rwgular sugar is granulated sugar. the other kind is confectioner's sugar, or powdered sugar
According to the website the two can be swapped for each other in equal amounts.
Granulated sugar shouldn't be used as a substitute where powdered sugar is specified in a recipe; granulated sugar will be too coarse.
Yes because superfine sugar is regular granulated sugar it's just been ground into finer crystals so it can be dissolved easier in many light recipes where you would not want the grainy texture of regular sugar, like in merinques and angel food cake. You can use superfine sugar in any recipe and be successful, it's when you try to substitute regular granulated sugar when it calls for superfine that you run into trouble because it will be too grainy or possibly lumpy. You could always make your own version of superfine sugar by putting regular granulated sugar into a food processor and chopping it up for a minute or two and it would be simliar to store bought superfine sugar.
You can make any recipe that calls for granulated sugar because caster sugar can be used to replace granulated sugar.
Granulated sugar shouldn't be used as a substitute where caster sugar is specified in a recipe; granulated sugar will be too coarse.
First,just do the recipe but add the sour cherries instead of the regular cherries But if you want the taste to be not so sour then add some regular cherries to the recipe Hope this helped -Hello Panda
Not unless the cake recipe specifically calls for icing sugar. Granulated sugar has a specific weight to measured volume and will provide that specific quantity and sweetness to the cake. Icing sugar has a different weight to volume, different texture and a different level of sweetness. It is important to use the specific ingredient called for in the recipe being followed in order to obtain the proper result.
yep, buy domino and you'll have no problem.
If you put the granulated sugar into your blender & turn it into powdered sugar you can use it. Just blend the amount the recipe needs. Like, if it says 1 cup powdered, use one cup granulated. The problem with using regular sugar is - the frosting will sweat. It will look ok at first but when it sits for a while the frosting will look like it has water puddles on it. If you plan to eat it soon after its made, that would be ok. But it shouldn't sit for very long. You might want to find a recipe that uses regular sugar.
Unless it is specified as something else, sugar in a recipe is granulated sugar. If it is supposed to be powered or brown it will say so.
Yes, you can substitute brandy instead of sherry in a cookie recipe.
it is white
sunstition for brown sugar using granulated sugar and pancake syrup