Can you freeze waffle batter? The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InCan you freeze gravy?Can you freeze apples?Can you freeze jalapenos?Why would I want to use the creaming method in waffles?Fix my waffle recipeWhat can I do to make my Cheese & Onion Pie freeze well?How long can you keep yeasted waffle batter (including eggs/buttermilk) in the refrigerator?Breakfast burritos from 16 egg casserole, how to cook everything uniformly?Waffle batter with yeast and pearl sugarStovetop Waffle Iron vs Electric Waffle Maker
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Can you freeze waffle batter?
The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InCan you freeze gravy?Can you freeze apples?Can you freeze jalapenos?Why would I want to use the creaming method in waffles?Fix my waffle recipeWhat can I do to make my Cheese & Onion Pie freeze well?How long can you keep yeasted waffle batter (including eggs/buttermilk) in the refrigerator?Breakfast burritos from 16 egg casserole, how to cook everything uniformly?Waffle batter with yeast and pearl sugarStovetop Waffle Iron vs Electric Waffle Maker
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We have made too much waffle batter. The recipe includes flour, baking powder, salt, eggs and milk (no fat), and part of the instructions are to beat the eggs until frothy - we're assuming this is to encorporate air into the mixture.
Can we freeze half of the batter, and if so, will we need to do anything to it when we come to use it (i.e. beating it to re-encorporate air)?
freezing waffle
add a comment |
We have made too much waffle batter. The recipe includes flour, baking powder, salt, eggs and milk (no fat), and part of the instructions are to beat the eggs until frothy - we're assuming this is to encorporate air into the mixture.
Can we freeze half of the batter, and if so, will we need to do anything to it when we come to use it (i.e. beating it to re-encorporate air)?
freezing waffle
add a comment |
We have made too much waffle batter. The recipe includes flour, baking powder, salt, eggs and milk (no fat), and part of the instructions are to beat the eggs until frothy - we're assuming this is to encorporate air into the mixture.
Can we freeze half of the batter, and if so, will we need to do anything to it when we come to use it (i.e. beating it to re-encorporate air)?
freezing waffle
We have made too much waffle batter. The recipe includes flour, baking powder, salt, eggs and milk (no fat), and part of the instructions are to beat the eggs until frothy - we're assuming this is to encorporate air into the mixture.
Can we freeze half of the batter, and if so, will we need to do anything to it when we come to use it (i.e. beating it to re-encorporate air)?
freezing waffle
freezing waffle
asked Oct 30 '10 at 8:56
BluebelleBluebelle
1,474132933
1,474132933
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4 Answers
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StillTasty says you can safely store waffle batter for 3 months, but I've had bad luck freezing it as far as quality goes. After thawing and cooking the batter, the waffles didn't really "rise" enough to be worthwhile. They tasted ok, but the texture wasn't nearly what I wanted.
Waffles are essentially a quick bread, and I believe the baking powder doesn't have the same effect after freezing. I do know that you lose the frothy goodness that you get from the whisking/beating, which is important in achieving the light, fluffy lift inside the crispy exterior. I was told that if you use a yeast recipe instead of a baking powder recipe, you can thaw it overnight and it will give the yeast time to activate by morning - unfortunately I haven't tried it so I'm only passing it on as a suggestion.
What I've found works:
- Making a bunch of waffles and freezing them between layers of wax paper. Not as good as fresh, but better than store-bought frozen, and very convenient.
- Storing the dry mix in the pantry (short-term) or freezer (longer-term), as I generally have milk and eggs on hand and have time for a quick whisk. Not as convenient or portable, but tastier. If you modify the recipe using evaporated milk or dried buttermilk, you can make them with water and egg instead of milk and egg.
As a side note, you probably have about 3 days in the fridge.
5
Reheating waffles in a toaster helps make up for a bit of what they lose not being fresh.
– Cascabel♦
Oct 30 '10 at 13:58
1
Just add some more baking powder after removing from the fridge the next day.
