Dulce de Leche Three Ways
You can make dulce de leche (a sweet, addictive caramel-like sauce popular in Latin America) three different ways. Whether you prefer to use the stove, an electric pressure cooker, or a slow cooker, you really can’t go wrong!
Each method has slightly different ingredients and preparation, and I share the pros and cons of each one in this post.
When I tested all three methods – stovetop, Instant Pot, and slow cooker – I found that the results were quite different:
From top to bottom, this image shows the dulce de leche made on the stovetop, in an Instant Pot, and using a slow cooker. Each one is totally delicious, but by no means do they taste the same.
The traditional way to make dulce de leche uses a stovetop. It’s by far the most time-consuming method. Like making classic caramel icing, making classic dulce de leche takes hours of monitoring a pot on the stove.
Is it worth the effort? If you have the time, the answer is a resounding yes! We had all three in jars in our refrigerator at once and this is the one that I reached for every time.
Aside from the clear visual difference (the color is so much darker), this version has a far more robust flavor than its hands-off counterparts. It is almost like the difference between baking with regular butter rather than browned butter or eating dark chocolate rather than milk chocolate.
It’s also much thinner than the Instant Pot or slow cooker versions, although it can be thickened up.
The Instant Pot produces my second favorite version. It thickens up really nicely and has a full flavor – its flavor is not quite as robust as the stovetop version, but nobody will complain about it. And, for many, this milder flavor is what they think of as the taste of dulce de leche.
It’s the one I reached for when I made my dulce de leche cake.
Finally, we come to the slow cooker method. It is the absolute easiest!
I used to love slow cooker dulce de leche until I tried the other two methods. But, the transformation from sweetened condensed milk to a new caramel-like substance isn’t as dramatic as the other versions.
The problem with this method is inconsistencies between slow cookers.
A mini slow cooker yielded unchanged sweetened condensed milk after a long wait. My full-sized slow cooker produced exactly what I was hoping for. Other slow cookers will produce slightly darker results than what I’m showing here.
If you want easy, definitely give the slow cooker method a try. When you figure out the cooking time required to make it properly with yours, stick with that.
Ingredients
Stovetop
The stovetop preparation requires whole milk, sugar, baking soda, and vanilla extract.
Instant Pot and Slow Cooker
When using these appliances, you will need a can of sweetened condensed milk and water.
How It’s Made
Stovetop
Start by combining milk, sugar, and baking soda in a medium-sized saucepan. Use one that is larger than you think you need so that it doesn’t boil over.
Baking soda raises the pH of the liquid (meaning that it becomes less acidic). Food chemists say that this makes the caramelization and Maillard reactions occur more quickly. The baking soda also helps to prevent the milk proteins from coagulating, which makes it easier to produce a caramel-like sauce that is smooth and free from lumps.
Bring to a boil, whisking constantly.
Turn the burner down and cook on a very low heat (just barely boiling) for about two and a half hours.
Stir and scrape the bottom of the pan periodically to make sure it is cooking evenly and not developing lumps.
When it has turned a dark color like you see here, whisk in vanilla extract (optional).
If needed (which likely won’t be the case), use an immersion blender to remove any lumps and to make sure that your sauce is smooth and creamy.
It will thicken more as it cools, but you’ll need to thicken it even more if you want it to be more of a spread than a syrup.
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.
Instant Pot
Smell the silicone ring inside of the Instant Pot lid before you start. If it smells like garlic from some dinner you made, give it a good clean before using it or buy a second one [paid link] and designate it for desserts. You don’t want that garlic smell to permeate your dulce de leche! Now that everything smells fresh, you can begin.
Pour one cup of water into your Instant Pot.
Pour a can of sweetened condensed milk into a stainless steel or oven-safe glass bowl, cover with foil, and place it in the water. If you don’t cover the sweetened condensed milk with foil, the steam from pressure cooking will condense on top of the sweetened condensed milk and the texture will be all off.
Because of the intense pressure inside of an Instant Pot, never put a can of sweetened condensed milk directly into the Instant Pot.
