Classic Popovers - A Simple 4 Ingredient Recipe (2024)

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Classic popovers are crispy on the outside, tender on the inside and are so easy to make. They’re delicious warm and slathered with honey butter.

Several years ago, my husband and I frequented a wonderful restaurant by our home that served the best popovers – and they were free! No matter what you ordered, you were each provided a hot popover with adelicious maple honeybutter. And, these weren’t little mini popovers, these were the real-deal.

At the time, I thought popovers were pretty fancy and likely difficult to make. I could make a mean dinner roll, but I thought homemade popovers might be a bit ambitious. I was so wrong!

4 Ingredient Popovers

After a little research, I found out I could make the perfect popovers with just four simple ingredients. I mean combining milk, eggs, flour and salt makes for a pretty easy popover recipe in my mind.

Start preheating the oven, mix up the batter, pour into your popover tin and “pop” them in the oven! In a little over 30 minutes you will have fresh, hot popovers.

Do I Have to Use a Popover Pan?

There is a special pan for making popovers. Known as a popover pan (also called a popover tin), it has deep wells and steep, straight sides which help force the popover batter upwards to create that puffy top and crispy sides.

If you don’t have a popover pan, you can use regular muffin tins. The only difference is that you won’t get large, fluffy popovers. They will be smaller due to the fact that a standard muffin tin isn’t as deep, nor are the sides as steep as a regular popover pan.

Fun Fact About Popovers and Yorkshire Pudding

While I was doing my classic popover recipe research, I kept coming across mentions of Yorkshire pudding. I thought this was a little odd until I learned that popovers are just an American version of Yorkshire pudding.

They basically use the same simple ingredients, but how you prepare the popover pan is where you see a difference. For popovers, you prepare the pan using a non-stick cooking spray or melted butter. For Yorkshire pudding, you use beef drippings or beef fat to prepare your pan.

Yorkshire pudding is typically served with dishes such as roast beef, pot roast or prime rib. If you plan on having a meal highlighting beef, Yorkshire pudding would be a fun addition.

Bake Your Popovers Today!

These easy popovers are great for abreakfast treatwith a little blueberry or apricot jam. They are also a great replacement for the classic dinner roll at your dinner parties or as part of a holiday meal. Serve them with some honey butter (or try this awesome Pumpkin Pie Spice Butter) and they will surely be a hit at your dinner table!

Tips and Tricks for the Perfect Classic Popovers

  • If you don’t have a 6-cup popover pan you can use a muffin pan. But, instead of making 6 popovers, you’ll divide the batter between 8 muffin cups. Once you reduce the temperature, watch them closely, they will probably be finished a couple minutes earlier.
  • Leftover popovers can be reheated in a 300 degree oven for about 5 minutes.
  • I use whole milk for this recipe, but any milk you have on hand will work just fine. However, I would not recommend using half and half or heavy cream.
  • Do not open the oven door while baking. This could cause the popovers to deflate. Just have patience!
  • Use room temperature ingredients to ensure the best popovers.

Ingredients Needed to Make Classic Popovers

Full instructions are found below in the printable recipe card

  • Milk
  • All-purpose flour
  • Salt
  • Eggs

How to Make Classic Popovers

  • Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
  • Spray a 6-cup popover pan with cooking spray.
  • Pour milk in a large bowl.
  • Add flour and salt.
  • Whisk together, just until flour is incorporated, do not overmix.
  • Whisk in eggs, one at a time, just until blended. Again, don’t overmix or scrape the side of the bowl.
  • Divide popover batter equally between the popover cups. This will make six popovers.
  • Bake at 425 degrees for 25 minutes.
  • Reduce heat to 325 degrees and bake for an additional 10-15 minutes, until a deep golden brown.
  • Serve immediately.

More Quick Bread Recipes

Yield: 6 servings

Classic Popovers - A Simple 4 Ingredient Recipe

Classic Popovers - A Simple 4 Ingredient Recipe (5)

Classic popovers are crispy on the outside and tender on the inside and so easy to make. They're delicious warm and slathered with honey butter.

Prep Time10 minutes

Cook Time40 minutes

Total Time50 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 1/4 cup milk
  • 1 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 4 eggs

Instructions

    1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
    2. Spray a 6-cup popover pan with cooking spray.
    3. Pour milk in a large bowl.
    4. Add flour and salt.
    5. Whisk together, just until flour is incorporated, do not overmix.
    6. Whisk in eggs, one at a time, just until blended. Again, don’t overmix or scrape the side of the bowl.
    7. Divide batter equally between popover cups. This will make six popovers.
    8. Bake at 425 degrees for 25 minutes.
    9. Reduce heat to 325 degrees and bake for an additional 10-15 minutes, until a deep golden brown.
    10. Serve immediately.

