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Baking Ingredient Substitutions Guide

Mid-recipe and out of eggs, butter or buttermilk? Search over 50 tested substitutions across eggs, dairy, flour, sugar, leavening agents and chocolate — with ratios, notes and dietary flags.

10 ingredients covered
50+ substitutes with ratios
Vegan & GF options flagged

Egg

1 large egg

Eggs
  • Aquafaba
    Vegan

    3 tbsp

    Liquid from canned chickpeas. Whips up like egg whites.

    Best for: meringues, macarons

  • Flax egg
    Vegan

    1 tbsp ground flax + 3 tbsp water (sit 5 min)

    Gel forms after resting; adds nuttiness.

    Best for: dense baked goods

  • Chia egg
    Vegan

    1 tbsp chia seeds + 3 tbsp water (sit 5 min)

    Similar to flax egg; neutral flavour.

  • Unsweetened applesauce

    ¼ cup

    Adds moisture and mild sweetness; reduces rise slightly.

    Best for: muffins, quick breads

  • Mashed banana

    ¼ cup

    Adds banana flavour and sweetness; best in flavour-forward recipes.

  • Commercial egg replacer
    Vegan

    Follow packet instructions

    Most blends work 1:1; check brand for ratios.

  • Plain yogurt

    ¼ cup

    Adds moisture and a slight tang. Use full-fat for best results.

  • Silken tofu (blended)
    Vegan

    ¼ cup

    Neutral flavour; creates dense, moist texture.

Buttermilk

1 cup buttermilk

Buttermilk
  • Milk + white vinegar

    1 cup milk + 1 tbsp white vinegar (sit 5 min)

    Curdles slightly to mimic buttermilk acidity. Works perfectly in pancakes and cakes.

  • Milk + lemon juice

    1 cup milk + 1 tbsp lemon juice (sit 5 min)

    Same principle as vinegar substitute; adds very slight citrus note.

  • Plant milk + vinegar
    Vegan

    1 cup soy or oat milk + 1 tbsp white vinegar (sit 5 min)

    Soy milk curdles most convincingly.

  • Plain yogurt (thinned)

    ¾ cup yogurt + ¼ cup milk

    Richer result; great for scones and Irish soda bread.

  • Sour cream (thinned)

    ¾ cup sour cream + ¼ cup milk or water

    Very rich; excellent in chocolate cake.

Whole Milk

1 cup whole milk

Dairy
  • Oat milk
    Vegan

    1:1

    Slight natural sweetness; closest texture to whole milk for baking.

  • Almond milk
    Vegan

    1:1

    Thinner than dairy milk; may affect crumb slightly.

  • Soy milk
    Vegan

    1:1

    Highest protein of plant milks; closest to dairy in baking performance.

  • Coconut milk
    Vegan

    1:1

    Adds coconut flavour and richness. Full-fat version preferred.

  • 2% milk + cream

    1 cup 2% milk + 1 tbsp heavy cream

    Mimics the fat content of whole milk without buying a separate carton.

  • Evaporated milk (diluted)

    ½ cup evaporated milk + ½ cup water

    Great pantry substitute; slightly richer than fresh milk.

Butter

1 cup butter

Fats
  • Coconut oil
    Vegan

    1:1

    Solid at room temperature like butter; adds mild coconut flavour.

  • Vegetable shortening
    Vegan

    1:1

    Neutral flavour; great for flaky pastry and pie crusts.

  • Applesauce

    ½ cup

    Reduces fat significantly; keeps baked goods moist. Best in lower-fat recipes.

    Best for: muffins, quick breads

  • Greek yogurt

    ½ cup

    Reduces fat; adds tang and protein. Use full-fat for best results.

  • Mashed avocado
    Vegan

    1:1

    Provides healthy fats; works best where butter flavour is not dominant.

    Best for: brownies, chocolate baked goods

  • Olive oil
    Vegan

    ¾ cup

    Use light/mild olive oil for less flavour impact.

    Best for: savoury bakes

All-Purpose Flour

1 cup all-purpose flour

Flour
  • Bread flour

    1:1

    Higher gluten content produces a chewier, denser crumb.

  • Cake flour

    1 cup + 2 tbsp cake flour

    Lower protein for a lighter, more tender crumb. Ideal for delicate cakes.

  • Whole wheat flour (partial)

    ½ cup whole wheat + ½ cup AP flour

    Full substitution makes very dense baked goods; partial swap adds nutrition without sacrificing texture.

  • Almond flour
    GF

    1:1 by weight

    Much moister result — reduce other liquids. Cannot provide gluten structure; add binder.

  • Oat flour
    GF

    1⅓ cups oat flour per 1 cup AP

    Use certified gluten-free oats if needed. Produces a tender, slightly nutty result.

  • Gluten-free flour blend
    GF

    1:1

    Only works 1:1 if the blend already contains xanthan gum. Check the label.

White Sugar

1 cup white sugar

Sugar
  • Brown sugar
    Vegan

    1:1

    Adds molasses flavour and extra moisture; baked goods will be slightly darker.

