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
Cam sent me out for minced meat once.
I always called it ground 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.
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.
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.
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.
No shit?
I doesn't in the states?
18% fat is light cream, or just cream.