Place the lid on the Instant Pot, set to sealing, and pressure cook at high pressure for 90 minutes.
When the time is up, do a full natural release and carefully remove the bowl from the Instant Pot while wearing oven mitts.
Blend with an immersion blender until completely smooth. It will thicken up as it cools.
Slow Cooker
Start by lining your slow cooker bowl with foil. This prevents the slow cooker from getting rusty. I’ve been there and I don’t recommend it.
Peel the label off of a 14 ounce can of sweetened condensed milk, place it in the slow cooker, and submerge it in water. Make sure it is completely submerged with room to spare!
Cover and cook!
At low temperature:
- After 6 hours, the slow cooker dulce de leche should have the consistency of caramel sauce. At this stage, it is great for pouring over ice cream or adding to coffee in the morning.
- After 10 hours, the dulce de leche should thicken to the point where you can spread it like a preserve.
Expert Tips and FAQs
is a sweet caramel-like sauce that is used in Latin American countries as a spread for toast, a sweetener for coffee, and also as an ingredient or topping for cakes, tarts, and candies. (I like to drizzle it over my banana cookies.)
Cooked just a little, it is a thin syrup that can be used to pour over ice cream or anywhere else you would use caramel. If you cook it down more, it turns into a thick, rich milk preserve that can be spread like jam.
It’s famously used in sandwich cookies called alfajores [paid link], it’s fabulous over any cupcakes (particularly chocolate cupcakes), it makes amazing ice cream, and it is so good in or on top of flan!
Caramel is simply sugar that has been heated for a while. Under heat, the sugars break down and re-form into thousands of new little molecules that smell and taste great. Most cooks add water when making caramel to help keep it from burning. When making candies or thicker caramel sauces such as caramel icing, they will add butter, cream, and other ingredients, too.
Dulce de leche has to be made with a combination of milk and sugar. Some of its unique flavors of come from the caramelization of the sugars, but some come from more complicated Maillard reactions between the proteins of the milk and the added sugar.
On the whole, dulce de leche will have a more subtle flavor and smoother mouth feel than caramel.
No, it won’t explode if you wait until it cools down. Always wait for the can to cool to room temperature before opening!
You can refrigerate it in an airtight container for up to one month. You can also freeze it for several months.
Related Recipes
- Cajeta (This is like dulce de leche, but made with goat’s milk. It’s very common in Mexico.)
- Dulce de leche frosting
- Dulce de leche cake
- Butterscotch sauce
- Whiskey sauce
- Old fashioned caramel icing
- Mexican chocolate sauce
Dulce de Leche Recipe
Ingredients
Dulce de Leche
- 4 cups milk stovetop method only
- 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar stovetop method only
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda stovetop method only
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract stovetop method only
- 14 ounces sweetened condensed milk Instant Pot and slow sooker methods only
Instructions
Stovetop Instructions
- Combine all ingredients except vanilla extract in a pot over medium-high heat. Bring to a boil, whisking constantly. (Make sure the pot is big enough so the milk won’t spill over the sides when it boils.)
- Turn heat down so the mixture is just barely boiling and cook for about two and a half to three hours until it turns a deep caramel color. Stir and scrape the bottom and side of the pan periodically to guarantee even cooking. Note that it will thicken as it cools.
- Remove from the heat and whisk in vanilla extract.
- Use an immersion blender if necessary to remove any lumps.
- If you find that your dulce de leche is still too thin after cooling, make a slurry of 1/2 tablespoon cornstarch with 1 1/4 teaspoons milk. Bring the dulce de leche 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.
- To store, pour cooled dulce de leche into airtight containers and refrigerate for up to a month or freeze for several months.
Instant Pot Instructions
- Pour one cup of water into an Instant Pot. (It is very important that the sealing ring be completely clean and odor-free or your dulce de leche will end up tasting like the last meal you prepared in the Instant Pot.)
- Pour the can of sweetened condensed milk into a stainless steel or oven-safe bowl that will fit inside of the Instant Pot.
