DIY Evaporated Milk

Evaporated milk is different than condensed milk, and the condensed version doesn’t make a great substitute. However, you can make you’re own evaporated milk at home. Make evaporated milk by heating 2 ¼ cups of regular milk and gently boiling it down until it reduces to 1 cup. This exact method is used to make evaporated milk for commercial retail. Evaporated milk is most commonly made with 2 percent milk, but whole milk, 1 percent, or skim will also work. You can also follow this process using dairy-free milk like soy, almond, or oat milk.

Half-and-Half

If you’re under a super tight deadline, you may substitute the same amount of half-and-half for evaporated milk (i.e., 1 cup of half-and-half for 1 cup of evaporated milk). While you won’t get the same slightly caramelized flavor that evaporated milk has, the creamy consistency of half-and-half is a close mimic.

Heavy Cream

With its very similar consistency, 1 cup of heavy cream can replace 1 cup of evaporated milk in sweet and savory dishes. While the flavor will be blander than evaporated milk’s unique caramelized tones, the texture will be noticeably richer. It’s not the lowest fat option, but there are times when we’ll do whatever it takes to avoid last-minute baking stress.

Powdered Milk

Powdered Milk is a preserved milk product that is made by evaporating and spray drying regular milk. The result is a long-lasting, nutritious milk substitute. You can create evaporated milk by mixing 1 cup of powdered milk with 1 ½ cups of warm water; stir until the powdered milk has dissolved completely. The water will thicken enough to resemble the same product as what’s inside that classic 12-ounce can.

Dairy-Free Evaporated Milk

Dairy-free cooks don’t have to be deprived of the luscious, rich flavor and consistency that comes from evaporated milk. Nature’s Charm is a producer of plant-based ingredients that include evaporated coconut milk. Nestle Carnation, the most well-known maker of evaporated milk, created a dairy-free almond cooking milk that also serves as the perfect substitute for evaporated milk.

Lactose-Free Evaporated Milk

Nestle Carnation designed lactose-free evaporated milk from milk, lactase, and a small handful of other additives.