Life's a Stitch

And more recently life’s a creative adventure with some travel thrown in.

In the injury induced absence of knitting I was on a creative quest. Popovers. Soda can sized airy puffs, right from the oven, melted butter on top. A restaurant near my childhood home specialized in popovers.

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For you Brits, they have the same ingredients as Yorkshire Puddings, but cooked in a different pan. Yorkies baked in a muffin tin come out lower and cakier. Still good, but not popover good:

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The pan is the secret. I mentioned this during a recent visit from my Minnesota SIL's and I was presented with the ultimate Nordic Ware popover pan. Similar to a muffin tin but doubly deep. 

The recipe:

Ingredients: 2 eggs, 1 C flour (works best with white but whole wheat gives impressive results), 1 C milk, 1/2 t salt, 1 T margarine for the pan, cooking spray and flour for dusting.

Procedure: Bring all ingredients to room temperature. Spray pans with cooking spray and dust with flour. Place a half teaspoon of margarine or butter in the bottom of each pan. In a large measuring cup beat eggs slightly. Blend in remaining ingredients just until smooth. Let rest for half an hour. Heat pan for five minutes in 450 degree oven. Remove from oven and fill each cup halfway. Return pan to oven and cook for 20 minutes. reduce heat to 350 degrees and cook for twenty minutes more. Serve warm from the oven. DO NOT open oven door. If your oven has a window, park yourself in front and watch the show, the magical continuous rising of popovers is akin to the legendary listening of corn growing in the midwest it happens so quickly. And the scent…

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We also baked them with an ounce of grated cheese on top. Yumm.

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Leftovers are wonderful the next morning for breakfast, toasted and served with melted white cheese and jam.

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A word of warning. These are not meant to be sweet treats. Sweeten them after baking with powdered sugar, jam or syrup. I added one tablespoon of sugar to the batter causing a disastrous outcome. Tough spongecake would be the best description.

We all agreed, the pan is the key to success. My SIL bought the competitor's pan and had less than satisfactory results. The Nordic Ware pans are pricey, as they are made in Minnesota, but with each batch the cost per popover gets way more reasonable. Sort of like your Addi knitting needles.

Need more convincing? Pop on over and I'll bake you some.

 

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4 responses to “Pop on Over”

  1. Carole Avatar

    Oh yummmmm! I love popovers and my mom used to make them all the time when I was a kid. She always used these little glass cups, though, not a pan.

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  2. Margaret Avatar
    Margaret

    The next time we have prime rib together these will be perfect – dipped in Au Jus – YUMMMM

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  3. Kristen Avatar

    Looks delicious- I must try making them.

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  4. LoriAngela Avatar

    Yum. I pour mine on cooked sausages for “Toad In a Hole”.

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