Found a great recipe for bread I’d like to make, but it calls for 1/4 cup nonfat dry milk powder. I only have real milk and going out for powdered milk isn’t an option, so how much should I use?
TIA
Found a great recipe for bread I’d like to make, but it calls for 1/4 cup nonfat dry milk powder. I only have real milk and going out for powdered milk isn’t an option, so how much should I use?
TIA
Most substitution charts I looked at listed
1/4 cup powdered milk, dissolved in enough water to make 1 cup = 1 cup skim milk.
So if it were me, I’d substitute 1 cup of the water in the recipe with 1 cup skim milk.
However, I can’t guarantee that you’ll get the same results with this substitution as you would with just using powdered milk. I’m not a bread-baking expert, but I’ve always been told that powdered milk affects the texture of the end result. OTOH, I have had some cookbooks tell me that the powdered milk is used in bread-machine recipes just because if you’re doing a delayed knead & bake, you don’t want fresh milk sitting there for hours.
Maybe an expert will chime in.
Milk powder helps to make the loaf more moist and soft, but it isn’t really necessary; you could replace some of the water with fresh milk, as Motorgirl suggests - it won’t be the exactly same, but it will probably still work OK.
Can I also replace the sugar with sucralose?
This is a quote from the King Arthur Flour Company. They have some great recipes, too.
StG
I’ve been out of powdered milk before and just replaced the water with milk with no untoward results. I can’t recall, though, if scalding it beforehand really made a difference or not. (Sometimes I did, sometimes I didn’t.)
Probably not; the sugar is often added to give the yeast an initial boost.
Interesting; I didn’t know about the scalding thing, but by pure coincidence, the only times I have ever used liquid milk in a bread recipe, it was UHT from a carton, which is pre-scalded, I suppose.