Dulce de Leche Recipe (2024)

Homemade Dulce de Leche (best authentic recipe)

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This truly is the best recipe for making dulce de leche scratch, that wonderful sweet milk jam from Argentina, where I'm from. In this post, you'll find the most useful tips ever that were handed down from generations in my family making it.

Ingredients

Units

For regular dulce de leche:

  • 4 cups (1 lt.) of whole milk
  • 1 cup (200g) white granulated sugar
  • ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • 3 tablespoons heavy cream (optional; I use it because it makes a richer dulce de leche)
  • Vanilla drops (optional)
  • Pinch of salt (optional)

For thicker dulce de leche:

  • 1 cup regular dulce de leche (homemade or store-bought)
  • 1 tablespoon cornstarch
  • ½ tablespoon milk

Instructions

For regular dulce de leche:

  1. Heat the milk (and cream if using) over medium heat in a large saucepan with high sides and double or triple bottom.
  2. Add the sugar when it’s warm and mix.
  3. Add the baking soda and stir until it dissolves.
  4. When it starts to boil, lower the heat to a minimum but keep it simmering.
  5. At this point is where you can add a plate upside down, glass marbles, or some other small glass object that can withstand the heat. What they do is move around so it ‘stirs’ the mixture and also helps with crystallization.
  6. Let it reduce, stirring every so often, about an hour, or an hour and a half. This depends on the amount of milk you’re using and the amount of heat.
  7. It darkens from the bicarbonate and thickens. If you added a plate you can stir once in a while, but it not, you should stir more often.
  8. At some point, usually an hour from the moment it starts to simmer, it gets quite dark and thickens. At this point, it’s almost ready. Maybe a few minutes more. Make sure you take out the plate and stir constantly during these last moments.
  9. If you put a little on a plate it will run immediately, be quite liquid. It will thicken a lot as it cools and even more in the refrigerator.
  10. Remove from the heat, add vanilla and salt if using, transfer to a bowl and let cool. If you stir over a bowl with ice water it will cool faster and generally makes it creamier because there’s a smaller chance of crystallization.
  11. Whisk at the end before refrigerating to make it as creamy as possible.
  12. Fill a jar and keep refrigerated.

For thicker dulce de leche:

Option 1

  1. Mix cornstarch and milk in a small bowl or cup.
  2. Put the dulce de leche in a small saucepan over low heat.
  3. Stir constantly, and when the dulce de leche becomes more liquid, add the cornstarch slowly while stirring with a wooden spoon.
  4. Bring the mixture to a slow boil, stirring all the time. You don't want the mixture to stick.
  5. Boil for about 2 minutes, being careful it doesn't burn in the bottom of the pan. Check that it has somewhat thickened, but remember it will completely set after it's cooled and refrigerated.
  6. Let cool completely and refrigerate for 1 hour before using, or for several weeks in a closed jar.

Option 2

  1. Melt 50g (3 ½ tablespoons) butter in a medium saucepan.
  2. Add a can of condensed milk (400g / 14oz) and 200g (7oz) regular dulce de leche.
  3. Stir over low heat until it thickens and let cool before using.

Notes

Milk - use whole milk for the best results. This is a jam and the richness and fat in regular milk make for a more luscious product.

Cream - it adds even more richness, so I hardly make it without if I have some at home.

Sugar - regular granulated sugar is what you want. I did try it with powdered sugar but the result is grainy. Brown sugar might work, but sometimes the consistency is not right.

Baking soda - this ingredient is crucial if you want a brown color. Use more for deeper caramel color and less for a more tea-with-milk type of hue.

Vanilla and salt - these can be categorized as optional, but I think a few drops of vanilla and a small pinch of sea salt deepen the flavor and make this milk jam so much tastier!

Saucepan: it should be deep because the milk when it boils can creep up quickly and you don't want it to spill, and heavy-bottomed because there's way less possibility of it scorching or sticking.

The plate inside: this is a peculiar tip and you can see it in the video tutorial above, but it's what they did in the old days, back when most of the food was homemade and took all day. My grandmother used glass marbles, but those are hard to find nowadays. The next best thing was a plate upside down, though I also use the super small glass things I show in the video also. The idea is to have something that moves around, mimicking stirring, so you don't have to do it manually. Because you need to stir very often otherwise.

Commercial dulce de leche: you can buy it online. The best one available to use for fillings right now is Vacalin dulce de leche repostero, which is the one we use here, so I recommend it. Others that are usually available for the regular type are Cachafaz Dulce de Leche, Havanna Argentina Dulce de Leche sauce, and DDL&Co. premium dulce de leche.

