If your liquid in the receipe is 1 cup of water etc. decrease the water 1/2 c and replace it with 1/2 milk 1/2 water, i am not sure but i think the dry milk adds calcium to the bread or the white color. When I do bread it seems I mainly use water, oil or some type of liquid, I think that Tablespoon of dry milk would equal 1 c of milk, you would have to taste it.
Not nonfat, no.
A suitable substitute for nonfat dry milk in a recipe is powdered coconut milk or powdered soy milk.
Use the same amount of butter as you would shortening. In bread, a tablespoon of butter can be used instead of a tablespoon of shortening. The same amount of canola oil is even healthier.
No, not even in a recipe.
To substitute cornstarch for flour in a recipe, use half the amount of cornstarch as you would flour. For example, if a recipe calls for 1 tablespoon of flour, you would use 1/2 tablespoon of cornstarch instead. Cornstarch is a good thickening agent, so it works well in recipes that require a thick consistency.
teaspoon
You can substitute dried basil for fresh basil in a recipe by using one-third of the amount of fresh basil called for. For example, if a recipe calls for 3 tablespoons of fresh basil, you would use 1 tablespoon of dried basil instead.
To substitute dried basil for fresh basil in a recipe, use one-third of the amount of dried basil compared to fresh basil called for in the recipe. For example, if the recipe calls for 3 tablespoons of fresh basil, use 1 tablespoon of dried basil instead.
A heaping Tablespoon ,not a level one
if there is 1 sixteenth-tablespoon in 1 recipe, then in 105 recipes there would be 6 tablespoons, 1 half-teaspoon, and 3 sixteenth-teaspoons.
To substitute fresh ginger with ground ginger in a recipe, use 1/4 teaspoon of ground ginger for every 1 tablespoon of fresh ginger called for in the recipe. Adjust the amount to taste, as ground ginger is more concentrated than fresh ginger.
In a recipe, tb would mean table, in the context of a tablespoon.