Ingredientlight brown sugar
sweetnessbrowningbulkHigh confidenceHigh risk
The call
Use granulated sugar
for light brown sugar.
Use 1:1 for most dry sweetener swaps, then rebalance flavor and moisture.
Ratio
1 : 1
Why
Granularity, molasses content, and sweetness intensity drive the main differences between dry sweeteners.
Flavor
Brown and raw sugars taste deeper than white sugar.
Texture
Fine sugars dissolve faster; coarse sugars keep more crunch.
Alternatives, ranked
4 more options
| Candidate | Ratio | Confidence | Risk | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | caster sugar | 1 : 1 | A·0.88 | High | Dry sugars usually swap more cleanly than dry-to-liquid sweetener changes. |
| 2 | maple syrup | 1 : 1 | B·0.75 | Med | Liquid sweeteners add both sweetness and moisture. |
| 3 | superfine sugar | 1 : 1 | A·0.88 | High | Dry sugars usually swap more cleanly than dry-to-liquid sweetener changes. |
| 4 | honey | 1 : 1 | B·0.75 | Med | Liquid sweeteners add both sweetness and moisture. |
Adjustments
- texture
- Pulverize coarse sugars if the recipe expects a smooth batter or icing.
Where to be careful
- Highgranulated sugar — Low to medium in caramel-heavy or highly aerated recipes.
- Highcaster sugar — Low to medium in caramel-heavy or highly aerated recipes.
- Medmaple syrup — Medium in crisp cookies or meringue-style formulas.