Buttery Yorkshire Puddings
Buttery Yorkshire Puddings
Whisking the batter for Yorkshire puddings feels just like making pancakes. Then the real magic happens—pouring it into the hot pan and watching them puff up as they bake, all golden and proud, with airy centers and crisp edges. Just be patient—no peeking! Serve them hot and fresh, perfect for tearing and dunking into soup—pure British comfort at home.
Happy & Healthy Cooking,
Fun-Da-Mentals Kitchen Skills
- bake :
to cook food with dry heat, as in an oven.
- measure :
to calculate the specific amount of an ingredient required using a measuring tool (like measuring cups or spoons).
- whisk :
to beat or stir ingredients vigorously with a fork or whisk to mix, blend, or incorporate air.
Equipment Checklist
- Oven
- Muffin pan
- Liquid measuring cup
- Dry measuring cups
- Measuring spoons
- Whisk
Ingredients
Buttery Yorkshire Puddings
- 3 large eggs **(for EGG ALLERGY sub 3 T ground flaxseeds + 3/4 C water, whisked)**
- 1 C whole milk **(for DAIRY ALLERGY sub dairy-free/nut-free milk)**
- 1 C all-purpose flour **(for GLUTEN ALLERGY sub 1 1/4 C gluten-free/nut-free all-purpose flour)**
- 2 T unsalted butter **(for DAIRY ALLERGY sub 2 T vegetable oil)**
Food Allergen Substitutions
Buttery Yorkshire Puddings
- Egg: For 3 large eggs, substitute 3 T ground flaxseeds + 3/4 C water and whisk until absorbed and thickened.
- Dairy: Substitute dairy-free/nut-free milk. For 2 T unsalted butter, substitute 2 T vegetable oil.
- Gluten/Wheat: For 1 C all-purpose flour, substitute 1 1/4 C gluten-free/nut-free all-purpose flour.
Instructions
Buttery Yorkshire Puddings
intro
Yorkshire pudding is a traditional British dish made from a simple batter of flour, eggs, and milk. It is typically baked in the oven in hot lard, resulting in a puffy, golden exterior with a soft, airy interior. Often served as a side dish with roast beef and gravy, it is a staple of the classic Sunday roast. The only difference in this SFC version will be the exclusion of lard. Butter will work just fine for our home kitchens.
measure + whisk
In a mixing bowl, measure and whisk 3 large eggs, 1 cup whole milk, and 1 cup flour. You are looking for a light pancake batter consistency.
melt + bake
In a muffin pan, evenly divide 2 tablespoons of butter into each of the wells. Then, place the pan in your oven. Preheat the oven to 375 F. The butter will melt while the oven preheats. Once melted, carefully remove the pan from the oven and pour roughly 2 tablespoons of the batter into each well of the hot muffin pan. Then, slide the pan back into the oven. The next part is very important: Do not open the oven at all. You want to keep the steam trapped in the oven to puff your Yorkshire pudding. Bake the puddings for 10 minutes or until golden brown and puffed.
serve + dunk
Serve immediately with soup, like our Vibrant English Spring Pea Soup. Yorkshire pudding is great for ripping and dipping in sauces and soups. Eat and enjoy!
Hi! I'm Butter!
"I'm a byproduct of churned cream used in cooking and as a spread for bread. I'm really yummy when I'm melted and poured over freshly popped popcorn! You don't have to "butter me up" (flatter me) to get me to add richness to your food!"
History & Etymology
- According to Elaine Khosrova, author and pastry chef, butter may have originated 8,000 years ago in Africa. A shepherd had tied a bag of warm sheep's milk to the back of a sheep and found that after traveling a few miles, the milk had curdled, creating a tasty substance. She claims butter would have come from the milk of sheep and goats before cow's milk.
- The method of churning butter eventually changed from having bags of milk dangling from domesticated animals' backs to hanging them from tree branches.
- In places where olive oil was preferred with bread and cooking, as in ancient Greece and Rome, butter was seen as a food for barbarians. However, it was accepted as a medicinal ointment.
- A 4,500-year-old Sumerian tablet describes making butter from cows.
- Scandinavia was exporting butter by the 12th century. Butter did not spoil as quickly in northern Europe as in southern climates. In Ireland, in the 11th to 14th centuries, butter was placed in firkins (wooden vessels or casks) and buried in peat bogs to preserve it. Archaeologists can still find buried butter firkins in Ireland.
- Butter was churned by hand on farms until the 19th century. Farmers would make enough for themselves and to sell in brick form for extra income.
- In the 1860s, butter factories started up in the United States. In 1894, Gustaf de Laval patented the first centrifugal milk-cream separator, which sped up the butter-making process.
- At home, you can make butter by shaking or whipping heavy cream, causing the butter fats to separate from the liquid until it turns into butter and buttermilk!
- The latter half of the 20th century would see margarine overtake butter in popularity because it was less expensive and seen as healthier. That changed somewhat in the early 2000s, but both products have been surpassed in recent years with healthier fats, like canola and olive oils.
- The United States produces the most butter worldwide, followed by New Zealand and Germany.
- The word "butter" is from the Old English "butere," of West Germanic origin, from the Latin "butyrum," from the Greek "bouturon."
Composition
- Butter is a dairy product made from cream, which is typically 80 percent butterfat. It is a solid substance when refrigerated, and at room temperature, it is semi-solid. When heated, it melts and becomes a liquid.
- Butter is most often made from cow's milk, although it can also be made from goat, sheep, buffalo, and yak milk.
