I'm going to stay off dairy for a while... I may consider adding grass - fed butter or ghee and possibly at some point heavy cream but right now I just don't feel the need for it, I'm completely happy with coconut milk and coconut
oil as substitutions.
Not exact matches
Haven't made yet... but wondering if coconut
oil can be used
as a
substitution for half the butter.
Mine worked with these
substitutions - of - necessity: 1 Baked in 5 ″ x 9 ″ glass loaf pan 2 Used parchment paper, not greased pan 3 ran out of coconut
oil so it was 3/4 parts coconut
oil, 1/4 olive
oil 4 Once again, used Trader Joe's almond meal, didn't have blanched alm flour on hand today Yes,
as you commented jgentry, it was the perfect blend of almond and coconut flours so
as not to be almond flour dry or c - flour sweet.
This is a great recipe
as is, and also works well with some healty
substitutions (1/2 whole wheat flour 1/2 white, 1/2 applesauce for the
oil).
Just made these and they came out very well, even with a couple of
substitutions (I live in Turkey, couldn't find «all purpose flour», what they have here just translates
as «flour», plus couldn't find coconut
oil so I used hazelnut
oil).
I made these the other day — had a few
substitutions as I used coconut
oil instead of grapeseed and also I subbed another sweetener for Agave (a mix of splenda, Xylitol, and Erythitol)
as I can't use Agave.
Substitutions • Chipotle: fresh jalapeño, seeded and chopped, or 1 teaspoon chili powder • Agave nectar: coconut nectar or any other liquid sweetener • Tomato: 1 1/2 cups grape or cherry tomatoes, halved • Hempseeds: sesame seeds Chef's Tip: Feel free to reduce the
oil to 2 tablespoons, adding a splash more water
as necessary to get the desired consistency.
I did make a few
substitutions though — I used coconut
oil instead of the palm
oil (i added about a teaspoon more coconut
oil once I had mixed everything together because the mixture was a bit too crumbly and dry for my liking) and I also added a teaspoon or so more of honey due to the dryness of the mixture... I didn't use any white chocolate chips, and used vegan dark chocolate that i chopped up because i didn't have «chips»
as such....
made these today with many
substitutions as our cupboard was somewhat bare almond butter for the peanut molasses for the maple olive
oil in lieu of canola buckwheat and sorghum flour for wheat cream for the vegan milk
I don't have any
substitutions (except if you want to make a totally different deodorant that doesn't contains oils, such
as those with witch hazel or magnesium
oil) BUT castile soap is a life - saver for removing
oil stains.
* My
substitutions: I used extra-virgin olive
oil instead of avocado or flax
oil,
as that is what I happened to have at home.
For example, olives (Olea europaea) and their cold - pressed
oil are prized
as a good culinary
substitution to lower LDL cholesterol levels.
Therefore, people with reduced production can use jojoba
oil as a sebum
substitution.
For those that like to know about
substitutions — I always use honey instead of agave nectar and did so here; I did use grapeseed
oil here because it was the first time and I wanted to not vary the recipe the first time much but I will use coconut or palm
oil next time
as they seem to work fine in the other recipes I've tried so far from this blog.
We recommend using one of these two oils, but other pet - safe
substitutions such
as coconut
oil can be made at your own discretion.
We find (i) measurements at all scales show that official inventories consistently underestimate actual CH4 [methane] emissions, with the natural gas and
oil sectors
as important contributors; (ii) many independent experiments suggest that a small number of «super-emitters» could be responsible for a large fraction of leakage; (iii) recent regional atmospheric studies with very high emissions rates are unlikely to be representative of typical natural gas system leakage rates; and (iv) assessments using 100 - year impact indicators show system - wide leakage is unlikely to be large enough to negate climate benefits of coal - to - natural gas
substitution.
For this reason, we argue that focus on
oil futures should shift away from attention on
oil as purely a scarcity problem toward a focus on managing the impacts (both social and environmental) of
oil substitution.
This is either regarded
as being a good thing enabling the eventual
substitution of declining crude
oil and natural gas supplies.
Fuel
Substitution: The
oil and natural gas industry has spent nearly $ 25 billion developing substitute and less carbon intensive fuels, such
as liquefied natural gas and reducing fugitive gas emissions.
Consider a case study of
substitution offered by some of the Breakthrough Institute scholars who signed the Ecomodernist Manifesto: the replacement of whale
oil by fuels such
as kerosene, which, they argue, helped spare many species of whales from extinction at the harpoons of the whalers in the nineteenth century.