Great Yorkshire Pudding...



Yorkshire pudding has a very interesting background. Although we serve it with beef, it was orginally used as a beef replacement during the war, as when drenched in thich gravy, it had a very similar texture. Its also like any other cake, and great with creams and jams.

Ingredients

Method: How to make yorkshire pudding

What about these problems many people have making them . . . why do they not rise? Why do they fall flat? Should they be crisp or soft? The latter for me is a totally personal issue, some like them soft, some crisp on the outside and soft in the middle. When you lash them with a gravy does it make any real difference?

But to answer the main problems people have with them, rising and falling flat. One must think and understand about why and how this happens to answer it. They rise mainly because of the egg content in the mixture . . . NEVER add baking powder! For this rising to occur the mixture needs instant heat, this creates steam and they puff up and rise - so the oven, etc must all be pre-heated, a slow gentle heat or cold oven will not work.

They will fall flat if they are removed from the oven too soon. If they do not slightly crispen on the outside the structure of the egg and flour mixture does not fully 'dextrinise' meaning its structure will not hold its own weight . . . think of building a sky scraper out of wood, eventually it will buckle and collapse under its own weight.

Cooking times will always vary, as everyone's oven is slightly different and because we tend to open and close the door to remove the meat, the potatoes, etc. So the 12 minutes I have given here is approximate only, one will need to judge and modify accordingly.

   
   
flour - cake or all purpose
2
cups / 250 grams / 8 3/4 ozs
eggs
4
pc
milk
2
tbs
salt sq

   

  • Combine the egg and milk thoroughly with fork (do not whisk)
  • Add the enough of the flour and using a whisk combine to form a thick yet pourable batter; one that is nicely thick but can be easily poured from a jug. How thick is too thick, how thin is too thin is a matter of trial and error and will soon be become evident as you make a few batches
  • Add a little salt to taste
  • Place the muffin tray / moulds in the oven to pre-heat (180° - 200°C) for 15 minutes. The oil may also be added at this time and heated in the oven or may be heated separately and poured in. I find that putting in enough oil to 1/5th of the mould works best.
  • When both the moulds and oil are hot, pour in the batter, if it does not start to sizzle immediately, stop and continue to heat and try again
  • Place on the middle shelf and bake for approx.12 minutes until risen, golden brown and slightly crisp. A tray on the top shelf will help prevent them browning too much as this deflects the falling heated air particles (use this tip when baking cakes etc too!)
  • Remove from the oven and carefully (as they will be hot) remove from the tray and serve as soon as possible
  • Remember to pour away the fat while still warm to be re-used and pop the puddings in the oven if they seem to be starting to collapse after a minute or so
  • Note: This website is really for me at this stage. Whilst Ill monitor traffic, I have no real concern at the moment on offering any facilities like recipe download or such like. If you like the recipes, use them by all means. If you change something, good for you - I dont need to know about it.