- Cover the bowl tightly with aluminum foil. This prevents condensation that results from pressure cooking from ruining the dulce de leche.
- Place the bowl inside of the water bath in the Instant Pot.
- Close the Instant Pot, set it to sealing, and pressure cook at high pressure for 90 minutes.
- When finished, perform a natural release and carefully remove the hot bowl from the Instant Pot and remove the aluminum foil.
- Use an immersion blender to blend the dulce de leche until it reaches a smooth consistency. Note that it will thicken as it cools.
- To store, cool and pour into airtight containers and refrigerate for up to a month or freeze for several months.
Slow Cooker Instructions
- Line your slow cooker with aluminum foil. This prevents the ceramic bowl from accumulating rust from the cooking process that is difficult to clean.
- Remove the label from the can of sweetened condensed milk and place into the foil-lined slow cooker.
- Fill the slow cooker with water, making sure to completely submerge the can of sweetened condensed milk. This can must remain covered with water during the cooking process.
- Cook on low temperature for six to 10 hours, depending on how thick you want your resulting dulce de leche. After 6 hours, the slow cooker dulce de leche should have the consistency of caramel sauce. At this stage, it is great for pouring over ice cream or adding to coffee in the morning. After 10 hours, the dulce de leche should thicken to the point where you can spread it like a preserve.
- When finished, remove the can from the slow cooker and allow to cool to room temperature before opening.
- To store, pour into airtight containers and refrigerate for up to a month or freeze for several months.
It’s delish. The glue residue from the can is adhered to the inside of my crockpot. Any tips for cleaning that mess?!?
Maybe try Goo Gone?
I tried the Instant Pot method but after mixing with the immersion blender the bottom of my 2 cup canning jar fell off on my counter. The sauce was luscious though. What should I use next time?
Sorry that happened. Try using a small stainless steel bowl.
Thanks. Will try that next time.
I love this recipe. Thanks full
I tried your stovetop version and your directions were perfect! Boy, this was delicious!!!
I am of dulche de leche in any form! Thanks for all the great info!
Mexico’s version of dulce de leche, called cajeta, is made with goat’s milk (or sometimes a mix of goat’s & cow’s milk). Sugar may or may not be added. The milk is reduced and the sugars are caramelized. It is said to have originated near the town of Celaya in or around 1810, at the dawn of the Mexican War for Independence. The reduced & caramelized milk lasted longer & traveled better than regular milk, making it good soldier food.
Given this use, I suspect that what was made at the time was something between sweetened condensed milk & modern cajeta, and that the more caramelized version evolved later. In the U.S., milk was sweetened to inhibit bacterial growth, then condensed & canned so that it could be stored unrefrigerated. This dramatically reduced the incidence of disease & death in children caused by consumption of spoiled milk.
Bit late to the party, but I was taught a secret trick to get your dulce super smooth, when cooking it from scratch(Recipe One). The secret is adding glass marbles to the pot, and stirring with a wooden spoon. I looked all over for what a Colombian friend’s mother called “baletas” to add to help stir the dulce as it cooks. After searching for several months at specialty kitchen stores, I realized that she had described marbles, so I went to the store and grabbed a bag. It works every time, and I’ve never had one break. As the mixture boils, the marbles bubble through and help stir your dulce. She also added a pinch of baking powder. Good luck!
If you can get your hands on some fresh( and by fresh i mean just milked out of a cow fresh)milk and some firewood it would come out a lot better, although it is a lot more work. I’m Mexican, were dulce de leche is also very popular along with its more syrupy counterpart the cajeta. The women in my family have made the candy several times by taking turns during those long hours and the best ones came out of fresh milk(which we call leche bronca) and a fire. Just a suggestion in case you would like to try it, because like i said it takes a lot more work.
