Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe (2024)

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Using discard and a few simple ingredients, these sourdough popovers are a wonderfully comforting treat! With a soft interior and the slightest tang, all you need is a little butter on your hot popovers to make the perfect winter day snack!

Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe (1)

I am always on the hunt for more great recipes to utilize my discard. I’d much rather make something for my family than throw it out.

And, lately, these popovers are quickly becoming one of my go-to recipes to use up my sourdough starter discard.

These are especially enjoyable on these cloudy, cold February days here at the Farmhouse. There is seriously nothing like a baked treat fresh out of the oven to warm you right up!

This sourdough popover recipe is super simple, using ingredients you probably already have on hand. Plus, there is no kneading or proofing. Simply mix the batter, add it to the popover tin, bake, and enjoy!

What are popovers?

Popovers are similar to Yorkshire pudding, a popular side dish in Great Britain.

Made with eggs, milk, and flour, this super simple batter rises and literally pops over while baking to create a soft, airy bread.

The secret to a good popover is heat. As you will notice, there is not any baking powder or baking soda in this discard recipe. It is actually the steam created by the liquid in the batter that makes them rise.

Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe (2)

Why you’ll love this recipe:

Simple and quick: Made of pantry staples, these come together in no time, and there is no proofing required.

Delicious: These are so comforting and yummy!

A great way to use discard: I hate any food waste, and that includes throwing out my discard. This is a perfect way to easily use the discard up!

Tips for making the perfect sourdough popovers:

  • Don’t over mix! This can cause the final product to be tough.
  • The batter is pretty thin, similar to pancake batter
  • Don’t fill the tins all the way up with dough if using a popover pan.
  • Make sure your ingredients are at room temperature before starting the dough. Popovers rise and popover because of the steam created by the liquid. With cold ingredients, your popover may fall a bit flat.
  • I found it is helpful to have a hot pan. Preheat the popover pan before adding your ingredients. Heat is your friend. These are basically like a puff pancake in muffin form, so they deflate quickly after baking, but are still so delicious.

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FAQ:

Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe (3)

What makes popovers not rise?

The secret to popovers is all about the heat! Make sure your ingredients are at room temperature before mixing up your batter. It also helps to warm up your popover pan in the oven before filling it.

What is the best flour to use for popovers?

I personally use all purpose flour, and it works great!

Can I use a regular muffin pan instead of a popover pan?

Yes! You will get a bit of a different shape, but it is possible. When using a muffin tin, you’ll want to fill the batter to the top.

Can you long ferment sourdough popovers?

I tried long fermenting these, and it failed. I believe the hydrated flour makes it too dense to rise and pop over properly.

Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe (4)

Ingredients:

Milk: Make sure it is at room temperature. This is critical to how well your popovers will rise in the oven.

Eggs: Your eggs should also be at room temperature.

Sourdough starter: You can use a fed starter or discard for this recipe.

Salt

Flour: I use all purpose flour for this recipe.

Large Bowl

Popover Pan

Danish Dough Hook or Whisk

How to make Sourdough Popovers

Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe (5)

Preheat your oven and popover pan

Preheat your oven to 450°F. I found it is helpful to preheat the popover pan as well! You can stick it in the oven while it is preheating.

For this recipe, Heat is your friend. These are basically like a puff pancake in muffin form, so they deflate quickly after baking, but are still so delicious.

Mix your ingredients

Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe (6)

Before you mix your ingredients, make sure your ingredients are at room temperature first – this is key for a good rise.

Mix together the room temperature eggs, sourdough starter, salt, and room temperature milk.

Mix the flour in gently with a whisk or danish dough hook.

Bake!

Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe (7)

If you preheated your popover pan, carefully remove it from the hot oven.

You can either spray it with nonstick spray or use a little coconut oil or butter so the batter doesn’t stick.

Add the popover batter to the pan, but make sure not to fill all the way up. Leave room for them to pop up!