How to Buy & Eat
- In the US, butter is typically purchased in 1-pound packages with four 4-ounce sticks. The sticks may come in the Elgin or Eastern-pack shape: 4 3/4 x 1 1/4 x 1 1/4 inches. This form was named for a dairy in Elgin, Illinois. Or, they will be in the Western-pack shape: 3 1/4 x 1 1/2 x 1 1/2 inches. Butter dishes are generally designed for the Elgin shape.
- Most butter has 80 percent butterfat. If your recipe calls for butter with more butterfat content, look for a European-style butter. It is churned longer and has 82 to 90 percent butterfat.
- You can purchase salted or unsalted butter. In baking, recipes often call for unsalted butter. If you use salted butter in a recipe that calls for unsalted, you may not need as much or any additional salt.
- The culinary uses for butter are extensive. You can spread it on bread, toast, and other baked goods. It is a cooking fat that adds flavor to pan-fried foods. Cooking vegetables in a little butter allows the sugars in the veggies to carmelize. Adding butter when finishing a sauce makes the sauce rich and creamy. Baking with butter will add texture and richness to cakes, cookies, and pastries and make them more tender. Mix it with powdered sugar, and you have buttercream frosting!
- Several foods have "butter" as an ingredient and in their names, including butter cookies, butter cake, butter chicken, butter rice, butter pecan ice cream, buttercream, butterscotch (candy), butter pie, bread and butter pudding, and cookie butter (a sweet food paste). The French "beurre blanc" ("butter white") is a rich white butter sauce.
Nutrition
- One tablespoon of butter has 102 calories, 12 grams of fat (7 grams saturated fat), one-tenth gram of protein, and no carbohydrates, fiber, or sugar. It has 355 IU of vitamin A and small amounts of calcium, magnesium, and potassium. Salted butter has 91 milligrams of sodium.
- Eating butter may increase the absorption of other nutrients in the foods it is in.
- Butter is not a heart-healthy fat, so it should be eaten in moderation.
History of Yorkshire Pudding!
- In the 1700s, in the Yorkshire region of northern England, cooks found they could cook a batter with the fat that dripped into a pan while roasting meat. In 1737, a recipe for “dripping pudding” was published in a women’s homemaking book.
- Hannah Glasse, an 18th-century cookery writer, was the first to use the term “Yorkshire pudding” in one of her cookery books.
- Yorkshire pudding is traditionally a baked savory pudding in the United Kingdom. Its main ingredients are eggs, flour, and milk or water. The hot fat it is cooked in and the created steam allows it to puff, similar to the American popover.
- Yorkshire puddings are often served as a side dish with a Sunday meat roast and gravy. The puddings can also be filled with sausage, roast beef, and mashed potatoes. In some areas of England, they are eaten with a sweet sauce as a dessert.
- National Yorkshire Pudding Day is celebrated on the first Sunday in February in Britain and on October 13 in the United States.
Let's learn about England!
- England is ruled by a Monarch, a Prime Minister, and a Parliament. Windsor Castle is the oldest royal castle in the world that is still being used by the royal family.
- England is on the island of Great Britain, along with Wales and Scotland. It is also part of the United Kingdom, which consists of those three countries and Northern Ireland.
- Did you know that there's no place in the UK that is more than 70 miles from the sea?!
- Stonehenge is a construction of immense stones that the early inhabitants of what's now Wiltshire, England, began building around 3100 BCE. The final sections were completed around 1600 BCE. Scientists are still not sure how or why they built it. One theory for its purpose is an astronomical observatory. It is very popular with tourists.
- Other popular tourist spots in England include the Tower of London, Buckingham Palace, Windsor Castle, Westminster Abbey, Big Ben and Parliament (Palace of Westminster), the Roman Baths and the city of Bath, and the Lake District.
- London, the capital city, wasn't always called that. In the past, its name was Londonium.
- England took part in the briefest war in history. They fought Zanzibar in 1896, and Zanzibar surrendered after just 38 minutes!
- There have been several influential English authors, but perhaps the most well-known is William Shakespeare, who wrote classics such as Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, and Hamlet.
- English computer scientist Tim Berners-Lee is credited with inventing the World Wide Web.
- The British really like their sandwiches—they eat almost 11.5 billion a year!
What's It Like to Be a Kid in England?
- Most schools in England require students to wear a school uniform.
- Sports kids play include football (soccer), cricket, rugby, tennis, netball (similar to basketball), and rounders (similar to baseball). They also play video games, watch the telly, and ride bikes or skateboards.
- Boxing Day is a unique holiday kids celebrate in England the day after Christmas, December 26. The official public holiday is the first weekday after Christmas if Boxing Day falls on a weekend. When the English created the holiday, it was the day to share the contents of alms boxes with the poor. Today, it is mostly a day off from school and work, although some small gifts may be given out to family and employees, or collected to give to the poor.
- English kids may have different names for everyday items also found in the United States. For example, a kid will call his mom "mum." Their backyard is a "garden." A big truck is called a "lorry," and the trunk of a car is a "boot." Biscuits in the US are closest to the British "scones," and cookies in England are "biscuits." A TV is usually called a "telly." Bags of chips are referred to as bags of "crisps." French fries, like those from a fast-food hamburger place, might be called "fries," but if they are thicker, like the ones typically served with batter-fried fish, they're called "chips" (fish and chips). Finally, kids call the fish sticks they might have for lunch "fish fingers.