recipe lingo ..

nalani

Well-Known Member
ok, this might sound like a really dumb question to a lot of you but you know when a recipe calls for "cream", do they mean whipping cream? heavy cream? or evaporate milk, which is what we call "cream" here? Talk about language barriers :D
 

Sharky

New Member
ok, this might sound like a really dumb question to a lot of you but you know when a recipe calls for "cream", do they mean whipping cream? heavy cream? or evaporate milk, which is what we call "cream" here? Talk about language barriers :D

My guess would be heavy cream. Usually if they mean whipping cream or evaporated milk they will be specific. :cool:
 

Leslie

Communistrator
Staff member
It's not dumb. I get confused by recipes all the time. I don't know the answer to this one either. I would also guess heavy cream. Definitely not evaporated milk, unless it's the local church bazaar recipe book.
 

tonksy

New Member
Evap milk is a cool ingredient, though. I use it in cream soups. It's not as rich but a jigger of sherry fixes that wee problem right up. I am not opposed to cream, it's just that it tends to go bad before I use it all and evap stores loverly.
 

paul_valaru

100% Pure Canadian Beef
Oh unless it is a british cookbook, in britain when it says Cream it means 18% also known as single cream.

I would say if they don't specify the norm seems to be 18%, so light, or table cream.
 

nalani

Well-Known Member
Thanks guys! Well, I'm not making anything right now... it's just that I always fall into the 'I really want to make this but I have no idea what they mean by cream' category :D

There are other words or ingredients that have stumped me but I can't think of them off the top of my head .. I will remember then and write them here though so y'all can help me cook LOL
 

nalani

Well-Known Member
Oh unless it is a british cookbook, in britain when it says Cream it means 18% also known as single cream.

I would say if they don't specify the norm seems to be 18%, so light, or table cream.

ummm.. errrr... you totally lost me. What's 'light' cream and 'table' cream? Here, we call evaporated milk 'cream' and put it in our hot cocoa and teas .. we also call half-and-half 'cream' but that's for coffee - way too expensive to put in cocoa.
 

nalani

Well-Known Member
Evap milk is a cool ingredient, though. I use it in cream soups. It's not as rich but a jigger of sherry fixes that wee problem right up. I am not opposed to cream, it's just that it tends to go bad before I use it all and evap stores loverly.

people here buy evaporated milk by the cases sometimes .. that's how much it's used here just for regular stuff. Often times the elders will mix it with water to use as regular milk .. tastes awful LOL
 

paul_valaru

100% Pure Canadian Beef
ummm.. errrr... you totally lost me. What's 'light' cream and 'table' cream? Here, we call evaporated milk 'cream' and put it in our hot cocoa and teas .. we also call half-and-half 'cream' but that's for coffee - way too expensive to put in cocoa.

18% fat is light cream, or just cream.
 

paul_valaru

100% Pure Canadian Beef
I have never see any of my creams say any percent of anything on them, and i work in a grocery store. well i am not sure but it might be because i live in america.

Really?

Maybe that is the confusion, here it lists right on the container, in bold the fat content.
 

chcr

Too cute for words
I doesn't in the states?

Of course it does. I'm a bit worried that someone who works at a grocery store doesn't know this.

'Splains why I sometimes can't find what I want at the market, I suppose.

edit: Typically you have to look at the side of the carton.
 

nalani

Well-Known Member
18% fat is light cream, or just cream.

so what is "table cream"? Is that like cream you put in tea and stuff? This is weirdly interesting to me :D No wonder the Maoris asked "what's this?" when we were hosting them a long time ago and we had evaporated milk out on the table for their teas and cocoa .. and had a strange look when we said, "cream" :D
 
Top