– Bruce Alderson
Oct 30 '10 at 14:36
add a comment |
I would suggest freezing the waffles instead. Baking soda/powder–based batters don't thaw too well, and there's the issue of the egg whites collapsing. Whisking the batter after thawing it would be more likely to result in gluten formation than in light, fluffy waffles. Frozen waffles, on the other hand, are a lovely convenience food - just stick 'em in the toaster to thaw.
add a comment |
Baking powder typically contains two rising agents, one water-activated and one heat activated.
The water-activated agent is usually sodium bicarbonate which will start reacting with the liquid in the waffle batter, start releasing CO2-gas which makes the batter start to get small bubbles. (Sodium bicarbonate is usually sold as baking soda, for making English Scones.
If you freeze the batter, and then re-thaw it that gas will probably escape from the batter.
I'm guessing that you can add some more baking soda to replace the lost gas-bubbles, but I havn't tried it.
See wikipedia for details on baking powder.
/Leif
add a comment |
I make classic belgian waffle batter with yeast and have tried it fresh, kept in the frig overnight and frozen then thawed. All the waffles turned out crispy, fluffy and good although I always love the fresh waffles - might just be in my mind tho.
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
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StillTasty says you can safely store waffle batter for 3 months, but I've had bad luck freezing it as far as quality goes. After thawing and cooking the batter, the waffles didn't really "rise" enough to be worthwhile. They tasted ok, but the texture wasn't nearly what I wanted.
Waffles are essentially a quick bread, and I believe the baking powder doesn't have the same effect after freezing. I do know that you lose the frothy goodness that you get from the whisking/beating, which is important in achieving the light, fluffy lift inside the crispy exterior. I was told that if you use a yeast recipe instead of a baking powder recipe, you can thaw it overnight and it will give the yeast time to activate by morning - unfortunately I haven't tried it so I'm only passing it on as a suggestion.
What I've found works:
- Making a bunch of waffles and freezing them between layers of wax paper. Not as good as fresh, but better than store-bought frozen, and very convenient.
- Storing the dry mix in the pantry (short-term) or freezer (longer-term), as I generally have milk and eggs on hand and have time for a quick whisk. Not as convenient or portable, but tastier. If you modify the recipe using evaporated milk or dried buttermilk, you can make them with water and egg instead of milk and egg.
As a side note, you probably have about 3 days in the fridge.
5
Reheating waffles in a toaster helps make up for a bit of what they lose not being fresh.
– Cascabel♦
Oct 30 '10 at 13:58
1
Just add some more baking powder after removing from the fridge the next day.
– Bruce Alderson
Oct 30 '10 at 14:36
add a comment |
StillTasty says you can safely store waffle batter for 3 months, but I've had bad luck freezing it as far as quality goes. After thawing and cooking the batter, the waffles didn't really "rise" enough to be worthwhile. They tasted ok, but the texture wasn't nearly what I wanted.
Waffles are essentially a quick bread, and I believe the baking powder doesn't have the same effect after freezing. I do know that you lose the frothy goodness that you get from the whisking/beating, which is important in achieving the light, fluffy lift inside the crispy exterior. I was told that if you use a yeast recipe instead of a baking powder recipe, you can thaw it overnight and it will give the yeast time to activate by morning - unfortunately I haven't tried it so I'm only passing it on as a suggestion.
What I've found works:
- Making a bunch of waffles and freezing them between layers of wax paper. Not as good as fresh, but better than store-bought frozen, and very convenient.
- Storing the dry mix in the pantry (short-term) or freezer (longer-term), as I generally have milk and eggs on hand and have time for a quick whisk. Not as convenient or portable, but tastier. If you modify the recipe using evaporated milk or dried buttermilk, you can make them with water and egg instead of milk and egg.
As a side note, you probably have about 3 days in the fridge.
5
Reheating waffles in a toaster helps make up for a bit of what they lose not being fresh.
– Cascabel♦
Oct 30 '10 at 13:58
1
Just add some more baking powder after removing from the fridge the next day.
– Bruce Alderson
Oct 30 '10 at 14:36
add a comment |
StillTasty says you can safely store waffle batter for 3 months, but I've had bad luck freezing it as far as quality goes. After thawing and cooking the batter, the waffles didn't really "rise" enough to be worthwhile. They tasted ok, but the texture wasn't nearly what I wanted.
