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Your Everything Guide to Thanksgiving

Your Everything Guide to Thanksgiving
Top-notch recipes, expert tips, and more—it's all right this way.
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41 Comments
demi
April 16, 2020
I'm making a cheesecake and it calls for heavy could I use light cream instead and and more butter? or just use the light cream?
Emma L.
April 17, 2020
Hi! Light cream might work, though it's hard to say without seeing the full recipe. In case it's helpful, here's our guide to making cheesecake without a recipe: https://food52.com/blog/21396-how-to-make-cheesecake-without-a-recipe. (It provides a template you can mix-and-match with under "The Filling" section.)
Jenny M.
August 14, 2019
You did leave out one important Do Not Substitute: making fresh cream of tomato soup requires heavy cream as 1/2 & 1/2 or milk do not have enough fat to bind with tomato. The result with lower fat options is a broken soup. I found out the hard way.
Beth
August 15, 2019
Really? But lots of recipes for fresh tomato soup call for milk or evaporated milk. I'm sure cream would taste awesome, though. What do you mean by broken soup, did it curdle, or what? I'm really curious.
Beth
August 10, 2019
Cool whip doesn't bake very well. Tends to melt and fall apart. I don't know what it's made of, kind of afraid to find out, but it can't be less caloric than real cream and apparently that's not a problem anyway. Does well in a refrigerator pie though.
vhoney9023
August 10, 2019
Can I use cool whip in place of heavy cream for a thicker in pecans , brown sugar, corn syrup,van. & butter then eggs, salt, & WHICH CREAM ?? just to blend the two together to thicken and pour on top of a cheesecake, and finish baking ? ? Thank you for any help !!
Vickey
Vickey
Emma L.
August 12, 2019
Hi Vickey—as Beth noted, I wouldn't recommend using Cool Whip as a substitute for heavy cream in baking.
Maxine V.
August 6, 2019
If I have recipe for a 9 inch pie pan but wanna make it 13x9 how would I get right measurement for 8ngredients
Beth
August 6, 2019
A 13 x 9 dish will hold almost twice as much as a 9 inch pie pan. Whatever you're making, if that's a little too much for the 13 x 9 inch pan, you can maybe cook the rest in a smaller dish or a custard cup. I would try twice as much and adjust it from there. Hope that helps.
Hannah
August 5, 2019
I am hoping to find a substitute for heavy cream in baked goods - what options could I use?
Emma L.
August 8, 2019
Hi Hannah! It really depends on the specific recipe. If you share an example that you're thinking of, I can try to help!
Hannah
August 8, 2019
I have an old recipe for a cake that requires heavy cream in the batter. Would, say, whole milk be ok instead? I don’t know if heavy cream is supposed to give it richness, helping in the batter rising, or both.
Emma L.
August 9, 2019
Got it! Assuming the cream doesn't get whipped, light cream or half-and-half should work fine. Whole milk *could* work, but it's harder to predict since the fat content is so much leaner than heavy cream. If you give either a try, let me know how it goes!
rktrix
August 3, 2019
Is whipped chick-pea water better used as a substitute for egg whites? It seems creamy, but since there is no fat it would probably break down too easily. Has anyone played with this stuff?
ED
August 3, 2019
I have cookie recipe that calls for 1/3 cup whipping cream in the dough. Is there a substitute for that purpose?
Emma L.
August 8, 2019
Interesting! I haven't seen heavy cream in a lot of cookie dough recipes. Half-and-half, milk, or full-fat coconut milk are probably your best bet.
acecil
August 3, 2019
I can’t wait to try this “onion cream” thing. I have so many ideas! Thanks for the article.
Danielle
August 2, 2019
Any tips on a good sub for condensed milk? I love the coconut macaroons from this site, but I’m lactose intolerant.
Cate
August 3, 2019
I am as well so when a recipe comes up using creams, butter, etc. I take Lactaid, which takes care of the problem when eating dairy for those of us who are intolerant.
Also when the recipe is more forgiving, I use Lactaid milk either alone or combined with a regular cream. It lowers the amount of Lactaid I have to then compensate for with a tablet. I have come across lactose free sour cream as well, which is good to use. Whole Foods carries it.
Once, I needed an emergency substitute, so I used a lactose free vanilla ice cream, mostly melted, and it worked well. Crisis become the mother of invention!😉
Also when the recipe is more forgiving, I use Lactaid milk either alone or combined with a regular cream. It lowers the amount of Lactaid I have to then compensate for with a tablet. I have come across lactose free sour cream as well, which is good to use. Whole Foods carries it.