As the true argentinian i am , i feel the need to educate you a bit on this specific topic, you see i eat dulce de leche almost every day, so i believe i know what i’m talking about. I have sampled millions of diferent brands and once i even tried an international brand brought over from the uk,let me just tell you they don’t taste the same. You have to try the original brands, specially from argentina or uruguay, beacause it was created in the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata. As someone here wisely said, one of the best brands is San Ignacio or Ilolay, but try the dulce de leche repostero, it’s thicker than the regular one and incredibly yummy. Surprisingly, the best dulce de leche i have ever tried is from uruguay , not argentina, and is called Lapataia. It goes brilliantly with pancakes, cakes, even crackers. Hope it helps someone.
OHH AND PS: there is not such thing as a diet dulce the leche, they come a bit close but they don’t compare.
I saw something about a drink with Doce de Leite. Here is one.
Batida de Doce de Leite.
In a 2 liter bottle add 2 cans of doce de leite ( considering that you are using the condensed milk method)
same measure of milk and add Cachaca to taste.
Another variation is to substitute the plain milk for coconut milk.
Once the liquids are in, close it up and give it a good shake, that’s what the name means, BATIDA: beat, mixed.
Easiest way of making Doce de Leite is put a condensed milk can in a pressure cooker. It may sounds dangerous, but i assume that the can have the strength to not explode inside the pan.
If you love beans (here in Brasil we buy beans not cooked) and use the pressure cooker to accelerate the process. Do 2 things in a row. Cook a bowl of black beans and a condensed milk can (sans the paper!).
Put the can away `till it colds. And in the mean time make a “feijoada” like beans. Put some sausage, pork meat, bacon and u have an “almost” traditional brazilian meal…
Please, go to any argentinian´s house or shop (i´m shure you have one closer) and buy the original! For example Poncho Negro, San Ignacio or Salamandra. You´ll know the heaven!
Also, caramel is caramel through the process of carmelization while dulce de leche is dulce de leche through the malliard reaction, which is similar to but diffrent than carmelization. Also for the sweetened condensed milk method, poke two tiny tiny holes in the top, it wont explode and it will cook very evenly, unwatched
Rosie – Interesting. I hadn’t heard of that method before.
You can caramelize condensed milk in a crockpot if you have one – you just open the can, put a bit of tinfoil over the top, and put the whole can in the crockpot with a cup of warm water. Put the lid on the pot and then just leave it be for 4 – 6 hours on high. It gets darker the longer you leave it, but there is no chance of it exploding.
HI… I make my the traditional Latin way of boiling an unopened can in a saucepan. Way easier, but takes longer. I made some last week with coconut in it! It was great.
I’ll post it up on my blog next week when I remake it! Yours looks good and thanks for clearing up the difference b/w DdL and caramel. A lot of ppl confuse them for being the same. NOT!
http://www.flanboyanteats.com
I have been told that real dulce de leche has to be made with the first method but I make it in yet another way: It is easier and uses condensed milk like the second method but is not as dangerous! (Are you aware that a can under pressure will explode? With a hot liquid in it? Never, never do this!) Just open a can of condensed milk, pour it into a shallow oven-proof dish. Sprinkle with some fleur de sel. Cover with foil. Put this dish into a baking tray, fill the baking tray with warm water till it reaches halfway up the smaller dish and put the whole thing into a 220°C warm oven for 1-1,5 hours. That is it! Whisk smooth before filling into a jar.
i love your blog! oi the first visit and you’re already talking about my favorite thing ever… dulce de leche (i need to figure out how to make it vegan!)!
i’ll be back!
You can use a pressure cooker to shorten the condensed milk method. It’s also safer: the cans are subject to completely uniform temperature and pressure, greatly reducing risk of an “incident.”
Remove can label, but leave can otherwise entirely intact. Place one or more cans in pressure cooker and cover -completely- with water. You want the cans to remain fully submerged throughout the process.
Bring up to pressure and cook for 20-40 minutes, depending on desired firmness.
Allow the cans to cool, and enjoy.
The dulce de leche from condensed milk is the closest to the real thing. I go to the Mexican Rivera every summer, when I go, I’ll send you a sampler pack. You have to try it. It’s divine on toast!
I love dulce de leche (and I know what it is!) but I admit that I was very well educated when buying my wedding cupcakes on the topic. Its freaking YUMMY!