Low-Fat powdered (instant) milk can be stored
for many years if you use an oxygen absorber and an air tight container and/or
mylar bag, so many people who store food for emergencies store this. It can be
used to make an evaporated milk equivalent, ricotta-type cheese, sweetened
condensed milk, caramel sauce, yogurt, sour cream, etc. Some of these aren't as
good as the real thing but will do in a pinch, although I have to say the
caramel sauce is awfully tasty. ;) It's nice to have some options in
emergencies and hard times. You don't see powdered whole milk often, but there
is a good reason. Products with fat in them don't store well.
I heard on the news that milk prices may sore in the new year. Here is a New York Times article. (click here)
Update, another article. (click here)
Update, a compromise being reached on the farm bill? (click here)
One thing to keep in mind is, you can "save" and "pin" as many recipes as you want on the internet; but if the power goes out for a long time, how will you get to them? It's a very good idea to copy basic recipes for the foods that you have stored. It may even be a good idea to practice making some of these things and will give you more confidence in it.
I actually haven't stored any powdered milk yet because it seems so expensive, and I'm on a strict budget. At least it seems expensive to me since you are buying a box of something powdered as opposed to cans of evaporated milk for around 75 cents each. Then I thought, well silly girl, that could be one of your projects! Crunch the numbers and figure it out! Powdered milk is $7.78 for a small box (1 pound & 9.6 ounces) here at Wal-Mart. I live in a small town area, so we don't have a lot of big warehouse type stores or discount stores. I normally only buy powdered milk to make a copy-cat toffee cappuccino recipe to stretch out the store brand cappuccino that I like to buy. I don't drink white milk (just don't like it); so, if I have a recipe that calls for milk and don't have it in the house, I just use evaporated milk (1/2 water and 1/2 evaporated milk). Also, I live 30 miles from where I buy my groceries, so it's nice to know substitute recipes I can use in a pinch.
As usual, there is conflicting information on the shelf life of non-fat powdered milk. From what I've read, if stored properly in air-tight containers and/or mylar bags with an oxygen absorber, it can last anywhere from 10-25 years, which is a long time either way. Evaporated milk is supposed to be good for 1-2 years but is thought to be good for at least several years in an emergency situation. The taste just wouldn't be as good. You would have to use your own judgment.
So, I crunched the numbers. The box of powdered milk in my area, as I said above, is $7.78 for a small box, and a can of evaporated milk is around 75 cents (Not sale prices. Of course it's better when you can get it on sale). Anyway, if you use the powdered milk to make 1-1/2 cups of evaporated milk (equivalent), which is how much is in a can of evaporated milk, it came out to about 73 cents, so about the same price BUT powdered milk lasts much longer in storage. I like the evaporated milk much better for recipes, but I should start storing some powdered milk too. FYI, 1 cup of milk from powdered milk is about 24 cents.
Here are some recipes I tried:
Evaporated Milk
Update, a compromise being reached on the farm bill? (click here)
One thing to keep in mind is, you can "save" and "pin" as many recipes as you want on the internet; but if the power goes out for a long time, how will you get to them? It's a very good idea to copy basic recipes for the foods that you have stored. It may even be a good idea to practice making some of these things and will give you more confidence in it.
I actually haven't stored any powdered milk yet because it seems so expensive, and I'm on a strict budget. At least it seems expensive to me since you are buying a box of something powdered as opposed to cans of evaporated milk for around 75 cents each. Then I thought, well silly girl, that could be one of your projects! Crunch the numbers and figure it out! Powdered milk is $7.78 for a small box (1 pound & 9.6 ounces) here at Wal-Mart. I live in a small town area, so we don't have a lot of big warehouse type stores or discount stores. I normally only buy powdered milk to make a copy-cat toffee cappuccino recipe to stretch out the store brand cappuccino that I like to buy. I don't drink white milk (just don't like it); so, if I have a recipe that calls for milk and don't have it in the house, I just use evaporated milk (1/2 water and 1/2 evaporated milk). Also, I live 30 miles from where I buy my groceries, so it's nice to know substitute recipes I can use in a pinch.
As usual, there is conflicting information on the shelf life of non-fat powdered milk. From what I've read, if stored properly in air-tight containers and/or mylar bags with an oxygen absorber, it can last anywhere from 10-25 years, which is a long time either way. Evaporated milk is supposed to be good for 1-2 years but is thought to be good for at least several years in an emergency situation. The taste just wouldn't be as good. You would have to use your own judgment.
So, I crunched the numbers. The box of powdered milk in my area, as I said above, is $7.78 for a small box, and a can of evaporated milk is around 75 cents (Not sale prices. Of course it's better when you can get it on sale). Anyway, if you use the powdered milk to make 1-1/2 cups of evaporated milk (equivalent), which is how much is in a can of evaporated milk, it came out to about 73 cents, so about the same price BUT powdered milk lasts much longer in storage. I like the evaporated milk much better for recipes, but I should start storing some powdered milk too. FYI, 1 cup of milk from powdered milk is about 24 cents.
Here are some recipes I tried:
Evaporated Milk
1-1/3 cups water
1 cup powdered milk
Combine. This makes the same amount as a
12-ounce can of evaporated milk. (If you have evaporated milk and want to
substitute it for regular milk in a recipe, just use 1/2 water and 1/2
evaporated milk. I do it all the time.)
Curds & Whey, Ricotta-type
cheese, and Cottage Cheese
6 cups of water
3 cups of powdered milk
1/2 cup white vinegar
Combine the water and powdered milk in a pot.
