Perfect Popovers - Kitchen Joy (2024)

By Mandy Leave a Comment

I don't know about you guys, but I’ve always wanted to make popovers. They seem so impressive in all their golden, puffed up glory. Popovers are basically a beautiful, puffy, hollow, crêpe-in-the-shape-of-a-muffin that pair perfectly with just about any spread you can imagine. It only seemed fitting that popovers were the first recipe I worked on after my long blogging break when I had my daughter. I’ll always remember our first time baking together. I did the work and she was snuggled in her baby carrier on my belly watching all the excitement.

Perfect Popovers - Kitchen Joy (1)

To achieve truly impressive heights with your popovers, you need a popover pan. However, a very tasty, albeit more height-challenged version can be achieved using a standard muffin pan. For comparison sake, I've included photos of both versions. In my popover adventures, I learned a few things to keep in mind when baking popovers.

Perfect Popovers - Kitchen Joy (2)

  • Start with room-temperature ingredients. Why? Room temperature ingredients mix together to form pockets of air, which when baked result in a higher rise. If you want your popovers to rise high, let your ingredients come to room temperature before mixing.
  • Let the batter rest. This is similar to a crepe batter, which also benefits greatly from rest time. This allows the very delicate batter to be perfectly smooth and hom*ogenous. It has everything to do with texture. The flour needs some time to absorb into the liquid, which not only thickens the batter a bit, it also allows the gluten molecules to relax which makes for a lighter, not chewy popover. The resting period also makes the batter more velvety and helps allow air bubbles to release. This results in a lighter, more delicate popover.
  • Popovers get their ‘pop’ from steam. This means that when they come out of the oven, there will be steam inside them that needs to escape. If you don’t want your beautiful popovers to collapse, simply use a sharp paring knife and pierce the bottom of the hot popovers to allow steam to escape and place them on a cooling rack. Do not let them cool in the pan, they’ll lose their shape.
  • The oven and pan needs to be VERY hot. Be sure to preheat the popover pan when you preheat the oven. You’ll need to spray the pan very generously as well. The batter should sizzle when you pour it into the pan. Do not open the oven during the baking process. Doing so could cause your popovers to deflate.

Perfect Popovers - Kitchen Joy (3)

Popovers made in a muffin pan.

Perfect Popovers - Kitchen Joy (4)

(Scroll down for printable version of this recipe.)

By Kitchen Joy®

Makes 6 popovers (or 12 muffin pan size popovers**)

Ingredients

3 large eggs, at room temperature

1 ½ cups whole milk, at room temperature

1 ½ cups all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon coarse salt (or ½ teaspoon regular salt)

Directions

Add eggs to large bowl and whisk until lightly beaten. Add milk and whisk again until combined. Add flour and salt, and whisk just until combined. Do not overmix.

Let batter rest at room temperature for 1 hour.

While batter is resting, place popover pan on a rimmed baking sheet and place on center rack of oven. Preheat to 450°F. (Preheat for at least 20 minutes to be sure temperature has been reached, or use an oven thermometer.)

Once pan is preheated and batter is finished resting, remove pan from oven and quickly spray generously with cooking spray. Pour batter into popover pan, filling each cup about ⅔ full.

Bake at 450°F for 20 minutes, then lower oven temperature to 350°F and continue baking for 20 more minutes.

Remove pan from oven and promptly remove popovers from pan and lay on a wire rack. Pierce the bottom or side of each popover with a sharp paring knife to allow steam to escape.

Serve with butter, jam, Nutella, or whatever your heart desires!

**Muffin pan variation: Follow all preparation above, using a 12 cup muffin pan in place of the popover pan. Bake at 450°F for 13 minutes then lower temperature to 350°F for 13 minutes.

Print

Popovers

Print Recipe
★ 5 Stars ☆ ★ 4 Stars ☆ ★ 3 Stars ☆ ★ 2 Stars ☆ ★ 1 Star ☆ No reviews
  • Total Time: 1 hour 45 minutes
  • Yield: 6 popovers 1x

Ingredients

Units Scale

  • 3 large eggs, at room temperature
  • 1 ½ cups whole milk, at room temperature
  • 1 ½ cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon coarse salt (or ½ teaspoon regular salt)

Instructions

  1. Add eggs to large bowl and whisk until lightly beaten. Add milk and whisk again until combined. Add flour and salt, and whisk just until combined. Do not overmix.
  2. Let batter rest at room temperature for 1 hour.
  3. While batter is resting, place popover pan on a rimmed baking sheet and place on center rack of oven. Preheat to 450°F. (Preheat for at least 20 minutes to be sure temperature has been reached, or use an oven thermometer.)
  4. Once pan is preheated and batter is finished resting, remove pan from oven and quickly spray generously with cooking spray. Pour batter into popover pan, filling each cup about ⅔ full.
  5. Bake at 450°F for 20 minutes, then lower oven temperature to 350°F and continue baking for 20 more minutes.
  6. Remove pan from oven and promptly remove popovers from pan and lay on a wire rack. Pierce the bottom or side of each popover with a sharp paring knife to allow steam to escape.
  7. Serve with butter, jam, Nutella, or whatever your heart desires!

Notes

*Muffin pan variation: Follow all preparation above, using a 12 cup muffin pan in place of the popover pan. Bake at 450°F for 13 minutes then lower temperature to 350°F for 13 minutes.

