Answer
No, milk cannot be used as a substitute for heavy cream when making whipped cream. Milk does not have enough fat to whip up into a topping.
If whipped cream is too high calorie for you, there are some alternatives. Meringue is made with egg whites and sugar, and a very nice whipped topping can be made from nonfat dry milk. See the links below for how to.
Answer
No. Regular milk, including low fat, 2% or skim, will foam or froth up, but it will not whip and stay fluffy as whipping cream will do. It is not a suitable substitute for whipped cream.
No. Milk will not fluff up when whipped. If you are using it for a sauce, milk will not thicken like whipping cream will.
If it's a cake ingredient, maybe. If you actually want a creamy sauce like wipped cream, you can't achieve this with butter and milk. You'd be better off making a creme patisserie.
No, because the cream is what gives the mousse its texture. If you use milk instead, it won't be a mousse, more like thick chocolate milk.
Yes you could but it wouldn't taste very nice. or like milk. AT ALL.
no
yes
You can do anything you like in cooking. However, this particular substitution is not ideal. Whipping cream is a heavy cream, not a light cream. A mixture of whipping cream and milk would be a better substitution.
If you are planning on WHIPPING the cream, say to make whipping cream for a dessert, there really isn't a substitute you could make at home. There are of course commercial substitutes that are made with oil, but you're far better off using the real thing. You also shouldn't substitute for cream when baking, because the ratios in baking for flour, fats, proteins, leavening agents and the like are temperamental, and its best not to tamper with them unless you know what you are doing. If you have a cooking recipe that calls for heavy cream, however, such as for a cream soup, or adding to a sauce, you can substitute either milk, half and half or light cream, and just add a few tablespoons of butter. I believe the ratio is three tablespoons of butter to each cup of milk to approximate heavy cream, if you are using light cream, you could probably reduce the butter to two tablespoons per cup.
heavy creams sub is double creami have used this many times it is thick and heavy ,almost heavy cream itself ,it is especially great for macaroons but works with anything elsegood luck with your baking
Two Table spoons of sugar, two tablespoons of butter, drop of milk
No. Whipping cream is more denser and has more fat than full-fat or full-cream milk.
There are a few things that can be substituted for baby sheep's milk. Powdered buttermilk, powdered calf-milk, canned milk, whipping cream, and full fat Greek yogurt can all be used as a substitute for a baby sheep.
Puppie Milk replacer and heavy whipping cream with water nothing dairy related. For better information go to this website http://www.squirreltales.org/
1/3 cup butter plus 3/4 cup of milk can be substituted for 1 cup of cream, in baking or cooking. It will not whip up for whipped cream but tastes great in sauces and baking recipes! If the question is regarding a pareve substitute for whipping cream, there are many kosher non-dairy substitutes, mainly edible oil products.
I guess piping and also to never stop whipping when you are whipping together condensed milk and whipping cream unless you are willing to make butter( i learned that the hard way )
substitute cream for evaported milk in fudge
Yes, half and half in the US is half heavy or whipping cream and half milk. So heavy or whipping cream can be made into half and half by substituting half of it with milk.
Yes you can! If you're like me and leave your condensed milk in the pantry at room temperature, then I would suggest chilling it in the freezer for at least 20 minutes beforehand (chilling the bowl is also a good idea). Condensed milk is also a great choice because it has less cholesterol than regular whipping cream.