light whipping cream
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: * A type of dairy cream containing a specific, moderate amount of milk fat (typically between 30% and 36%), which gives it the ability to be aerated and thickened into whipped cream when beaten.
Usage
- Light whipping cream is the specific ingredient called for in recipes where the cream needs to hold soft peaks, such as for topping desserts or folding into mousses.
- It is distinct from other creams based on its butterfat content, being richer than half-and-half or light cream but less rich than heavy whipping cream.
Examples
- "For the strawberry shortcake, you will need one cup of light whipping cream."
- "The recipe failed because I used table cream instead of light whipping cream; it didn't whip properly."
- "Light whipping cream is often sold next to heavy cream in the dairy aisle."
Advanced Usage
- In a culinary or food science context, the term precisely denotes a product standardized by its milk fat percentage, which is critical for achieving specific textures in professional baking and pastry work.
Variants and Related Words
- Whipping cream: Often used interchangeably, though in some regions or contexts, "whipping cream" may implicitly refer to "light whipping cream."
- Heavy whipping cream (or heavy cream): A related but distinct product with a higher butterfat content (36% to 40% or more), which whips up thicker and holds its shape longer.
- Light cream: A different product with a lower fat content (around 18-30%), which cannot be whipped.
Synonyms
- Whipping cream (in general, non-specific usage)
Antonyms / Contrasting Terms
- Heavy cream / Heavy whipping cream (higher fat content)
- Light cream / Coffee cream (lower fat content, non-whipable)
- Half-and-half (much lower fat content, non-whipable)
Noun
- cream that has enough butterfat (30% to 36%) to be whipped