Ingredientevaporated milk
The call
Use milk
for evaporated milk.
Reconstitute first, then use 1:1. Evaporated milk: equal parts water (1/2 cup water + 1/2 cup evaporated = 1 cup milk). Non-instant dry milk: 1/4 cup powder + 1 cup water per cup of milk, with the powder whisked into the dry ingredients. Sweetened condensed milk is not a 1:1 milk swap because each cup carries roughly a cup of sugar.
Last verified 2026-05-06 against King Arthur Baking: Dried Whole Milk: Reviewed 2026-05-06 against King Arthur Baking 'Dried Whole Milk' product guidance (1/4 cup powder + 1 cup water per cup of milk; non-instant powder is designed to be added to the dry ingredients) and 'Baker's Special Dry Milk' product guidance (same 1/4 cup + 1 cup water ratio, up to about 8.2% of flour weight in yeast loaves). Confirmed evaporated milk takes a 1:1 water cut to behave like fresh milk (e.g., 1/2 cup water + 1/2 cup evaporated = 1 cup milk; 12 oz can + 18 oz water rebuilds about 30 oz of milk equivalent). Confirmed sweetened condensed milk is not a clean milk swap because each cup carries roughly a cup of sugar and would require a recipe-level sugar reduction. Compression rerun 2026-05-06: trimmed ratioText 410 -> 343 chars by dropping the parenthetical 12-oz-can math (preserved here) and the word 'ideally' for the dry-milk dry-blend instruction. Original ratioText reference: 'Reconstitute first, then use 1:1. Evaporated milk: equal parts water (1/2 cup water + 1/2 cup evaporated = 1 cup milk; a 12 oz can + 18 oz water rebuilds about 30 oz of milk). Non-instant dry or powdered milk: 1/4 cup powder + 1 cup water per cup of milk, ideally with the powder whisked into the dry ingredients. Sweetened condensed milk is not a 1:1 milk swap because each cup carries roughly a cup of sugar.'
Ratio
varies
Why this works
Evaporated milk has roughly 60% less water than fresh milk, so an equal-parts water cut returns it to milk-like body and protein. Non-instant dry milks like King Arthur's Dried Whole Milk and Baker's Special Dry Milk are designed to be added to the dry ingredients (1/4 cup powder per cup of milk) with the matching water added to the wet ingredients; cold-soaking non-instant powder leaves lumps. Sweetened condensed milk sits apart: it is concentrated and pre-sweetened, so dropping it in for plain milk leaves the recipe substantially over-sweet and over-browned unless the sugar is cut at the same time.
Sensory diff
- Flavor
- Evaporated milk reads slightly cooked and a touch sweeter; dry milk concentrates dairy flavor and lightly tans crusts from extra lactose; sweetened condensed milk tastes overtly sweet and caramel-leaning.
- Texture
- Reconstituted dry milk gives tender crumb and helps yeast loaves stay fresher; any of these concentrates left undiluted leaves batters dense, gummy, or sticky.
Nutrition diff
per 100ml
| Macro | evaporated milk | milk | Δ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calorieskcal | 134 | 61 | -54% |
| Proteing | 6.8 | 3.2 | -53% |
| Fatg | 7.6 | 3.3 | -57% |
| Sat. fatg | 4.6 | 1.9 | -59% |
| Carbsg | 10 | 4.8 | -52% |
| Sugarg | 10 | 5.1 | -49% |
| Fiberg | — | 0 | — |
| Sodiummg | 106 | 43 | -59% |
General reference, not medical advice. Sourced from USDA FoodData Central.
Alternatives, ranked
3 more options
- Highvaries·B·0.81·kcal -54%
Evaporated and dry milk reconstitute cleanly into milk; sweetened condensed milk is a different product and does not.
Last verified 2026-05-06 against King Arthur Baking: Dried Whole Milk: Reviewed 2026-05-06 against King Arthur Baking 'Dried Whole Milk' product guidance (1/4 cup powder + 1 cup water per cup of milk; non-instant powder is designed to be added to the dry ingredients) and 'Baker's Special Dry Milk' product guidance (same 1/4 cup + 1 cup water ratio, up to about 8.2% of flour weight in yeast loaves). Confirmed evaporated milk takes a 1:1 water cut to behave like fresh milk (e.g., 1/2 cup water + 1/2 cup evaporated = 1 cup milk; 12 oz can + 18 oz water rebuilds about 30 oz of milk equivalent). Confirmed sweetened condensed milk is not a clean milk swap because each cup carries roughly a cup of sugar and would require a recipe-level sugar reduction. Compression rerun 2026-05-06: trimmed ratioText 410 -> 343 chars by dropping the parenthetical 12-oz-can math (preserved here) and the word 'ideally' for the dry-milk dry-blend instruction. Original ratioText reference: 'Reconstitute first, then use 1:1. Evaporated milk: equal parts water (1/2 cup water + 1/2 cup evaporated = 1 cup milk; a 12 oz can + 18 oz water rebuilds about 30 oz of milk). Non-instant dry or powdered milk: 1/4 cup powder + 1 cup water per cup of milk, ideally with the powder whisked into the dry ingredients. Sweetened condensed milk is not a 1:1 milk swap because each cup carries roughly a cup of sugar.'
