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I have a recipe that calls for evaporated milk. How can I make "Evaporated Milk" (from raw milk), or a reasonable substitute for the canned evaporated milk found at the supermarket?

Aaronut
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Flimzy
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2 Answers2

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Very easy. All you want to do is to remove the water through heating. As you are not going to can it, you don't have to sterilize it afterwards.

The only concern when evaporating milk is to not end with a layer of scorched milk solids on the bottom. First, start with homogenized milk (you don't want to risk undissolved fat swimming on top of it). If you want the pure milk flavor, heat it to 70°C and wait until you are left with half the initial volume. This takes several hours, depending on the quantity of the milk. My great-grandma usually did it overnight.

If you don't mind a "scorched" taste, you can do it much quicker. Take a very big pot. It should be at least 6-7 times higher than the milk depth, because the boiling milk will foam up a lot. The width is up to you, but the wider the pot, the quicker it will go. Bring the milk to a vigorous boil. Use a setting which is just hot enough to sustain boiling, too much heat will increase the scorching. Stir all the time. You need maybe 10 minutes of stirring, again depending on quantity of the milk and pot width. You are aiming for the same rate of evaporation - you should be left with half the original volume, or somewhat less.

You don't have to add sugar to evaporated milk, the sweet taste is caused by the heating. Especially the boiling-evaporated milk is quite sweet, because you get some caramelization.

rumtscho
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    Thanks for the detailed answer. I don't have access to raw homogenized milk... Is there any way I can reduce the risk of "undissolved fat swimming on top of it?" If not, what is the risk here? Just an uneven consistency when I'm done? – Flimzy Oct 20 '11 at 11:30
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    The milk doesn't have to be raw, it can be pasteurized or ESL. I don't know if UHT will work. Practically all milk in the regular supermarket is homogenized. If you buy milk from an organic market, it can be non-homogenized. The risk is indeed bad consistency. If you have a cow and want to use its raw milk, you have to do it with very fresh milk, before the fat has separated. You can also skim the separated fat off the milk before you heat it, but you will end up with milk with a lower fat content, and for an application where you need evaporated milk, it is preferable to have higher fat. – rumtscho Oct 20 '11 at 11:39
  • I realize it doesn't have to be raw, but I'm trying to use a large quantity of raw milk I have available. If I was going to buy pasteurized milk for this, I'd probably just buy canned evaporated milk anyway. Thanks for the additional clarification. :) – Flimzy Oct 20 '11 at 11:41
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    You can also do this with soy milke, and I assume other non-dairy milks. I have done it to make pareve pumpkin pies, and it turned out perfect with soymilk. – Manako Oct 20 '11 at 15:37
  • Keep in mind that in Canada, we use the term Homogenized to mean whole milk. In common parlance, there is Skim, 2% and Homo. (although they are all homogenized in the technical sense), and yes, milk comes in bags. – Chris Cudmore May 08 '12 at 15:33
  • I just did the fast method, and afterwards noticed a white film had formed on the pan. Do you know what that is? Is that the milk fat or something else? I ask because I wonder how much of the non-water content gets lost to the pan in that; it could turn out to be rather counter-productive. – Fimpellizzeri May 31 '21 at 01:04
  • @Fimpellizieri it is milk proteins, they tend to form this layer on the bottom when boiled. It is what will scorch. As the answer says, if you don't want that to happen, you have to use the slow method. – rumtscho May 31 '21 at 09:08
  • @rumtscho I don't think I really mind the scorch-y taste; it didn't burn and a hint of caramel actually sounds nice. I was just wondering if the flavor profile turns out to be less milk-y because of the content lost stuck to the pan. I might try the slow method some other time for comparison purposes. – Fimpellizzeri May 31 '21 at 14:36
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I've heard that some people simply put milk on a large pan or container and leave it there for some hours to naturally evaporate without heating it up or anything. Did anyone here try that before?

Grace
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    This will most likely get closed, as you didn't use the [ask question](http://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/ask). And there's a good chance that people who have tried it wouldn't be around to answer the question, as room temperature milk for hours is a major risk for bacterial growth (and not necessarily the good kind if you didn't heat to sterilize, and then inoculate it with the one you want, like in cheese or yogurt making) – Joe Oct 28 '15 at 00:19
  • On second thought ... I guess you did answer it by second-hand knowledge ... but I'm still going to say this would be a very, very risky idea. – Joe Oct 28 '15 at 00:20
  • `Did anyone here try that before?` -- Yes. The result is usually called [farmer cheese](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farmer_cheese) or simply "sour milk", depending on the bacteria present during the process. – Flimzy Oct 28 '15 at 18:56
  • I'm very sorry. The video I watched mentioned this so quietly and quickly I couldn't hear and didn't realize that they said that. Anyway, I tried simmering the milk, but the milk turned into odd, spongy solids, and I left it out too long. Whoops! – Grace Nov 21 '15 at 06:08