See all Evaporated Milk conversions
Open the full ingredient guide for density notes, common cup weights, and the most-used conversion paths.
Evaporated Milk ingredient guide →1 teaspoon of evaporated milk = 5.3 grams. That's based on a 252 g per cup baseline. Because evaporated milk can shift with temperature and texture state, weighing is usually more accurate than measuring by volume.
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We have 2 tested substitutions with exact ratios.
Find a substitute →Open the full ingredient guide for density notes, common cup weights, and the most-used conversion paths.
Evaporated Milk ingredient guide →Start with Heavy Cream + Milk using 1/2 cup cream + 1/2 cup whole milk, then see the full substitute hub for more tested options.
Open Evaporated Milk substitutions →Jump straight to the recipe-specific page for ratios and adjustment notes in cakes.
Evaporated Milk substitute for cakes →| teaspoons | grams |
|---|---|
| 1/4 teaspoons | 1.0 grams |
| 1/2 teaspoons | 3.0 grams |
| 1 teaspoons | 5.0 grams |
| 2 teaspoons | 10.0 grams |
| 3 teaspoons | 15.0 grams |
Ingredient-specific, density-based conversions for baking
Evaporated Milk changes behavior based on temperature and fat state.
Evaporated Milk influences richness, tenderness, and structure. Consistent conversion helps maintain stable emulsions and predictable bake results.
Cow's milk with about 60% of water removed. Unsweetened, sterilised, and canned for shelf stability. Use this conversion as a practical starting point for scaling recipes with evaporated milk.
1 teaspoon of evaporated milk is 5.3 grams using a 252 g per cup baseline.
Evaporated Milk changes behavior based on temperature and fat state. In practice, temperature and texture state can shift results between kitchens.
Usually yes. Weight-based measuring reduces shifts from temperature and texture state, so your results are more repeatable.
For laminated dough: temperature and exact fat mass impact layer definition.
For creaming methods: weight keeps butter-to-sugar balance stable.
For custards: tight dairy ratios reduce curdling risk.
Baseline on this page: 1 cup evaporated milk = 252g. Real-world range can shift by about 6% because temperature and fat phase (solid vs softened vs melted) change effective volume.
Example for 2 cups: baseline 504g, common range 474g-534g. If your bake is texture-sensitive, start with the lower bound and adjust after a test batch.