Notes

If you don't have a popover pan you can use a muffin pan. But, instead of making 6 popovers, you'll divide the batter between 8 muffin cups. Once you reduce the temperature, watch them closely, as they will probably be finished a couple minutes earlier.

Nutrition Information:

Yield:

6

Serving Size:

1

Amount Per Serving:Calories: 168Total Fat: 4gSaturated Fat: 2gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 2gCholesterol: 128mgSodium: 268mgCarbohydrates: 23gFiber: 1gSugar: 0gProtein: 9g

This recipe was originally posted on 04/20/15. It was updated to improve user experience and reposted on 05/13/20.

Classic Popovers - A Simple 4 Ingredient Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to good popovers? ›

The key to perfect popovers is using a popover pan. The cylindrical walls of popover cups are straight rather than angled like those in a regular muffin tin, accentuating their puffy, mushroomed tops by forcing the batter up out of the slim space.

What makes popovers puff up? ›

What makes popovers pop? Unlike cake or bread, popovers use neither baking powder/baking soda nor yeast to provide leavening. Steam is the engine that makes them rise — and rise, and rise!

Should you let popover batter rest? ›

So we tested ways to make a standard muffin pan work. For maximum puff, we needed as thin and wet a batter as possible. We started by using low-fat milk instead of whole. We also let the batter rest for 25 minutes to give the flour time to fully hydrate.

Why are my popovers not airy? ›

Dense popovers (either from not rising or not getting nice hollows inside) can result from a couple things but usually it is by either not starting with room temperature eggs and milk, not preheating the popover pan, not using a quality popover tin, and/or making too thick of a batter.

What is the best flour for popovers? ›

Not only were popovers made with bread flour about 30 percent taller than those made with all-purpose flour, but their higher walls were also thinner, making them a bit more crisp, and that crispness held up as they cooled. Bread flour was in. Next up: the milk.

Why won t my popovers pop over? ›

If you try to use cold ingredients, the popovers won't “pop” right and will be dense and heavy, instead of airy and majestic. Since the dish calls for only five ingredients – eggs, milk, butter, flour and salt - it's pretty simple to get them to room temperature with a little forethought.

What is the biggest causes of popover failures? ›

Too cold and you won't get the popovers to steam internally quickly enough. But be aware that you shouldn't make it too hot. If your milk and/or butter is hot enough to cook the eggs while mixing, the batter won't rise. Best to use all warm ingredients in the 40-50 degrees celsius (100-120 fahrenheit) range.

Should popover batter be cold or room temp? ›

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.” Use room-temperature eggs.

Should you refrigerate popover batter before baking? ›

You can make the batter ahead of time and bake the popovers the next day or prepare a batch start to finish and freeze them for later or keep a few on your counter. Check out the tips below to keep your popovers fresh. To make ahead: You can make the batter and refrigerate it for up to one day before baking.

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.

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.

Why are my popovers flat on top? ›

SF Gate claims that if your bakes are flat and dense, rather than tall and puffy, you must adjust your ingredient ratios. Usually, the batter consists of a simple egg, milk, and flour mix but if you add too much flour, the batter will be too dense and your popovers won't have the power to rise.

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.

Are popovers supposed to be eggy? ›

Oh, the dilemma that so often stems from baking popovers — those hollowed rolls with a contrasting crunchy, flaky exterior and moist, eggy interior. They are the American relative to the British Yorkshire pudding, an evolution of the latter that disregards the use of beef drippings in the pan (and instead uses butter).

How is Yorkshire pudding different from popovers? ›

Cooking fat: Yorkshire pudding is a dripping pudding, meaning that chefs traditionally make it using the meat drippings leftover from cooking a Sunday roast dinner. Meanwhile, popover recipes tend to call for butter instead. Yorkshire pudding batter, therefore, takes on a more savory flavor than popover batter.

How do you stop popovers from deflating? ›

Popovers are best served immediately. They will, unfortunately, begin to collapse after a few minutes outside of the oven. One way to help prevent this is to puncture the top and/or side of the popover with the tip of a small, sharp knife to help release some of the steam trapped inside.

When should popovers pop? ›

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.

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