swee'pea99
Squire
I'd try another batch with the heat cranked up 20 degrees, see how it goes and play it by ear from there.
OK...... Normally my yorkies rise nicely and would grace the plate of a king. Occasionaly they puff up so well that they threaten the integrity of the oven door!!
The last two times I've felt like offering them to the local ice hockey teams as emergency pucks..
Same recipe, same oil, same oven, same temperature same everything, yada yada yada.
What's going on?? (No pictures to save my embarrassment)
Your mum's full of it. I use semi-skimmed and they come up lovely. (I always hand-whisk, BTW.)Ooh - that rings a bell.
Must try some tomorrow with less time spent whisking.
What milk is the OP using? My mother who has made Yorkshire puddings every Sunday of her married life reckons you need full fat milk.
No photos of these stunning puffed up yorkies yet though...
I'm going get a new bag of plain flour and see if that works. Ive got a cake to make this Saturday for a trip to Sherwood Pines with some mates on Monday so will force myself to have the full roast on Sunday![]()
We don't use washing up liquid on the wok or on the yorkie tin.There maybe something in that.
You're not supposed to use washing up liquid on woks.
So we haven't washed our wok in over 15 years.
We just wipe clean with a bit of cooking oil and a papercloth.
We don't use washing up liquid on the wok or on the yorkie tin.
My ex husband cleaned my wok while I was at work. When I got home it was so clean and nearly to a mirror shine
.
Unreasonable behaviourWas that grounds for divorce![]()
Plain flour from Sainsburys, new bag. Same type of eggs from Tesco via a chicken..
.... in the fridge tooSemi skimmed works for me also. Also not a lot of whisking and leave to settle for a couple of hours before using the mixture.
Yes, no, maybe.It could be the flour. Flour is not always the same. There can be big differances, especially in the age of the flour. The fresher the better, but old flour degrades.