#FoodieFriday – Yorkshire Puddings


Last Sunday I cooked a traditional English roast dinner. Roast Beef, roast potatoes, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower cheese, gravy AND Yorkshire pudding.

What is Yorkshire Pudding?
For those unfamiliar with the quirky accompaniment, No, it is not a dessert, as the name suggests, it is a British savoury pudding made from an equal weight of eggs, milk, flour and a pinch of salt, and traditionally served with a roast dinner.

In Britain, the term pudding historically meant any cooked dish made from eggs, milk and flour, such as Bread and Butter pudding, or Bread pudding, where you use up stale bread.

The name Yorkshire Pudding is derived from the method used by cooks in Yorkshire, where they placed the joint of beef on a trivet over the batter pan so the meat juices dripped into the batter mixture as it cooked. The result: A stodgey cake-like texture oozing with delicious meat juices. This is the method my old-fashioned mother-in-law taught me. This early version can be traced back to 1737 when it was called ‘Dripping’ pudding.

As time went on, the recipe evolved into the puffs of air we have today and is usually cooked individually in a muffin-style tray. I’ve never mastered this technique until I learned the secret ….

How to make Yorkshire Pudding

What you need: Muffin-style baking tray. Eggs, lard/oil. Eggs, milk, flour and a pinch of salt.

This made 4 Yorkshire puddings. Weigh the eggs: 2 eggs = 100 ml. Add 100 ml of cold milk, then whisk. Whisk in 100 ml of flour. I used self-raising. Season with a pinch of salt. Let the mixture stand for about an hour.

The secret … place a small knob of lard into each individual batter tin and heat in a very hot oven, 225 °C until sizzling. Quickly add the batter mixture and return to the oven for about 15 to 20 minutes. Don’t be tempted to open the oven door while they are cooking. Hey presto.

I was so proud of myself for getting them to rise, I just had to share!

I think for our American friends, Yorkshire Puddings would probably work well served with peanut butter and jelly. What do you think?

Do you have any further variations to offer?

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15 thoughts on “#FoodieFriday – Yorkshire Puddings

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  1. I don’t know why, but my mother often made Yorkshire pudding to go along with roast beef. We LOVED it. Maybe she got the recipe from my dad’s mother who was from England, and most likely it was something Dad grew up with. We just put gravy on it. I’m not sure I’d like it with peanut butter. Hmmm. I have not had it since my childhood and most likely will never make it (so fattening!), but it sure was a treat back then. :)

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  2. Yorkshire Puddings are the best part of a traditional roast beef dinner methinks! I don’t bake much but these always almost push their way out of the oven . . . and taste SO good!

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  3. Peanut butter!! That’s definitely a NO!! Just extra gravy thanks. We had these every Sunday growing up and my hubby and kids and grandkids all love them as much as I do. We had them stuffed once in a pub with the meat, potatoes and gravy and they were so good. So of course I did that one night for some special company. But my Yorkies always stick so instead of oil I am going to try your suggestion of lard. I do the hoy oven thing.

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    1. So of course I did that one night for some special company. But my Yorkies always stick

      What a shame, Bernie. I confess on this occasion I did use a nonstick pan.

      It is always frustrating when you cook for others and it doesn’t turn out as expected :(

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  4. They look like what we call “popovers” here. Similar ingredients, similar method of baking. Much as Americans are crazy about peanut butter, I have never heard of anyone using it on a popover. Instead, butter and jam. Yours are beautiful.

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  5. Yorkshires are getting bigger in pubs over here – ridiculous really, they have their own plates now, just for one. Also pudding can be used as an insult. Like “Ya great puddin'” usually from someone of senior age in the north.

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    1. Hi Lana, a yes. I’d forgotten than the word ‘pudding’ could be used in a degoratory way. I wonder how that came about?

      The Yorkshires in one English style restuarant here fills the plate and all the met and veg sits inside the pudding. I can’t say I fancy that idea myself.

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