Lenona.
> I opened a can and used some for a lemon pie. Anything else you can
> make from the leftover milk?
>
> Lenona.
I've used Carnation fat-free evaporated milk for breakfast cereal with
great success. The evaporation of water adds a sweetness that makes it a
great version of milk when applied to breakfast cereal, imho.
Best,
Andy
I imagine you could use it in mashed potatoes, any cream sauce or soup
recipe. Perhaps as the milk in a meatloaf recipe that calls for soaking
the breadcrumbs??
-->I opened a can and used some for a lemon pie. Anything else you can
-->make from the leftover milk?
-->
-->Lenona.
Hello Dolly Bar
� cup butter or margarine
1 � cups graham wafer crumbs
1 can Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk
1-cup semi-sweet chocolate chips or more
1-� cups flaked coconut (long sweet)
1 cup chopped nuts
Preheat oven to 350� or 325� if using glass dish.
In 13x9" baking pan, melt butter in oven.
Sprinkle crumbs over butter; mix together and press into pan.
Pour Eagle Brand evenly over crumbs.
Sprinkle with chips, then coconut and nuts; press down firmly.
Bake 25 to 30 minutes or until lightly browned.
Cool well before cutting.
Store loosely covered at room temperature.
NOTE: This is how we put it together: graham base, top with nuts, coconut &
chocolate chips. Pour Eagle Brand over it all. Sometimes we add the Eagle Brand
in between layers too; still only using 1 can!
Nanaimo Bars
� cup butter
� cup brown sugar
� cup cocoa
1 egg, beaten
2 cups graham wafer crumbs
1 cup coconut, flaked or shredded
� cup walnuts or peanuts, chopped
1 can Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk
1/3 cup Lemon juice
1/3 cup melted chipits semi-sweet chocolate baking chips
Melt butter and stir in sugar, cocoa, egg, crumbs, coconut and walnuts.
Press into bottom of a 9x9" pan.
Combine Eagle Brand with lemon juice.
Blend well and spread onto base.
Sprinkle with toasted almonds or pistachios or drizzle with melted chocolate
chips.
Refrigerate until firm (about 2 hours).
***Note: It's important to use butter for a couple of reasons; the filling
will be lighter in color. It also has a lighter taste.
Andy
> Hello Dolly Bar
>
> � cup butter or margarine
> 1 � cups graham wafer crumbs
> 1 can Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk
> 1-cup semi-sweet chocolate chips or more
> 1-� cups flaked coconut (long sweet)
> 1 cup chopped nuts
She has Evaporated Milk *not* Sweetened Condensed Milk
Nope. The recipe was from "White Trash Cooking," and it called for
BOTH evaporated milk and condensed milk.
Lenona.
-->Recipes wrote:
-->
-->> Hello Dolly Bar
-->>
-->> � cup butter or margarine
-->> 1 � cups graham wafer crumbs
-->> 1 can Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk
-->> 1-cup semi-sweet chocolate chips or more
-->> 1-� cups flaked coconut (long sweet)
-->> 1 cup chopped nuts
-->
-->She has Evaporated Milk *not* Sweetened Condensed Milk
Fudge then
If you can't bear to throw it out, mix it with some regular milk and
stretch your supply - then use in cooking? Clam chowduh?
This from the person known for eating shitty breakfasts. Pour it down
the drain.
>
> Best,
>
> Andy
--Bryan
Using canned milk is indeed White trash cooking.
>
> Lenona.
--Bryan
From the mouths of BUMS!!!
Andy
Evap is good in coffee, excellent drizzled over nilla ice cream, and
over cooked chocolate pudding... I also love it with my breakfast
flakies... it'll also whip just like whipped cream.
-->On Nov 23, 3:16�pm, aem <aem_ag...@yahoo.com> wrote:
-->> On Nov 23, 12:05 pm, Goomba <Goomb...@comcast.net> wrote:
-->>
-->>
-->>
-->> > She has Evaporated Milk *not* Sweetened Condensed Milk
-->>
-->> Yes, but the OP may have misspoke. �
-->
-->
-->Nope. The recipe was from "White Trash Cooking," and it called for
-->BOTH evaporated milk and condensed milk.
-->
-->Lenona.
Actually there were two, and they were not from your cookbook Lenona
-->On Nov 23, 2:51�pm, Lenona <lenona...@yahoo.com> wrote:
-->> On Nov 23, 3:16�pm, aem <aem_ag...@yahoo.com> wrote:
-->>
-->> > On Nov 23, 12:05 pm, Goomba <Goomb...@comcast.net> wrote:
-->>
-->> > > She has Evaporated Milk *not* Sweetened Condensed Milk
-->>
-->> > Yes, but the OP may have misspoke. �
-->>
-->> Nope. The recipe was from "White Trash Cooking," and it called for
-->> BOTH evaporated milk and condensed milk.