Waffles are essentially a quick bread, and I believe the baking powder doesn't have the same effect after freezing. I do know that you lose the frothy goodness that you get from the whisking/beating, which is important in achieving the light, fluffy lift inside the crispy exterior. I was told that if you use a yeast recipe instead of a baking powder recipe, you can thaw it overnight and it will give the yeast time to activate by morning - unfortunately I haven't tried it so I'm only passing it on as a suggestion.
What I've found works:
- Making a bunch of waffles and freezing them between layers of wax paper. Not as good as fresh, but better than store-bought frozen, and very convenient.
- Storing the dry mix in the pantry (short-term) or freezer (longer-term), as I generally have milk and eggs on hand and have time for a quick whisk. Not as convenient or portable, but tastier. If you modify the recipe using evaporated milk or dried buttermilk, you can make them with water and egg instead of milk and egg.
As a side note, you probably have about 3 days in the fridge.
StillTasty says you can safely store waffle batter for 3 months, but I've had bad luck freezing it as far as quality goes. After thawing and cooking the batter, the waffles didn't really "rise" enough to be worthwhile. They tasted ok, but the texture wasn't nearly what I wanted.
Waffles are essentially a quick bread, and I believe the baking powder doesn't have the same effect after freezing. I do know that you lose the frothy goodness that you get from the whisking/beating, which is important in achieving the light, fluffy lift inside the crispy exterior. I was told that if you use a yeast recipe instead of a baking powder recipe, you can thaw it overnight and it will give the yeast time to activate by morning - unfortunately I haven't tried it so I'm only passing it on as a suggestion.
What I've found works:
- Making a bunch of waffles and freezing them between layers of wax paper. Not as good as fresh, but better than store-bought frozen, and very convenient.
- Storing the dry mix in the pantry (short-term) or freezer (longer-term), as I generally have milk and eggs on hand and have time for a quick whisk. Not as convenient or portable, but tastier. If you modify the recipe using evaporated milk or dried buttermilk, you can make them with water and egg instead of milk and egg.
As a side note, you probably have about 3 days in the fridge.
answered Oct 30 '10 at 9:44
stephennmcdonaldstephennmcdonald
7,39773159
7,39773159
5
Reheating waffles in a toaster helps make up for a bit of what they lose not being fresh.
– Cascabel♦
Oct 30 '10 at 13:58
1
Just add some more baking powder after removing from the fridge the next day.
– Bruce Alderson
Oct 30 '10 at 14:36
add a comment |
5
Reheating waffles in a toaster helps make up for a bit of what they lose not being fresh.
– Cascabel♦
Oct 30 '10 at 13:58
1
Just add some more baking powder after removing from the fridge the next day.
– Bruce Alderson
Oct 30 '10 at 14:36
5
5
Reheating waffles in a toaster helps make up for a bit of what they lose not being fresh.
– Cascabel♦
Oct 30 '10 at 13:58
Reheating waffles in a toaster helps make up for a bit of what they lose not being fresh.
– Cascabel♦
Oct 30 '10 at 13:58
1
1
Just add some more baking powder after removing from the fridge the next day.
– Bruce Alderson
Oct 30 '10 at 14:36
Just add some more baking powder after removing from the fridge the next day.
– Bruce Alderson
Oct 30 '10 at 14:36
add a comment |
I would suggest freezing the waffles instead. Baking soda/powder–based batters don't thaw too well, and there's the issue of the egg whites collapsing. Whisking the batter after thawing it would be more likely to result in gluten formation than in light, fluffy waffles. Frozen waffles, on the other hand, are a lovely convenience food - just stick 'em in the toaster to thaw.
add a comment |
I would suggest freezing the waffles instead. Baking soda/powder–based batters don't thaw too well, and there's the issue of the egg whites collapsing. Whisking the batter after thawing it would be more likely to result in gluten formation than in light, fluffy waffles. Frozen waffles, on the other hand, are a lovely convenience food - just stick 'em in the toaster to thaw.
add a comment |
I would suggest freezing the waffles instead. Baking soda/powder–based batters don't thaw too well, and there's the issue of the egg whites collapsing. Whisking the batter after thawing it would be more likely to result in gluten formation than in light, fluffy waffles. Frozen waffles, on the other hand, are a lovely convenience food - just stick 'em in the toaster to thaw.
