If you are using it as a levening agent, you can substitute baking powder. One teaspoon of baking powder replaces 1/3 tsp of baking soda AND 2/3 tsp cream of tartar.
Baking powder is a 1:3 ratio of baking soda to cream of tartar. You cannot just substitute cream of tartar for baking powder - you also need the baking soda.
baking powder
baking pouder
Don't use sour cream...
yes In most cases, no. Baking power includes baking soda along with cream of tartar (or other ingredients,) and has a different affect in batter than cream of tartar, which is primarily a stabilizer.
If you do not have cream of tartar, baking powder will work just as well, or better. If the recipe calls for both cream of tartar and baking soda, leave out the soda if you use baking powder - it already has soda in it.
no, because it wont come out or taste the same with mayonaisse.
0.4 to .6 or 40% tartaric acid son it wont ruin the cream of tater cream tartar is 60%
No, corn flour is not a substitute for cream of tartar (potassium hydrogen tartrate). Here are some substitutes:for beating egg whites: equal amount of white vinegar or lemon juice or omit the cream of tartar.as leavening agent: replace the baking soda/cream of tartar (1/3tsp/2/3tsp) with 1tsp baking powder.for frosting: leave the cream of tartar out without using a substitute.
Probably, but canned cream is sometimes aerated; if this is the case, you need to whip the heavy cream before using it as a substitute.
I have been informed that baking powder is 1/4 baking soda & 5/8 cream of tartar the rest being made up of various other ingredients. Baking soda by itself is no good as it is alkaline and you need an acid so, depending on the recipe, you could try lemon juice, white vinegar or buttermilk.
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.