Place it back on the oven rack. Bake at 450°F for 20 minutes. Then, reduce heat to 350°F and bake for an additional 10 minutes.

Storage

You can keep your popovers for few days, just make sure to store them in an air-tight container. We like to reheat our leftover popovers!

Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe (8)

The best toppings for fresh sourdough popovers:

Sourdough popovers are best enjoyed warm – ideally fresh from the oven.

We like to enjoy popovers at the farmhouse with a little bit of honey cinnamon butter, homemade herb butter, or strawberry jam.

More sourdough discard recipes:

  • Sourdough Discard Crackers
  • Sourdough Discard Focaccia
  • The Easiest No Knead Sourdough Discard Bread
  • The Easiest Sourdough Discard Pizza Crust Recipe
  • Easy Sourdough Waffle Recipe

If you try this recipe and love it, I would love if you could come back and give it 5 stars!

Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe (9)

Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe

Yield: 6

Prep Time: 5 minutes

Cook Time: 30 minutes

Total Time: 35 minutes

These sourdough popovers are a wonderfully comforting treat! Light, fluffy, and slightly tangy from the sourdough starter. It's a great way to use up extra sourdough discard.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup milk, room temp
  • 3 eggs, room temp
  • 1/2 cup (sourdough starter, fed or discard)
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup All purpose flour

Instructions

  1. Preheat your oven to 450°F. I found it is helpful to preheat the popover tin as well! You can stick it in the oven while it is preheating.
  2. Before you mix your ingredients, make sure your ingredients are at room temperature first – this is key for a good rise.
  3. Mix together the room temperature eggs, sourdough starter, salt, and room temperature milk.
  4. Mix the flourin gently with a whisk or danish dough hook.
  5. Pour batter into the popover tins, but make sure not to fill all the way up. Leave room for them to pop up!
  6. Bake at 450°F for 20 minutes. Then, reduce heat to 350°F and bake for an additional 10 minutes.

Notes

The batter is pretty thin, similar to pancake batter

Don't over mix! It will make these tough.

It's critical your ingredients are at room temperature. Heat is your friend in this recipe!

Nutrition Information:

Yield: 6Serving Size: 1
Amount Per Serving:Calories: 132Total Fat: 3gSaturated Fat: 1gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 2gCholesterol: 96mgSodium: 408mgCarbohydrates: 18gFiber: 1gSugar: 2gProtein: 7g

Easy Sourdough Popovers Recipe (2024)

FAQs

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 is the best flour to use for popovers? ›

Seeking Optimal Lift and Crispness

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.

What makes popovers not pop? ›

The gluten in flour (and protein from the eggs) create the structure that traps steam in rising popovers. Without this structure, steam will escape like air from a punctured balloon, and your popovers will puddle, not pop.

What makes a popover rise? ›

Basic popovers are made with eggs, milk, and flour. The batter is thin enough to be pourable, about as thick as heavy cream. The high proportion of liquid in the batter creates steam that causes the popovers to puff up like the popover pictured below. The conversion of the liquid in the batter to steam is dramatic.

What are the biggest causes of popover failures? ›

Until last night…
  • Preheat your popover pan.
  • NEVER open the oven door while baking.
  • Use room temperature ingredients.
  • Use the freshest eggs possible.
Jun 22, 2016

Should you let popover batter rest? ›

Let batter rest for 15 minutes while you preheat the oven. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees F and place rack in the bottom third position (to make room for tall popovers and to ensure the tops don't burn!) and another rack in the top position.

How do you trigger a popover? ›

How popover is triggered - click | hover | focus | manual. You may pass multiple triggers; separate them with a space. `manual` cannot be combined with any other trigger.

Should popover batter be cold or room temperature? ›

Make the batter in a blender; make it with a whisk. Beat till smooth and frothy; leave some lumps. Everything should be at room temperature.

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. Serve right away.

How to prevent popover 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.

Can you make popovers the night before? ›

How to Store and Reheat Popovers. 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.

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.

Why do my popovers always deflate? ›

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.

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