Once, I needed an emergency substitute, so I used a lactose free vanilla ice cream, mostly melted, and it worked well. Crisis become the mother of invention!😉
Yirgach
August 2, 2019
This is a nice article on alternatives, but actually for all the wrong reasons. It's the trans fat which is a problem! Your body produces it's own cholesterol for a good reason. Learn the difference and you will be able to enjoy the taste of food as nature intended.
See here: https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/top-9-biggest-lies-about-dietary-fat-and-cholesterol
See here: https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/top-9-biggest-lies-about-dietary-fat-and-cholesterol
James B.
August 2, 2019
When I worked at a local Italian restaurant years ago, we used full-blown "manufacturing cream" (>40% butterfat) in our Fettucine Alfredo sauce. I've managed to scale-down the artery-clogging potential by subbing Half & Half with a caveat: After browning the minced garlic and flambeeing with dry vermouth, I lowered the heat, added the cooked pasta into the pan and slowly added the half & half letting it absorb somewhat into the noodles before sprinkling/folding in the grated Parmesan. As soon as it became a creamy, cheesy sauce, I immediately plate it before it separates with the cheese sinking to the bottom of the pan and the half & half cruddling up. Takes some practice, but it's an acceptable substitution.
Nicole P.
August 3, 2019
Milkfat is GOOD FOR YOU!!! Artery-clogging is a myth! Don't believe the hype!
Carla K.
September 23, 2019
I know it’s off topic, but that sounds wonderful. Can I come over for dinner?
Beth
August 2, 2019
Back before whipping cream was readily available, I had several recipes that used whipped evaporated milk. In order for it to whip it has to be really cold, practically frozen, so I would pour a can of it into an ice tray and freeze it until it was partially crystalized. I put my mixer blades and the bowl in the freezer too. Then into the cold bowl with sugar and vanilla and it whips up quite nicely and tastes almost like real whipped cream.
doristeo
July 19, 2019
Evaporated milk is not condensed milk! The consistency and sugar level is totally different!
amherreras
July 19, 2019
Hello, loved the article, and as a professional chef I must say Food52 is one of my favorites. Thank you for your diversity and deliciousness included in every recipe and article. Just check this one quote out from the article: "Evaporated milk (also known as condensed milk)". Perhaps this is misleading?
Nancy
July 14, 2019
Useful article, thanks.
Remember, also, avocado instead of heavy cream in chocolate mousse.
Remember, also, avocado instead of heavy cream in chocolate mousse.
Emma L.
July 19, 2019
Yes! I've been wanting to try this recipe ever since it published: https://food52.com/recipes/81255-hannah-bronfman-s-no-cook-chocolate-mousse-with-avocado
Nancy
July 19, 2019
Emma - I learned another recipe about 10 years ago, but the concept is the same. I recommend raspberries or blackberries for garnish (sharper nicer contrast with the chocolate than other sweet berries) and mint leaves for garnish. Also good as a dessert that almost everyone can eat (GF, vegan, non dairy).
Joan H.
July 14, 2019
Early in the piece you say that evaporated milk is also known as condensed milk. Not so. Condensed is sweetened.
Lora S.
July 14, 2019
That's sweetened condensed milk, such as Eagle Brand. Evaporated and condensed are similar words in meaning, evaporated milk is condensed by removing, by evaporation, some of it's water/liquid.
Peter J.
July 18, 2019
Anyone who goes into a supermarket and grabs a can of condensed milk thining it is the same as evaporated is going to be disappointed. There may be some places where they sell unsweetened condensed milk, but in every store I've ever been in in the US, there are two distinct sections: evaporated milk (unsweetened and more liquid) and condensed (sweetened, thicker and in a shorter can).
Emma L.
July 19, 2019
Thank you so much, Joan (and Gammy, Hue, Doristeo, and Amherreras!), for flagging that "condensed milk" and "sweetened condensed milk" are often used interchangeably. We've corrected this line in the piece to avoid any confusion.
Allison
July 13, 2019
can you substitute half and half for cream when making caramel (sauce and candies)? lactose free half and half is readily available at the grocery store, but i have yet to find lactose free cream, unfortunately...
tia
July 15, 2019
I think what you're looking for out of the cream is fat, to help keep the caramel soft so you'd need to make it up somehow. You could maybe use butter instead? Or maybe add enough to make up for the limits of the lactose free half and half? I know butter has some lactose in it, but I think it's a very small amount so it might be worth a try.











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