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 recipe ingredient 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 Kitchen 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 it sit for five minutes before using)
For: 1 cup sour cream (in baking) — Use: 7/8 cup buttermilk or sour milk plus 3 Tbsp. of 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
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Deborah Taylor-Hough is the author of the bestselling Frozen Assets: Cook for a Day, Eat for a Month and A Simple Choice: a practical guide for saving your time, money and sanity. She also edits the Simple Times email newsletter. To subscribe, visit Debi online at: thesimplemom.wordpress.com




You can also substitute 3 tbsp of mayonnaise for one egg when baking…. you can’t tell the difference in the end product!
I use 12 oz. of club soda or other carbonated beverage in place of the egg, water and oil in box mixes for cakes, muffins, corn bread, as I have an egg allergy. I sometimes also use a ripe banana (the same size amount as the egg) as a substitute for the egg in pancakes.