-->
-->Using canned milk is indeed White trash cooking.
-->>
-->> Lenona.
-->
-->--Bryan
You should know
--Bryan
I ALWAYS use evaporated milk for: meatloaf and scalloped/au gratin
potatoes. Works better than plain whole milk or light cream - adds
richness without as much fat. I cannot, however STAND the taste of it
"raw"! ;-)
Lynn in Fargo
Make jello according to package directions, then whip in the
evaporated milk. e.
10 Q veddy much! I'll try that.
Lynn
Add some water and feed a baby.
Use it as a coffee creamer.
--
-Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ
http://web.me.com/barbschaller - Who Said Chickens Have Fingers?
10-30-2009
Cook it down into a custard. Or put it into your coffee. The Dutch
'koffiemelk' is very much like evaporated milk, so I use the canned milk
from time to time as a comfort thing LOL.
Pumpkin pie!
gloria p
Start the child's life with low expectations so (s)he won't have to
deal with disappoinment
>
> Use it as a coffee creamer.
And the good people of Lake Wobegon can feel lucky that they're
stepping up from their standard Coffee-Mate.
>
> --
> -Barb, Mother Superior
--Bryan
> On Nov 23, 8:28�pm, Food Snob� <bryangsimm...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > On Nov 23, 8:14�pm, Melba's Jammin' <barbschal...@earthlink.net>
> > wrote:
> > > Add some water and feed a baby.
Not recommended. See below.
> > Start the child's life with low expectations so (s)he won't have to
> > deal with disappoinment
Babies aren't very picky.
> Evaporated milk mixed with Karo syrup used to be the standard
> 'formula' for babies who were not breast fed. There's 100's of
> thousands of people who were fed this long before Similac ever
> appeared on the scene.
Cow's milk is for calves. It doesn't have the correct percentages of
protein, fat and sugar for human babies. It's fine as a supplement or
for older kids who other getting other food.
Is "Karo syrup" where kids got their taste for HFCS? :-)
--
Dan Abel
Petaluma, California USA
da...@sonic.net
> Is "Karo syrup" where kids got their taste for HFCS? :-)
Actually, Karo syrup did _not_ contain HFCS, to my surprise, and did
have real vanilla in it. Who knew?
Regards,
Ranee @ Arabian Knits
"She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands." Prov 31:13
Back in the days when babies used to chew lead paint off of their
cribs. While I enjoy watching Mad Men, I don't want to return to the
ways things were done back then.
--Bryan
True, no HFCS, but instead NO fructose corn syrup (worse in most
ways). Except for the vanilla and salt, it was just glucose and
water.
>
> Regards,
> Ranee @ Arabian Knits
--Bryan
> In article
> <dabel-B251BA....@c-61-68-245-199.per.connect.net.au>,
> Dan Abel <da...@sonic.net> wrote:
>
> > Is "Karo syrup" where kids got their taste for HFCS? :-)
>
> Actually, Karo syrup did _not_ contain HFCS, to my surprise, and did
> have real vanilla in it. Who knew?
I mentioned it because CS (corn syrup), (which, with salt and vanilla,
as Bryan mentioned), is Karo Light, is the first step in producing HFCS.
I just checked the web site:
http://www.karosyrup.com/products.html
Only Karo pancake contains HFCS, the others (Karo Light, Lite, Dark and
Brown Sugar, don't).
Note that "Light" refers to the color. "Lite" has sucralose added to
reduce calories.
Thai style iced tea or iced coffee is made with sweetened condensed
milk. I think it's too sweet. Should be good with the regular
evaporated milk instead.
No of "those people* made a case with a reply "What can?" and didn't
attacked you? I am impressed. *Those* people must have finally learned
not to forget the subject title of the post by the time they started
reading the post. *Those people* know my list of *those*.
--Bryan
-->On Nov 23, 1:32�pm, Recipes <s...@foodforu.ca> wrote:
-->>
-->You left out the first 3/4 of your screen name, Canadian White Trash
-->Recipes.
-->
-->--Bryan
.....and you left out Asshole out of your's
I don't see your answer to the question posed. Did you forget the
subject title of the post, Amanda?
>I opened a can and used some for a lemon pie. Anything else you can
>make from the leftover milk?
>
>Lenona.
Freeze it. I buy evaporated milk in both the 12 oz and the 5oz cans.
I don't drink milk so keeping this on hand at times has been a
lifesaver.
koko
--
There is no love more sincere than the love of food
George Bernard Shaw
www.kokoscorner.typepad.com
updated 11/23
i assume they will be dealt with severely.
blake