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The next time you want to substitute an ingredient in a recipe, don't
panic. The originator of the recipe will never know! When you substitute,
you improvise; you create; and you are the artist in charge.
Use the chart below as a starting point for brainstorming
alternatives. The process might look a bit intimidating but is easy once
you dive in and start asking questions such as: What do I really want
this dish to taste like? What textures do I like? Why did the recipe
writer put all of these things in here, anyway?
Here are some general guidelines about making substitutions in recipes.
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 | Try to keep ingredients within the same ethnic category. Ethnic flavor
combinations have been developed over centuries and blend together
naturally. If you are making a Mexican dish and don't want to use meat,
use traditional Mexican proteins and starches such as posole (hominy),
pinto beans and black beans, not Asian mung beans or Indian lentils. |
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 | Dissect the basic flavors of the dish. If you don't have a certain
flavoring, ask yourself if it is basically sweet, salty, sour, bitter or
spicy? Think of something in your cupboard from the same category. |
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 | Substituting starches and proteins makes less of a difference in overall
taste than spices and flavorings. |
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 | Try the pantry approach to cooking. If you find yourself continually
missing key ingredients, analyze your pantry and consider restocking it. |
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 | Assemble herbs, spices and flavorings which are complementary in
groupings in your pantry. That way, when you are experimenting with a
dish, Italian, for example, your Italian seasonings such as basil,
parsley, garlic and oregano will be grouped together, and you can
substitute accordingly. |
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 | Keep staples such as flours, oil, beans and grains on hand so you don't
have to run out to the store at the last minute. |
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Meat-free
| Ingredient |
Substitute |
| Gelatin |
Agar-agar (sea vegetable powder or flakes), arrowroot (starchy powder
from tropical tuber), ground nuts and seeds, gums (guar gum is from an
East Indian seed, xanthan gum is from corn), kudzu (starchy powder from
tropical tuber) |
| Meat |
Beans, cheese, seitan (wheat meat), tempeh (cultured soy food), textured vegetable protein
(TVP), tofu |
| Meat, Chicken or Seafood Stock |
Apple, cranberry, orange or pomegranate juice, beer, Dr. Bronner's
mineral tonic, garlic broth, miso (fermented soybean paste) diluted with
water, sherry, vegetable bouillon cubes, vegetable stock, water in which
beans, pasta or vegetables have been cooked, wine |
| Seasoned or Smoked Meats |
For sausage, substitute crumbled tofu seasoned with fennel, parsley and
garlic. For smoked meats, substitute canned chipotle chilies,
oven-roasted vegetables, toasted nuts, smoked tofu or smoked cheeses |
Vegan
| Ingredient |
Substitute |
| Buttermilk |
Clabbered soymilk (to clabber, mix 2 tsps. lemon juice or white vinegar per cup of soymilk) |
| Cheese |
Soy- and nut-based cheeses |
| Cottage cheese/ricotta |
Crumbled tofu |
| Eggs |
Crumbled or pureed tofu |
| Mayonnaise |
Tofu mayonnaise |
| Milk |
Nut milk, rice milk, soymilk |
Low fat
| Ingredient |
Substitute |
| Creamed soups and sauces |
Arrowroot (starchy powder from tropical tuber), kudzu.