This recipe first appeared on Kitchen Joy®

I hope you’re having a wonderful week. Thanks for visiting my site! Have a very Happy New Year!

Perfect Popovers - Kitchen Joy (5)

Related

« Pressure Cooker Basics Part 4: Cleaning and Caring for your Pressure Cooker

Home Roasted Coffee Beans (Air Popper Method) »

Reader Interactions

Comments

No Comments

Leave a Reply

Perfect Popovers - Kitchen Joy (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to good popovers? ›

My biggest tip for creating perfect popovers is to use warm milk and room-temperature eggs with absolutely no chill on them. Do not take the milk and eggs from the fridge and use them. Cold ingredients will give you dense popovers. Warm ingredients will give you light, airy, and perfect popovers.

Should you let popover batter rest? ›

Let batter rest for 15 minutes while you preheat the oven. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees F and place rack in the bottom third position (to make room for tall popovers and to ensure the tops don't burn!) and another rack in the top position.

Why won t my popovers pop over? ›

The gluten in flour (and protein from the eggs) create the structure that traps steam in rising popovers. Without this structure, steam will escape like air from a punctured balloon, and your popovers will puddle, not pop.

How do you keep popovers from collapsing? ›

If you don't want your beautiful popovers to collapse, simply use a sharp paring knife and pierce the bottom of the hot popovers to allow steam to escape and place them on a cooling rack. Do not let them cool in the pan, they'll lose their shape.

Should popover batter be cold or room temperature? ›

Make the batter in a blender; make it with a whisk. Beat till smooth and frothy; leave some lumps. Everything should be at room temperature.

What is the best flour to use for popovers? ›

Bread Flour or All-Purpose Flour: The key to making these popovers super light and fluffy is to use bread flour. Bread flour contains a higher amount of protein than all-purpose flour, causing it to yield a much lighter and fluffier popover.

What makes a popover rise? ›

Basic popovers are made with eggs, milk, and flour. The batter is thin enough to be pourable, about as thick as heavy cream. The high proportion of liquid in the batter creates steam that causes the popovers to puff up like the popover pictured below. The conversion of the liquid in the batter to steam is dramatic.

Should popover pans be greased? ›

A popover pan should be greased. I prefer to use melted butter, but oil or nonstick spray would work too. Greasing the pan ensures that the finished popovers don't stick and promotes browning on the exterior of the popover. After you've greased your pan, place it into the oven while it preheats.

Should a popover have a close button? ›

Popovers which do not timeout nor close upon "mouseout" should always have a dedicated close button. It can be an X in the upper corner, a dedicated Cancel/Close button, or even some text styled as a link would produce sufficient confidence for your users.

Is it necessary to poke the popover when it comes out of the oven? ›

Remove from oven:

Popovers lose their crunch if they linger in the pan, so turn them out on a wire rack immediately and poke a small opening in the side of each with a paring knife to let the steam escape.

Can you use cupcake liners for popovers? ›

You can buy special popover pans, with deeper, narrower cups which force the tops up in a more pronounced fashion, but I wouldn't bother. Any muffin pan will produce a perfect popover if the butter is hot, the batter is rich and smooth and the baker is patient.

How to tell if a popover is done? ›

Now you can open the oven door and check the popovers. Finished popovers will be golden-brown, feel dry to the touch, and sound hollow when tapped. Prick with a Knife, Cool, and Eat!: Turn the popovers out onto a drying rack. Pierce the bottoms with a knife to allow steam to escape.

Why did my popovers fall when I took them out of the oven? ›

When these airy baked goods aren't cooked enough, too much steam stays trapped inside. That moisture condenses once they're removed from the oven, causing them to collapse.

Can you make popovers the night before? ›

To make ahead: You can make the batter and refrigerate it for up to one day before baking. Just let the batter come to room temperature and whisk it well or whirl it in the blender for a few seconds before pouring it into the muffin tins. To store: Store baked and cooled popovers in a ziptop bag for up to a day.

Why do my popovers always deflate? ›

If your popovers lose volume when they come out of the oven, they are probably underbaked. When these airy baked goods aren't cooked enough, too much steam stays trapped inside. That moisture condenses once they're removed from the oven, causing them to collapse. The perfect popover, however, is easy to master.

What is the main leavening ingredient in popovers? ›

Because popovers rely on steam to rise — as opposed to baking powder, baking soda, or yeast — you want your batter warm when entering the oven. This King Arthur Flour article says it best: “The warmer your batter going into the oven, the more quickly it'll produce steam: simple as that.”

What makes popovers hollow? ›

The container forms the steam released in the oven heat into one giant bubble. This steam is contained with gluten from flour proteins, starch, and protein from eggs. So the popover literally 'pops' with steam, but the steam doesn't escape because the stretchy protein holds it inside the batter.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Chrissy Homenick

Last Updated:

Views: 6015

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (74 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Chrissy Homenick

Birthday: 2001-10-22

Address: 611 Kuhn Oval, Feltonbury, NY 02783-3818

Phone: +96619177651654

Job: Mining Representative

Hobby: amateur radio, Sculling, Knife making, Gardening, Watching movies, Gunsmithing, Video gaming

Introduction: My name is Chrissy Homenick, I am a tender, funny, determined, tender, glorious, fancy, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.