
I was in the final stretch of making Sunday lunch for my uncle and favorite cooking aunt, debating where I should buy a jar of dulce de leche to add to the polovorones or shortbread cookies I’d made earlier. The gourmet shops nearby carry the good but expensive La Salamandra while the Colombian stores have a wider selection but seemed too far away in Queens. I decided to make my own instead. Though I knew it was easily done at home, I’d always avoided it in the past. Worried about exploding cans, we’d take them off heat too early and end up with milky mustard instead of a deep caramel (though it was still happily eaten). I found these recipes on From Argentina With Love for making dulce de leche at home that skipped the treacherous can boiling. Unwilling to face yet another grocery store run to buy whole milk, I tried the second version where a can of condensed milk is cooked in the top of a double boiler over a pan half filled with water. Though it takes 2 to 2 1/2 hours, it only needs to be checked and stirred about every 45 minutes freeing me up to work on other things. Because I’d rolled the polvorones thinner than usual, I watched the cookies closely and shortened the baking time to 10 minutes. I let the dulce de leche cook the entire time for a thicker consistency. Too rich to spread, it was the right consistency for holding together the crumbly cookies. A painless last minute (+two hour) solution. Read more