh. You don't want to run out to the store right
now. So what do you do?
Well, that's
when emergency kitchen substitutions come in handy. I've printed
out the following list and keep a copy taped to the inside of
my pantry door at all times.
Although these
substitutions will work in a pinch, I don't recommend always
substituting ingredients in your recipes. The recipes will technically
work with substitutions, but often the finished product won't
be exactly the same as when you use the original ingredients
called for in the recipe.
Also, be sure
you don't make more than one substitution in a particular recipe
at once. The more ingredients you substitute, the more "off"
your product will be when you're finished.
EMERGENCY
SUBSTITUTIONS:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For: 1 Tbsp fresh herb
Use: 1/3 to 1/2 tsp dried herb (of the same kind)
For: 1 clove
garlic
Use: 1/8 tsp garlic powder
For: 1 egg
in baking
Use: 1 tsp cornstarch plus 1/4 cup water
For: 1 whole
egg
Use: 2 egg yolks plus 1 Tbsp water
For: 1 cup
whole fresh milk
Use: 1/2 cup evaporated milk plus 1/2 cup water, or 1/3 cup dry
milk plus 1 cup water
For: 1 cup
buttermilk
Use: 1 cup plain yogurt, or 1 cup sour milk (4 tsp white vinegar
or lemon juice plus milk to make 1 cup -- let sit for five minutes
before using)
For: 1 cup
sour cream (in baking)
Use: 7/8 cup buttermilk or sour milk plus 3 Tbsp butter
For: 1 cup
sour cream (in salad dressings, casseroles)
Use: 1 cup plain yogurt or 3/4 cup sour milk plus 1/3 cup butter
For: 1 cup
cream
Use: 1/3 cup butter plus 3/4 cup milk
For: 1 cup
corn syrup
Use: 2/3 cup granulated sugar plus 1/3 cup water
For: 1 cup
brown sugar
Use: 1 cup granulated sugar plus 2 Tbsp molasses
For: 1 3/4
cup confectioners sugar
Use: 1 cup granulated sugar, packed
For: 1 cup
margarine or butter (in baking or cooking)
Use: 1 cup hard shortening or 7/8 cup vegetable oil
For: 1 square
unsweetened chocolate
Use: 3 Tbsp cocoa plus 1 Tbsp oil
For: 1 ounce
semi-sweet chocolate
Use: 1 ounce unsweetened chocolate plus 4 tsp sugar
For: 3/4 cup
cracker crumbs
Use: 1 cup bread crumbs
For: 1 cup
cake flour, sifted
Use: 7/8 cup all purpose flour, sifted (1 cup minus 2 Tbsp)
For: 1 tsp
baking powder
Use: 1/3 tsp baking soda plus 1/2 tsp cream of tarter, or 1/4
tsp baking soda plus 1/3 cup sour milk
For: 1 Tbsp
cornstarch for thickening
Use: 2 Tbsp flour
For: 1 Tbsp
flour for thickening
Use: 1 1/2 tsp corn flour, arrowroot, potato flour, or rice flour;
or 2 tsp tapioca
For: 2 Tbsp
tapioca for thickening
Use: 3 Tbsp flour
- Copyright
2003 Deborah Taylor-Hough. All rights reserved.
- Used with
permission.
- _______________________________________
Author:
Deborah Taylor-Hough
(wife and mother of three) is the author of the bestselling book,
'Frozen Assets: How to cook for a day and eat for a month,' and
the new book, 'Frugal Living For Dummies(r)' (Wiley, 2003). You
can subscribe to her newest free newsletter by sending an email
to: tips-and-quips-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Visit Debi at: http://hometown.aol.com/dsimple/
_______________________________________
|