Heavy cream could be used for milk in cornbread, but the baked cornbread might be heavy and too dense, because of the high fat content of heavy cream. It would be better to thin the heavy cream with water to bring it closer to the consistency of milk before using it in cornbread.
Nestle cream is cream made of butterfat that is skimmed off the top of pre-homogenized milk. You can substitute heavy cream for it.
You can, however, heavy cream is much thicker than whole milk which will cause the soup to be a much thicker consistency than you may want. Milk is a better choice.
substitute cream for evaported milk in fudge
heavy creams sub is double creami have used this many times it is thick and heavy ,almost heavy cream itself ,it is especially great for macaroons but works with anything elsegood luck with your baking
Probably, but canned cream is sometimes aerated; if this is the case, you need to whip the heavy cream before using it as a substitute.
i dont think so. use regular milk instead of canned. that would work
You can not make heavy cream from dry milk.
Yes, try diluting 1 tablespoon (or more) in a glass of water.
Puppie Milk replacer and heavy whipping cream with water nothing dairy related. For better information go to this website http://www.squirreltales.org/
You can do anything you like in cooking. However, this particular substitution is not ideal. Whipping cream is a heavy cream, not a light cream. A mixture of whipping cream and milk would be a better substitution.
If you do not have half and half you can substitute with one of two things. Fist if you can use milk, though this will not be nearly as creamy and can effect both the taste and texture of what you are making. Alternatively, if you have heavy cream you can mix the cream with low-fat milk for homemade half and half.
From what I could find on the web, heavy cream and heavy whipping cream are the same thing. I was looking because my homemade vanilla ice cream tastes like frozen whipped cream, and I don't that flavor. I thought that there must be a difference, but every site I've been to says they are the same thing.