I think I was sold the first time I heard someone describe dulce de leche, thick creamy caramel like, what could be better.
From what I have been able to find out, dulce de leche translates to Milk Sweets/Candy, and it is mainly just made of Milk and Sugar.
I first heard out about it after I found out that I was Lactose intolerant, and all the recipes I found for it was made with condense milk, but after days of searching, I found a website explaining how to make it from scratch, so that is what I did and it was heavenly, like nothing I have ever tasted before.
I was very curious after making it the first time, is it as good as when you make it from condense milk? So I decided to make two versions, one from scratch and one with a can of condense milk. I only had a small taste, to make out the difference as it would have given me a tummy ace to eat any, but I found that I actually liked the one I had made from scratch better. The conformation then came a day after when I went to the fridge and saw that most of the one I made from scratch was almost eaten and the other one had hardly been touched, and asking my boyfriend (who can have milk) he confessed that he had been eating it and that he liked the one from scratch best.
The thing is though, that it is a bit of an time consuming thing to make from scratch, but after you have made it a few times, it becomes so easy that you are finding yourself doing other things at the same time, so don't be discouraged and do try it.
There are two thicknesses you can make you dulce de leche in, as a sauce that you can use on ice cream, drizzle on cakes, and so on, or as a soft caramel thickness that you can scoop out with a spoon and use in all sorts of baked goods (or eat raw ;-).
Stir it all together in a pot, and letting it simmer on low-medium heat for 1 hour 15-30 minutes, stirring occasionally every 5 minutes) with a wooden spoon not letting it burn.
When it starts coating the spoon with a thin layer that stays on the spoon, that means it is in the final stages of cooking, and this is where the difference in thickness comes in.
If you want it as a dulce de leche sauce you want to give it a good stir for a minute and then transferee it to a container to cool.
If you want it as a soft caramel consistency, you want to switch the spoon for a whisk and whisk for the next 5 minutes making sure it doesn't burn, and when you start getting lines in the dulce de leche allowing you to see the bottom of the pan, that means that it is done, and you can transferee to baked goods or a container to cool.
When it starts coating the spoon with a thin layer that stays on the spoon, that means it is in the final stages of cooking, and this is where the difference in thickness comes in.
If you want it as a dulce de leche sauce you want to give it a good stir for a minute and then transferee it to a container to cool.
If you want it as a soft caramel consistency, you want to switch the spoon for a whisk and whisk for the next 5 minutes making sure it doesn't burn, and when you start getting lines in the dulce de leche allowing you to see the bottom of the pan, that means that it is done, and you can transferee to baked goods or a container to cool.
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