I've found mascarpone cheese can be pricey. What would be a good (in taste and price) substitute?
-
The specific application would be for a dessert with peaches and mascarpone, using this recipe: http://www.cookstr.com/recipes/peaches-with-mascarpone – JustRightMenus Jul 17 '10 at 04:21
-
technically speaking, is mascarpone a cheese? – Midhat Sep 19 '11 at 01:39
-
@Midhat https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mascarpone states so – Franck Dernoncourt Jul 04 '22 at 22:14
7 Answers
I found a highly rated mascarpone cheese substitute recipe on food.com. I haven't personally tried it, but it's highly rated on that site, and is ridiculously simple.
- 1 16 oz block of cream cheese
- 1/2 cup sour cream
1/4 cup heavy whipping cream
Blend until smooth
Try it and let us know? :)

- 38,350
- 16
- 145
- 214
-
2That is definitely quite like mascarpone! I went ahead and bought mascarpone, despite the cost, as a special treat for some guests. I also mixed up some of this substitute. VERY similar. In fact, my husband didn't like the actual mascarpone b/c he said it tasted like cream cheese. – JustRightMenus Jul 30 '10 at 20:01
-
@JustRightMenus: Great! I'm glad it worked for you. I'll make sure to use this if I ever need to sub mascarpone. – hobodave Jul 30 '10 at 20:47
-
I made tiramisu using fat free cream cheese and fat free sour cream in place of the marscapone (I did use the heavy whipping cream) and it turned out great. – Jan 24 '13 at 17:14
8 ounces of full-fat cream cheese blended with 1/4 cup of heavy cream and 2 tablespoons of full-fat sour cream make a decent replacement for mascarpone. A tip: don't try to blend the ingredients when the cream cheese is stone cold!

- 4,964
- 6
- 33
- 47
-
2+1 to offset @hobodave .. the ingredients are the same, but the proportions are different, plus the "full fat" advisories, which are (unfortunately) helpful in this age of reduced-fat everything! – tomjedrz Jul 17 '10 at 05:11
-
Thanks tomjedrz. I didn't think his answer deserved to stay at -1. I just want to get the message across that the community benefits from more variation in answers. This particular one on it's own is insignificant, but in light of his trend I thought I should point it out. – hobodave Jul 17 '10 at 05:16
-
3I thought it would be worth the questioner's time to have a recipe that I've used before with good results, and I expect that should a questioner receive several, similar answers, it can only make him or her feel more confident about making use of the advice. It's my first day on the site, and I was excited to see questions that I knew I could answer; I opened them in tabs and took them one at a time without refreshing the pages. Granted, I can see now why refreshing the pages is a good idea, but if I feel I've something useful to say, I'm going to say it without fear of being repetitive. – Iuls Jul 17 '10 at 05:24
-
3@hobodave You really shouldn't make assumptions about people's gender or sex. – Chas. Owens Jul 17 '10 at 05:26
It depends on the application. Try ricotta (much lower fat, so may not be suitable for some recipes) or a mixture of ricotta and generic cream cheese.
It's pretty easy to make your own ricotta, also, if you want to get into that.

- 61
- 1
-
She said taste and price. Ricotta definitely does not taste like mascarpone. The texture is entirely different as well. – hobodave Jul 17 '10 at 04:21
-
I agree but based on my experiences ricotta is a good substitute to mascarpone in many recipies, especially desserts. Besides, I'd rather accept a slightly different taste than use some weird mix. – loscuropresagio Feb 14 '12 at 22:25
Really, really good thick Greek yoghurt. Might not bake like mascarpone, but it certainly acts like it when you spoon it over a dessert.

- 161
- 3
I bought some mascarpone and tried the cream cheese (full fat) substitute side by side. Cream cheese was creamier. The mascarpone definitely had a grainier texture, sort of like ricotta. I will play with it a bit, but I think mixing about half and half to 1/3,2/3 ricotta and the cream cheese sour cream mixture would hit it right on the head.

- 21
- 1
There is an excellent page that describes how to make your own Mascarpone Cheese with just milk and culture at "http://www.cheesemaking.com/Mascarpone.html" The cheese is very good, and inexpensive.

- 21
- 1
Why not make your own? 1 litre of cream makes about 750gm of mascarpone. Pretty easy, but best to have a cooking thermometer.

- 41
- 1