Cook on low to medium heat, stirring occasionally, until it is hot but not
scalding, about 120 degrees. Take it off the heat and mix in the vinegar. Let
it sit for a few minutes, and the curds will separate from the liquid whey.
Strain it and rinse the curds under cool water. To make a kind of cottage cheese
(ish), just add more milk back into it to make it creamy.
I found this article on what you can do with the whey. (click here)
I found this article on what you can do with the whey. (click here)
Bringing it up to about 120 degrees.
Curds separating from the whey. (Where is Miss Muffet?)
(I only made 1/2 a batch, which came out to a little over
1/4 cup pressed or 1/2 cup fluffed up like if you
wanted to use it as a substitute for ricotta cheese.)
Curds
Mixed in a little milk to make it a cottage cheese consistency.
To take it one step further:
Mock Sour
Cream
make the cottage cheese above
1 cup cottage cheese
2 Tbsp milk
1 Tbsp lemon juice
Blend in a blender until creamy or with a hand
mixer.
This isn't that great in my opinion but better
than none at all. :)
(I make mock sour cream from real cottage cheese sometimes, and it's pretty good and less calories.)
Sweetened Condensed
Milk
3 Tbsp butter or shortening
1/2 cup water
1 cup sugar
dash of salt
1 cup powdered milk
Melt the butter in a pot and then mix in all but
the powdered milk and bring to a full rolling boil, stirring occasionally. Turn
off the heat. Cool slightly and then add 1 cup of powdered milk and beat until
smooth. This makes 1 cup. It will keep in the fridge for 2 weeks, or you can
freeze it
(To make sweetened condensed milk out of
evaporated milk, use 1-1/4 cup sugar in 1 cup of the milk and heat as above to
melt the sugar.)
I could have blended it a little smoother but
I continued on and made it into caramel anyway.
Now for the naughty part, looks what's next.
;)
Caramel
Just make the sweetened condensed milk above and
boil down, stirring constantly, until it thickens. For me, it took about 10
minutes. Note, it will thicken more as it cools of course.
(You can also use the evaporated milk as above,
1 cup with 1/1-4 cup sugar and heat to make sweetened condensed milk and then
continue to cook down to caramel.)
The texture isn't as creamy smooth as
the real thing but still very tasty. I keep nibbling. lol It
actually got a little thick after it cooled all the way,
so I'll cook it a little less next time.
"Butter" from Dry Milk? ....not so much. I found this recipe for it and was really hoping it would work well as I love butter. I thought, in an emergency situation, if you had powdered milk stored but was out of butter and just wanted something with a buttery taste and consistency to put on your food, you could do this; but it didn't work well. I tried 1/2 a batch and it wouldn't thicken. I tried it again, just 1/4 batch since I didn't want to waste the ingredients, and used just a little less water and oil; and even after beating it with the electric mixer on medium for 15 minutes and then on high for another 5 minutes, it wasn't even as thick as sour cream and didn't taste very good. To be fair, I didn't have the butter flavoring to add; but still, I don't think it would we worth the while. That was with the electric mixer too, not the hand mixer if the power was out. Also, I tried to search for other recipes like it and didn't see much; so that's another big red flag to me that it doesn't work very well. You can try it if you like, 3/4 cup powdered milk, 1/3 cup water, 1/4 cup oil. Food coloring, salt, and butter flavoring optional.
Here are a few more recipes I didn't try yet:
Home-made Yogurt (really
just stretching out a small amount of store-bought yogurt)
1 quart (4 cups) reconstituted milk
1 quart (4 cups) reconstituted milk
another 1/2 cup of the powdered
milk.
1/4 cup store bought yogurt with active
cultures
For the quart of reconstituted milk (1 cup is
1/3 cup powdered milk and 7/8 cup water), so measure out 1-1/3 cups of the
powdered milk and add enough water to equal a quart or 4 cups. Mix in the 1/4
cup yogurt and let sit in a warm area (80-110 degrees) for 6-8 hours. Then,
chill. This can also be used as a sour cream substitute or to stretch mayo.
Yogurt Cheese
Make the yogurt above and let drain overnight in
cheese cloth or other cloth (an old clean T-shirt). This can be used to
substitute for cream cheese or thick sour cream.
Whipped
Topping
1/2 cup water
1/2 cup powdered milk
2 Tbsp sugar
1 tsp lemon juice
1/2 tsp vanilla
Measure 1/2 cup of water into a large bowl and
put in the freezer. When ice starts to form around the edges, take it out and
add 1/2 cup powdered milk. Whip it with a hand mixer (hopefully the electric is
working or use a manual beater) until light and fluffy. Then add 2 Tbsp of
sugar, 1 tsp lemon juice, and 1/2 tsp of vanilla. Beat until it is a
consistency you like.
Buttermilk
1 cup milk
1 Tbsp vinegar.
I always make my own buttermilk when a recipe
calls for it simply by adding some vinegar to milk. You can also do this with
milk made from powdered milk. Stir in the vinegar.
If you have store-bought buttermilk and want to
stretch it further, mix 1/2 cup of the store-bought and 4 cups of reconstituted
powdered milk and let it sit at room
temperature overnight. Then refrigerate.
Sweet Vanilla Milk
1-1/3 cups powdered milk
2 Tbsp sugar
2 Tbsp coffee creamer
1/4 tsp vanilla
4 cups water
Mix together the dry ingredients and then add the vanilla and a little of
the water to dissolve and mix it well and then add the rest of the water and
stir.
Flavored Milk
You can heat a cup of reconstituted milk and stir
in a spoonful of molasses or add a spoonful of honey or chocolate syrup or a
couple drops of vanilla.
bada bing, bada boom
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