I would suggest freezing the waffles instead. Baking soda/powder–based batters don't thaw too well, and there's the issue of the egg whites collapsing. Whisking the batter after thawing it would be more likely to result in gluten formation than in light, fluffy waffles. Frozen waffles, on the other hand, are a lovely convenience food - just stick 'em in the toaster to thaw.
answered Oct 30 '10 at 18:11
MartiMarti
3,89953146
3,89953146
add a comment |
add a comment |
Baking powder typically contains two rising agents, one water-activated and one heat activated.
The water-activated agent is usually sodium bicarbonate which will start reacting with the liquid in the waffle batter, start releasing CO2-gas which makes the batter start to get small bubbles. (Sodium bicarbonate is usually sold as baking soda, for making English Scones.
If you freeze the batter, and then re-thaw it that gas will probably escape from the batter.
I'm guessing that you can add some more baking soda to replace the lost gas-bubbles, but I havn't tried it.
See wikipedia for details on baking powder.
/Leif
add a comment |
Baking powder typically contains two rising agents, one water-activated and one heat activated.
The water-activated agent is usually sodium bicarbonate which will start reacting with the liquid in the waffle batter, start releasing CO2-gas which makes the batter start to get small bubbles. (Sodium bicarbonate is usually sold as baking soda, for making English Scones.
If you freeze the batter, and then re-thaw it that gas will probably escape from the batter.
I'm guessing that you can add some more baking soda to replace the lost gas-bubbles, but I havn't tried it.
See wikipedia for details on baking powder.
/Leif
add a comment |
Baking powder typically contains two rising agents, one water-activated and one heat activated.
The water-activated agent is usually sodium bicarbonate which will start reacting with the liquid in the waffle batter, start releasing CO2-gas which makes the batter start to get small bubbles. (Sodium bicarbonate is usually sold as baking soda, for making English Scones.
If you freeze the batter, and then re-thaw it that gas will probably escape from the batter.
I'm guessing that you can add some more baking soda to replace the lost gas-bubbles, but I havn't tried it.
See wikipedia for details on baking powder.
/Leif
Baking powder typically contains two rising agents, one water-activated and one heat activated.
The water-activated agent is usually sodium bicarbonate which will start reacting with the liquid in the waffle batter, start releasing CO2-gas which makes the batter start to get small bubbles. (Sodium bicarbonate is usually sold as baking soda, for making English Scones.
If you freeze the batter, and then re-thaw it that gas will probably escape from the batter.
I'm guessing that you can add some more baking soda to replace the lost gas-bubbles, but I havn't tried it.
See wikipedia for details on baking powder.
/Leif
answered Oct 31 '10 at 9:57
leiflundgrenleiflundgren
407259
407259
add a comment |
add a comment |
I make classic belgian waffle batter with yeast and have tried it fresh, kept in the frig overnight and frozen then thawed. All the waffles turned out crispy, fluffy and good although I always love the fresh waffles - might just be in my mind tho.
New contributor
Winebibbler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
I make classic belgian waffle batter with yeast and have tried it fresh, kept in the frig overnight and frozen then thawed. All the waffles turned out crispy, fluffy and good although I always love the fresh waffles - might just be in my mind tho.
New contributor
Winebibbler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
I make classic belgian waffle batter with yeast and have tried it fresh, kept in the frig overnight and frozen then thawed. All the waffles turned out crispy, fluffy and good although I always love the fresh waffles - might just be in my mind tho.
New contributor
Winebibbler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I make classic belgian waffle batter with yeast and have tried it fresh, kept in the frig overnight and frozen then thawed. All the waffles turned out crispy, fluffy and good although I always love the fresh waffles - might just be in my mind tho.
New contributor
Winebibbler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Winebibbler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
answered 39 mins ago
WinebibblerWinebibbler
1
1
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New contributor
Winebibbler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Winebibbler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
add a comment |
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