  • Author: Paula Montenegro
  • Prep Time: 5
  • Cook Time: 120
  • Category: Sauces
  • Method: Stovetop
  • Cuisine: Argentinian

Keywords: dulce de leche recipe

Dulce de Leche Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How do you thicken condensed milk for dulce de leche? ›

Tip: To thicken stovetop dulce de leche, make a slurry of 1/2 tablespoon cornstarch with 1 1/4 teaspoons milk. Bring it to a very slow boil over medium heat, whisk this slurry into the dulce de leche, and continue to boil slowly for five minutes before removing from heat and cooling.

Why is my dulce de leche runny? ›

The longer you cook, the thicker and darker the dulce de leche will be. For a light and runny dulce de leche, cook for 2.5 hours, for a dulce de leche that is easy to pipe and holds its shape, cook for 3.5 to 4 hours.

Why do you put baking soda in dulce de leche? ›

The baking soda is optional, but helps prevent the milk proteins from coagulating, ensuring a smoother end result.

How do you fix overcooked dulce de leche? ›

Dulce de leche is too thick: If it's too thick while warm, this also happens when the sauce is overcooked and too much liquid has evaporated. Pulse in the food processor/blender with a tiny bit of cream or milk (start with 1/2 teaspoon; a little goes a long way) until it reaches your desired consistency.

Why isn't my dulce de leche thickening? ›

Thickness: in order to obtain a really thick dulce de leche, you have to bake it for a really long time. However, the longer you bake it, the more scorched it gets. Frosting use: if the dulce de leche is too lumpy it won't work well for frosting.

How do you fix runny condensed milk? ›

Put a can of sweetened condensed milk into a pot of simmering water deep enough to cover the can. Simmer for about 3 hours. When cool, it will be solid.

Does dulce de leche firm up? ›

It will firm up as it cools. The dulce de leche can be stored in a jar in the fridge and will keep for up to a month. If not storing in a jar ensure it's covered so a skin doesn't form.

Does condensed milk turn into dulce de leche? ›

If you have a can of sweetened condensed milk, you can make a batch of dulce de leche! Such a cinch. Just use caution and keep the heat on low.

Should dulce de leche be thick? ›

It's a thick, creamy, perfectly sweet confection made be heating sweetened milk. It has a beautiful nutty color and wonderful depth of flavor, which I would describe as a milky caramel. Dulce de leche is a really versatile ingredient you can use in cakes, cupcakes, sundaes and on cookies.

Can you use sweetened condensed milk instead of dulce de leche? ›

Dulce de leche is basically sweetened condensed milk that has continued cooking until the sugars have caramel used. You can make SCM into DdL by boiling the unopened can of SCM for a couple of hours. Let it cool before trying to open it.

What is the difference between caramel and dulce de leche? ›

Caramel and dulce de leche might look and taste somewhat similar, but they are actually pretty different. While caramel is made from slowly simmering water and sugar until it caramelizes, dulce de leche is made from simmering milk and sugar super slowly until it turns into a creamy, caramelized substance.

How do you fix lumpy dulce de leche? ›

Though you're keeping the temperature low, be sure you get the heat up enough to fully dissolve your sugar or you'll end up with grainy dulce de leche. If this happens to you, you can try smoothing it out by reheating it and stirring in a little more milk or half-and-half.

Can you Recook dulce de leche? ›

To use dulce de leche, open can when completely cool and scoop out; reheat in a double boiler to soften dulce de leche to spreadable or drizzle-able consistency.

Can dulce de leche go bad? ›

If dulce de leche has gone bad, you may notice a number of changes. First of all, it might develop a darker color and hard, crystallized lumps. It can also develop an off smell - something fermented or sour, which is not typical of its usual sweet, creamy aroma.

Is it safe to boil a can of condensed milk? ›

Is it safe to boil my can of sweetened condensed milk to make caramel sauce? No. For safety reasons, we do not recommend heating a can of our condensed milk, opened or unopened. The current can is not designed to withstand high temperatures.

How do you thicken tin condensed milk? ›

It's easy, as long as you have a nice large bowl. Empty a can of condensed milk into a bowl and microwave it for 3 minutes. Take it out, stir it, and do it again, watching carefully. As soon as the milk begins to bubble, turn off the microwave, stir the milk, then start it again.

Why won't my sweetened condensed milk thicken? ›

If you find that your condensed milk hasn't thickened, that means that the pan was removed from the heat too early. This can be corrected by returning your mixture to a pan and carefully continuing the heating process.

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