  • Coconut sugar
    Vegan

    1:1

    Lower GI; subtle caramel flavour. May slightly reduce spread in cookies.

  • Honey

    ¾ cup honey + reduce other liquids by ¼ cup + add ¼ tsp baking soda

    Higher moisture; speeds browning. Reduce oven temp by 25°F.

  • Maple syrup
    Vegan

    ¾ cup + reduce other liquids by 3 tbsp

    Adds maple flavour; baked goods brown more quickly.

  • Agave nectar
    Vegan

    ⅔ cup

    Sweeter than sugar; use less and reduce other liquids slightly.

  • Stevia / erythritol blend

    Follow packet conversion chart

    Keto-friendly; may not caramelise or brown like sugar. Texture can differ.

Baking Powder

1 tsp baking powder

Leavening
  • Baking soda + cream of tartar

    ¼ tsp baking soda + ½ tsp cream of tartar

    Most direct substitute; use immediately after mixing.

  • Baking soda + buttermilk

    ¼ tsp baking soda + ½ cup buttermilk (reduce other liquids)

    The acid in buttermilk activates the soda. Works well in pancakes.

  • Baking soda + lemon juice

    ¼ tsp baking soda + 1 tsp lemon juice

    Adds a very slight citrus note. React immediately — bake at once.

Baking Soda

1 tsp baking soda

Leavening
  • Baking powder

    3 tsp baking powder

    Less effective; may produce a slightly metallic taste in large quantities. Adjust salt if recipe calls for it.

  • Potassium bicarbonate

    ½ tsp

    Sodium-free alternative; good for low-sodium diets. Available at health food stores.

Unsweetened Chocolate

1 oz unsweetened chocolate

Chocolate
  • Cocoa powder + butter/oil

    3 tbsp cocoa powder + 1 tbsp butter or oil

    Closest in flavour; cocoa provides intensity, fat provides richness.

  • Carob powder + oil
    Vegan

    3 tbsp carob powder + 1 tbsp oil

    Naturally sweet; caffeine-free. Slightly different flavour profile.

Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips

1 cup semi-sweet chips

Chocolate
  • Chopped dark chocolate (70%)

    1 cup chopped

    Richer, deeper flavour. Chop to similar size as chips for even distribution.

  • Carob chips
    Vegan

    1 cup

    Caffeine-free, naturally sweeter. Available at health food stores.

  • Dark chocolate chips

    1 cup

    Slightly more bitter; works in any recipe calling for semi-sweet.

Showing 10 of 10 ingredients

Why Baking Substitutions Matter

Baking is a science, but it is also forgiving — if you know the rules. Every ingredient plays a specific role: eggs provide structure and bind ingredients together; butter contributes fat, flavour and tenderness; leavening agents create lift; dairy adds moisture and acidity. When you swap one ingredient for another, the key is understanding what job that ingredient does and finding a substitute that does the same job well enough. This guide is built on tested ratios so you can bake with confidence even when your pantry is missing something.

Egg-Free and Vegan Baking

Eggs are one of the most complex ingredients to replace because they do several things at once: they bind, they add moisture, they help with rise and they provide structure. The right substitute depends entirely on the recipe. Aquafaba — the liquid drained from a can of chickpeas — is the gold standard for recipes that need the airy, whippable quality of egg whites, such as meringues and macarons. For binding in dense baked goods like banana bread, brownies or oat cookies, a flax egg or chia egg works exceptionally well. Silken tofu blended smooth is a reliable neutral-flavour binder for cheesecakes and custard-style desserts. Mashed banana and applesauce both add moisture and act as binders, though they do contribute their own flavour — plan around that rather than fighting it.

Dairy-Free Baking Tips

Plant-based milks have improved enormously and most work as direct 1:1 swaps for dairy milk. Soy milk performs best in baking because of its higher protein content, which behaves more like cow's milk when heated. Oat milk is second best and adds a very slight natural sweetness. Both soy and oat milk curdle convincingly when combined with a tablespoon of white vinegar or lemon juice, making them excellent for homemade buttermilk substitutes. For butter, refined coconut oil (solid at room temperature) is the most reliable 1:1 swap in most baked goods — just be aware that unrefined coconut oil carries a noticeable coconut flavour. For a lower-fat option, Greek yogurt replaces up to half the butter in muffins and quick breads while keeping the crumb moist and tender.

Gluten-Free Flour Swaps

Replacing all-purpose flour with a gluten-free alternative requires more care than most other substitutions, because gluten provides the elastic network that gives baked goods their structure. A quality gluten-free flour blend that already contains xanthan gum — a polysaccharide that mimics gluten's binding properties — can often substitute 1:1. Almond flour produces a wonderfully moist, rich result but cannot provide structure on its own; it works best in denser recipes like flourless chocolate cake, almond cookies and frangipane. Oat flour (from certified gluten-free oats) is ideal for muffins, banana bread and soft cookies. When experimenting with gluten-free baking, start by replacing only part of the flour and adjust from there — small changes yield big insights.

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