Use roasted, pureed vegetables as a base, then
finish the soup or sauce with nonfat strained yogurt |
| Oil in baked goods |
Applesauce, pureed bananas, pureed stewed prunes |
| Oil for sautéing |
Apple juice, sherry, vegetable stock, wine |
| Salad dressing |
Citrus juice or cider vinegar thickened with pureed roasted red peppers,
carrots, onions or garlic |
| Sour cream |
Strained nonfat yogurt |
| White sauce |
Pureed white beans |
Yeast-Free
| Ingredient |
Substitute |
| Bread |
Baking soda breads (quick breads), flatbreads, muffins, sprouted breads |
| Salad dressing (wine-or vinegar-based) |
Puree citrus juice and avocado
Puree citrus juice and oil
Mix peeled, cubed fruit such as mango, oranges and papaya into green salads |
| Vinegar |
Cranberry or pomegranate juice, lemon or lime juice, mango powder
(amchoor), tamarind paste or pulp, vitamin C powder (ascorbic acid) |
| White sugar |
Bananas, barley malt, brown rice syrup, date sugar, dried fruits, fruit
juices, maple syrup |
Allergy
| Ingredient |
Substitute |
| Butter |
Clarified butter (milk solids have been removed), olive oil, sesame oil |
| Chocolate |
Carob |
| Cow's milk |
Almond, goat*, rice and soymilk
*Note: A large percentage of persons with allergies to cow's milk are
also allergic to goat milk
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| Cow's milk cheese |
Cheeses made from soy, nuts, goat or sheep milk*
*See note under cow's milk
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| Eggs |
Egg Replacer; liquid lecithin with 2 tsp. guar gum; baking soda plus
pureed fruit or vegetables; and flax seeds pureed with water |
| Peanuts |
Almonds |
| Wheat flour (for baking) |
Barley, buckwheat, corn, kamut, oats, rice, rye, spelt |
| Wheat pasta |
Corn, kamut and spelt pasta, rice noodles |
Ethnic
| Origin |
Ingredient |
Substitute |
| Americas |
Cactus pads (nopales) |
Green beans, okra |
| Chayote squash |
Yellow or green pattypan squash
or zucchini |
| Masa flour |
Mix corn flour with lime juice |
| Poblano or Anaheim chilies |
Minced jalapeno chili and green bell pepper |
| Posole (dried hominy) |
Canned white hominy |
| Asian |
Bok choy (Chinese white cabbage) |
Beet greens, kale and Swiss chard |
| Chinese cooking wine |
Dry sherry |
| Chinese five-spice powder |
Anise seed or star anise, fennel seed, cinnamon, black peppercorns and
whole cloves. (If you have a mortar and pestle or electric spice grinder,
use whole spices, otherwise use ground dry spices.) |
| Galangal (Thai ginger) |
Fresh ginger |
| Lemon grass |
Lemon zest |
| Lotus root |
Jicama or water chestnuts |
| Mirin (Japanese rice wine) |
Sweet white wine |
| Nam pla (Thai fish sauce) |
Soy sauce and lime juice |
| Rice wine vinegar |
Cider vinegar, white wine vinegar |
| Sesame oil |
1 Tbs. sesame seeds fried in 1/2 cup vegetable oil |
| Thai basil |
Italian basil |
| Water chestnuts |
Jicama |
| Indian |
Atta (chapati flour) |
1/2 cup all-purpose unbleached flour plus 1/2 cup sifted whole wheat flour |
| Chana dal |
Split yellow peas |
| Curry powder |
Mix together to taste ground ginger, cumin, coriander, fenugreek,
turmeric and fennel |
| Garam masala (mixed spices) |
1 tsp. cardamom seeds, 1 Tbs. cumin seed, 1 Tbs. coriander seed, 2 tsp.
black peppercorns, 1 tsp. cinnamon, 1 tsp. cloves, 1 tsp. nutmeg. (If you
have a mortar and pestle or electric spice grinder, use whole spices, or
mix together ground dry spices.) |
| Jaggery (coarse palm sugar) |
Date sugar or brown sugar |
| Toor dal, urad dal, mung dal |
Red lentils |
| Mediterranean |
Broccoli rabe (rapini) |
Broccoli plus arugula or dandelion greens |
| Cannellini beans |
Great Northern beans, navy beans, red kidney beans |
| Fava beans, dried |
Butter beans |
| Fava beans, fresh |
Fresh or frozen lima beans |
| Fennel |
Celery plus some fennel or anise seeds |
| Parmesan cheese |
Any hard, aged grating cheese such as Asiago or Romano or aged Monterey jack |
| Pine nuts |
Walnuts or a mixture of walnuts and almonds |
Alcohol-Free
| Ingredient |
Substitute |
| Red wine |
Pomegranate juice; 1/2 cup water plus 2 tsp. balsamic vinegar |
| White wine |
Apple, carrot or bell pepper juice, vegetable stock |
| Wine or beer |
Non-alcoholic wine or beer |
This is based on an article by Gigia Kolouch. She specializes in creating and cooking vegetarian fare,
especially low-cholesterol and allergy-free foods. She is based in Denver, Colorado.
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