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Mumsnet Discussions: Food : How to bake for lactose intolerant? Does a dairy-free butter exist? (25 messages)
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Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By greenday on Thu 15-May-08 14:23:55
Got a friend visiting over the weekend. So I've stocked up on soya milk but thought it would be nice to bake my 'famous' chocolate orange potato cake for her but I'm not sure what to use in replacement of butter.
Any ideas? Thanks!
Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By Scootergrrrl on Thu 15-May-08 14:24:52
Vegetable oil maybe?
Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By Scootergrrrl on Thu 15-May-08 14:25:08
Or soya marg?
Contact the poster See this person's profile Contact mumsnet about this post By Sazisi on Thu 15-May-08 14:25:45
light olive oil (ie the cheap stuff) works beautifully
Contact the poster See this person's profile Contact mumsnet about this post By CantSleepWontSleep on Thu 15-May-08 14:26:28
Pure do a dairy free spread or 3 (I used to use the sunflower one, in an orange pot), and vitalite is also dairy free.
Contact the poster See this person's profile Contact mumsnet about this post By Sazisi on Thu 15-May-08 14:26:43
chocolate orange potato cake sounds yummy...
Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By Miggsie on Thu 15-May-08 14:27:04
use soya marg, anything labelled "suitable for vegans" as veggie oil stuff often has whey powder added.
Trex is good for pastry
Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By greenday on Thu 15-May-08 14:27:20
Thanks SG, I saw dairy-free margarine but not entirely convinced that it will do the cake justice. Thought I'd check on MN first before settling for it as a last resort.
Any ideas or advice, keep them coming please! Thanks!!! x
Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By greenday on Thu 15-May-08 14:29:52
Ooh, thanks everyone! One more question - the recipe requires mixing butter and flour till crumbly ... so if I used oil or margarine, would it be alright? I guess I should just bite the bullet and try ... but it would be nice to get all you baking experts' opinions!
Contact the poster See this person's profile Contact mumsnet about this post By CantSleepWontSleep on Thu 15-May-08 14:30:20
Pure and vitalite do both work really well, I promise!
Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By HumphreyCushion on Thu 15-May-08 14:33:59
Yes, Pure is fab.
Contact the poster See this person's profile Contact mumsnet about this post By PrettyCandles on Thu 15-May-08 14:36:09
You can replace the butter in most sponge cakes with 4/5 the weight of oil. Ie instead of 5oz butter, use 4oz oil.
Contact the poster See this person's profile Contact mumsnet about this post By barnstaple on Thu 15-May-08 15:09:32
There are loads of non-dairy butters and they're great, don't taste different in cakes. I did a whole birthday party - biscuits, cakes, sarnies - using Pure and no one noticed, no kids going 'this tastes funny' etc. Highly recommend it.
Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By phlossie on Thu 15-May-08 16:31:54
Greenday - could I be cheeky and ask for the recipe? I'm intrigued...
Contact the poster See this person's profile Contact mumsnet about this post By NotQuiteCockney on Thu 15-May-08 16:44:00
If someone is lactose intolerant, butter in a cake shouldn't really cause them any problem - there's barely any lactose in butter, and cooking lactose tends to change it, imo and ime.

Is this a dairy allergy maybe?

At any rate, lots of margarine has some dairy in it, but Pure, as barnstaple says, is fine.

I wouldn't substitute a liquid fat for a solid one, tbh - they have different qualities, and a cake recipe that calls for butter, needs that or something similar.

There are loads of cake recipes that use liquid fat (safflower oil, whatever).
Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By Thankyouandgoodnight on Thu 15-May-08 19:41:18
Go to boots and buy them some drops to take just before eating the cake. The pharmacist will tell you what they are - they're actually for babies but you just double the dose for adults - it worked on my MIL. Colief or something....
Contact the poster See this person's profile Contact mumsnet about this post By SmugColditz on Thu 15-May-08 19:42:59
Vitalite is lovely, I buy it out of choice. It has the same sort of salt ratio as butter, whereas 'healthier' light marges don't.
Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By greenday on Fri 16-May-08 14:05:29
Thank you everyone for your response! I bought Pure today and I'm looking forward to trying it out (my local Sainsbury didn't have Vitalite)!

NCQ - you're right, I think I got it wrong. Its a dairy allergy, not lactose intolerance.

Phlossie - its a yummy cake, imo. Can't take the credit though, its from riverford. I'll find it now and attach it. People get a bit put off by the potato but you can hardly taste it, yet it lends to the moist texture without it being too buttery and sickly.
Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By greenday on Fri 16-May-08 14:09:06
www.riverford.co.uk/recipes/recipe.php?recipeid=555&catid=8

Did i mention too? It's such an easy cake to make.
Contact the poster See this person's profile Contact mumsnet about this post By Lulumama on Fri 16-May-08 14:11:12
if you have a kosher deli or live in a biown you can buy tomor margarine, which is a butter substitute suitable for baking, comes in blocks like butter or in a tub like marge.
Contact the poster See this person's profile Contact mumsnet about this post By Lulumama on Fri 16-May-08 14:11:33
*biown???? should be big town ! LOL!
Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By Medowflowers on Fri 16-May-08 14:13:00
I have used teh Pure Soya loads of times - I didn't find much difference with the end result when using it for baking - Everytinhg still turned out nicely and tasted lovely. smile
Contact the poster Contact mumsnet about this post By Medowflowers on Fri 16-May-08 14:13:35
Excellent typing! blush
Contact the poster See this person's profile Contact mumsnet about this post By Megglevache on Fri 16-May-08 14:14:36
Message withdrawn
Contact the poster See this person's profile Contact mumsnet about this post By jamila169 on Fri 16-May-08 14:18:11
i always have both pure spreads in- the soya one is superb in cakes because it's quite creamy tasting, for pastry, i use the sunflower version, it's not as 'wet', oh and alpro sweetened sya milk is the dogs for sweet stuff, it's got a vanilla taste to it


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