- Highvaries·B·0.81·kcal -63%
Evaporated and dry milk reconstitute cleanly into milk; sweetened condensed milk is a different product and does not.
Last verified 2026-05-06 against King Arthur Baking: Dried Whole Milk: Reviewed 2026-05-06 against King Arthur Baking 'Dried Whole Milk' product guidance (1/4 cup powder + 1 cup water per cup of milk; non-instant powder is designed to be added to the dry ingredients) and 'Baker's Special Dry Milk' product guidance (same 1/4 cup + 1 cup water ratio, up to about 8.2% of flour weight in yeast loaves). Confirmed evaporated milk takes a 1:1 water cut to behave like fresh milk (e.g., 1/2 cup water + 1/2 cup evaporated = 1 cup milk; 12 oz can + 18 oz water rebuilds about 30 oz of milk equivalent). Confirmed sweetened condensed milk is not a clean milk swap because each cup carries roughly a cup of sugar and would require a recipe-level sugar reduction. Compression rerun 2026-05-06: trimmed ratioText 410 -> 343 chars by dropping the parenthetical 12-oz-can math (preserved here) and the word 'ideally' for the dry-milk dry-blend instruction. Original ratioText reference: 'Reconstitute first, then use 1:1. Evaporated milk: equal parts water (1/2 cup water + 1/2 cup evaporated = 1 cup milk; a 12 oz can + 18 oz water rebuilds about 30 oz of milk). Non-instant dry or powdered milk: 1/4 cup powder + 1 cup water per cup of milk, ideally with the powder whisked into the dry ingredients. Sweetened condensed milk is not a 1:1 milk swap because each cup carries roughly a cup of sugar.'
- Highvaries·B·0.81·kcal -69%
Evaporated and dry milk reconstitute cleanly into milk; sweetened condensed milk is a different product and does not.
Last verified 2026-05-06 against King Arthur Baking: Dried Whole Milk: Reviewed 2026-05-06 against King Arthur Baking 'Dried Whole Milk' product guidance (1/4 cup powder + 1 cup water per cup of milk; non-instant powder is designed to be added to the dry ingredients) and 'Baker's Special Dry Milk' product guidance (same 1/4 cup + 1 cup water ratio, up to about 8.2% of flour weight in yeast loaves). Confirmed evaporated milk takes a 1:1 water cut to behave like fresh milk (e.g., 1/2 cup water + 1/2 cup evaporated = 1 cup milk; 12 oz can + 18 oz water rebuilds about 30 oz of milk equivalent). Confirmed sweetened condensed milk is not a clean milk swap because each cup carries roughly a cup of sugar and would require a recipe-level sugar reduction. Compression rerun 2026-05-06: trimmed ratioText 410 -> 343 chars by dropping the parenthetical 12-oz-can math (preserved here) and the word 'ideally' for the dry-milk dry-blend instruction. Original ratioText reference: 'Reconstitute first, then use 1:1. Evaporated milk: equal parts water (1/2 cup water + 1/2 cup evaporated = 1 cup milk; a 12 oz can + 18 oz water rebuilds about 30 oz of milk). Non-instant dry or powdered milk: 1/4 cup powder + 1 cup water per cup of milk, ideally with the powder whisked into the dry ingredients. Sweetened condensed milk is not a 1:1 milk swap because each cup carries roughly a cup of sugar.'
Adjustments
- dilution
- For evaporated milk, mix equal parts water and evaporated milk before measuring (1/2 cup water + 1/2 cup evaporated = 1 cup milk); for a whole 12 oz can, add 18 oz of water.
- dry-blend
- For non-instant dry or powdered milk, whisk 1/4 cup of powder into the dry ingredients per cup of milk and add 1 cup of water to the wet ingredients, matching King Arthur Dried Whole Milk and Baker's Special Dry Milk usage; if the recipe needs the milk pre-mixed, dissolve the powder in a little hot water first.
- sugar-balance
- Avoid swapping sweetened condensed milk for plain milk unless the recipe sugar can be cut by roughly 3/4 to 1 cup per cup of condensed milk used; otherwise the bake will be too sweet and over-brown.
- browning
- Reconstituted dry milk and evaporated milk both brown faster than fresh milk; check quick breads and yeast loaves a few minutes early or drop the oven 10-15 F if crusts darken too fast.
Where to be careful
- Highmilk — High when sweetened condensed milk is treated as plain milk, or when non-instant dry milk is dropped into cold liquids without dissolving in warm water or premixing with the dry ingredients.
- Highwhole milk — High when sweetened condensed milk is treated as plain milk, or when non-instant dry milk is dropped into cold liquids without dissolving in warm water or premixing with the dry ingredients.
- Highreduced-fat milk — High when sweetened condensed milk is treated as plain milk, or when non-instant dry milk is dropped into cold liquids without dissolving in warm water or premixing with the dry ingredients.