How to Make Popovers, a Step-by-Step Guide (2024)

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Our step-by-step guide for how to make popovers includes tips on baking in a muffin pan if you don't have a popover pan.

By

Martha Stewart

How to Make Popovers, a Step-by-Step Guide (1)

Martha Stewart is a bestselling author, entrepreneur, and lifestyle expert who has taught millions of people through generations the joy of entertaining, cooking, gardening, collecting, crafting, and home renovating via her eponymous magazine, Martha Stewart Living, Emmy-winning television shows, and 99 books (and counting). Based in Katonah, N.Y., where she helms her 156-acre Bedford Farm, Martha is America's first self-made female billionaire.

Updated on July 27, 2023

Prep Time:

5 mins

Total Time:

45 mins

Yield:

Makes 6 large popovers or 10 small popovers

How do you transform a basic egg batter into tall, tender, airy pockets surrounded by a burnished crust? It’s not magic, but kitchen physics, sparked by the combination of a preheated pan and a hot oven. Popovers, the American version of Yorkshire pudding, are quick and easy to make, and add a sense of fun to any meal, from a holiday brunch to a simple supper.

How to Make Popovers, a Step-by-Step Guide (2)

Ingredients

  • 3 large eggs, room temperature

  • 1 ½ cups whole milk, room temperature

  • 1 ½ cups all-purpose flour

  • 1 ¼ teaspoons coarse salt

  • Vegetable-oil nonstick cooking spray

Directions

How to Make Popovers, a Step-by-Step Guide (3)

  1. Bring to temperature:

    If eggs and milk are cold, before combining, submerge whole eggs in warm water 10 minutes and heat milk until just warm. Preheat oven to 450°F with a nonstick popover pan on rack in lowest position.

    Don't have a popover pan? Follow our tips for using a muffin pan instead.

  2. Whisk eggs and milk:

    After you have combined eggs and milk in a large bowl, whisk together until very frothy. This should only take about 1 minute. Have the flour and salt measured out and ready to go.

    How to Make Popovers, a Step-by-Step Guide (4)

  3. Add dry ingredients:

    Add flour and salt to egg mixture. We tested out a blender and an electric stand mixer when making the batter, but concluded that whisking by hand produces the most tender, airy popovers.

    How to Make Popovers, a Step-by-Step Guide (5)

  4. Whisk again:

    Whisk flour and salt into egg mixture just until batter is the consistency of heavy cream with some small lumps remaining. See those air bubbles? They are what will cause the popovers to rise.

    How to Make Popovers, a Step-by-Step Guide (6)

  5. Remove empty pan from oven:

    Remove popover pan from oven and coat with cooking spray.

  6. Fill and bake:

    Fill popover cups about three-quarters full with batter. Bake 20 minutes, then reduce oven temperature to 350°. Continue to bake until golden brown and dry to the touch, about 20 minutes more.

    How to Make Popovers, a Step-by-Step Guide (7)

  7. 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. Serve right away.

    How to Make Popovers, a Step-by-Step Guide (8)

    How to Make Popovers, a Step-by-Step Guide (9)

Using a Muffin Pan Instead of a Popover Pan

Though a nonstick popover pan results in optimal height, a standard muffin tin works fine, too—but the popovers will be smaller. (Don't worry, they'll still be delicious.)

To make, only fill the outer cups of the standard muffin tin with popover batter; they will get better circulation in the oven. When baking, reduce cook time by 5 minutes.

More Popover Recipes

Originally appeared: Martha Stewart Living, November 2013

How to Make Popovers, a Step-by-Step Guide (2024)

FAQs

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 ingredients are in a popover? ›

What are the biggest causes of popover failures? ›

Preheating your oven to the correct temperature is probably the most important thing you can do to ensure popover success. The hotter your oven, the higher your popovers will rise. Which makes sense: the faster liquid in the batter turns into steam, the more chance your popover has to expand before its crust sets.

Should popover batter rest before baking? ›

There's just one thing that will make the popovers better, and that's time. The batter needs time to rest before baking so that it creates a more tender popover in the end. So, cover the batter and pop it into the refrigerator for at least an hour, but preferably overnight.

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.

What makes a popover rise? ›

The room temperature of the batter, the heat of the pan, and high heat the oven are all what create the steam initially to get the batter to rise, then the bake at 350°F sets the batter and creates the crispy outside.

Do you really need a popover pan? ›

These tins are really only useful for making popovers, but oh, what beautiful popovers they make! Popover pans are distinguished from regular muffin tins by their deep, steep-sided wells. This forces the batter upwards and results in a popover with a puffy dome and crispy sides.

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.”

How to make custom popover? ›

How To Create a Popover. To create a popover, add the data-toggle="popover" attribute to an element. Note: Popovers must be initialized with jQuery: select the specified element and call the popover() method.

How to prevent popovers from deflating? ›

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.

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.

What happens to an underbaked popover? ›

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.

How do you know when a popover is done? ›

Bake for 15 to 20 minutes, then reduce heat to 350 degrees and continue baking for 15 minutes more, or until popovers are puffed and browned. Do not check popovers until they have baked for a total of 30 minutes. Remove from pan immediately and serve hot.

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.

Is yorkshire pudding the same as popovers? ›

Yorkshire Puddings are a staple in England with a Roast Dinner. Here in the US we know them as Popovers which are the same thing as the modern Yorkshire Pudding, except using a different pan. Yorkshire puddings are a delicious way to have a bread with your dinner with a minimal time investment.

What flour rises the best? ›

Self-Rising Flour

Self-rising flour is a convenient all-purpose flour with, the leavening agent, baking soda and salt added during milling. It has an 8–9 percent protein content and produces a nice, high rise for quick bread type baking.

Why did my popovers not pop up? ›

If you are having problems with popovers not popping, try decreasing your flour or adding an egg if you have already tried all the other tricks and you are sure that, like me, you are doing everything right.

What flour makes things crispy? ›

Rice flour and cornstarch work particularly well because they fry up crispier than wheat flour. They also absorb less moisture and fat during the frying process, making the products less greasy. This is why rice flour is often used when making tempura because it produces a very thin and crispy, dry crust.

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