Body & Soul0 min ago
help with yorkshire pudding
9 Answers
help! can anyone please give me a foolproof method for making yorkshire puddings,they just arent rising anymore, can i put baking powder in there as a safety net? using electric oven btw.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.i have an electric oven too. I just use 4 heaped tablespoons plain flour, 2 eggs, half a pint of milk plus salt, pepper and sage. Whisk the eggs into the flour, slowly add the milk and add seasoning. Leave to sit for half an hour before using it and whisk it again just before using. Preheat the oven to 200c and put in the tray you are going to use with some oil in it and heat for 10 minutes. Then add the batter and cook them for 20-25 minutes without opening the oven door. Should be perfect.
My method seems to work everytime;
It's an equal measure recipe. The same volume of eggs, plain flour (sifted) and milk.
I use a ramekin dish for us (there's only 2 of us), but you can scale up very easily to a mug etc.
Basically as many eggs as it takes to get to a level of your jug/cup etc (remember the level you filled to), pour these into a bowl, add plain flour to the same measurer you used for the eggs, fill with the flour up to the same level that the eggs reached, sift this into the bowl with the eggs. Do the same with the milk and add to the bowl, whisk until smooth.
Make sure you're using oil that does not burn (I use goosefat) and heat in in the baking trays for as long as possible. I then find it works if 2 of you can do the pouring of the mix into your oven trays, as speed means that the oven and oil have less time to cool down any.
Just done this this afternoon for our Sunday roast and they rose a treat, yummy!!!!
It's an equal measure recipe. The same volume of eggs, plain flour (sifted) and milk.
I use a ramekin dish for us (there's only 2 of us), but you can scale up very easily to a mug etc.
Basically as many eggs as it takes to get to a level of your jug/cup etc (remember the level you filled to), pour these into a bowl, add plain flour to the same measurer you used for the eggs, fill with the flour up to the same level that the eggs reached, sift this into the bowl with the eggs. Do the same with the milk and add to the bowl, whisk until smooth.
Make sure you're using oil that does not burn (I use goosefat) and heat in in the baking trays for as long as possible. I then find it works if 2 of you can do the pouring of the mix into your oven trays, as speed means that the oven and oil have less time to cool down any.
Just done this this afternoon for our Sunday roast and they rose a treat, yummy!!!!