Crumpets
By Andrea GearyPublished on January 6, 2020
Time
50 minutes, plus 40 minutes resting
Yield
Serves 6 (Makes 3 Large Crumpets)
Ingredients
Before You Begin
Because the heavily leavened batter will continue to rise as you cook, we call for dividing it into thirds rather than measuring by volume. (The cooked crumpets will all be about the same size.) We developed this recipe on a gas stovetop, which is very responsive. If you're using an electric stovetop, use two burners: Heat the skillet on one burner set to low for 5 minutes, and then increase the heat to medium for 1 minute before adding the batter and set the second burner to high. Move the skillet between the medium and high burners for the appropriate heat level. A digital timer is helpful for this recipe.
Instructions
- Whisk 1 cup (5 ounces) all-purpose flour, 1 cup (4 ounces) cake flour, 2 teaspoons instant or rapid-rise yeast, ¾ teaspoon baking powder, and ½ teaspoon table salt together in 8-cup liquid measuring cup. Add 1¼ cups warm water and whisk until smooth. Cover and let rise in warm place until doubled in volume, about 40 minutes.
- Heat ½ teaspoon vegetable oil in 8-inch nonstick skillet over low heat for at least 5 minutes. While skillet heats, add remaining ¼ cup warm water to batter and whisk until smooth.
- Increase heat to medium and heat skillet for 1 minute. Using paper towel, wipe out skillet, leaving thin film of oil on bottom and sides. Pour one-third of batter into skillet and increase heat to high. Cook for 45 seconds (bubbles will be visible just under surface of entire crumpet). Reduce heat to medium-low and continue to cook until edges are risen, set, and beginning to dry out, about 4 minutes longer. (Gently lift edge and peek at underside of crumpet occasionally; reduce heat if underside is getting too dark, and increase heat if underside doesn't appear to be browning.)
- Slide skillet off heat. Place dry, flat spatula on top of crumpet and pull up sharply to remove excess batter and reveal holes. Scrape excess batter from spatula back into measuring cup. Repeat procedure until holes are exposed over entire surface.
- Flip crumpet, return skillet to burner, increase heat to high, and cook until edges of second side are lightly browned, 1 to 2 minutes. Invert crumpet onto wire rack. Immediately add half of remaining batter to skillet. Return skillet to high heat and repeat cooking process (omitting 5-minute preheat). Repeat with remaining batter. Let crumpets cool completely.
- To serve, cut each crumpet into 4 wedges and toast until crumpets are heated through and exteriors are crisp. Spread crumpets generously with salted butter and jam or creamed honey and serve. (Untoasted crumpets can be transferred to zipper-lock bag and refrigerated for up to 1 week or frozen for up to 1 month.)
Time
50 minutes, plus 40 minutes restingYield
Serves 6 (Makes 3 Large Crumpets)Ingredients
Test Kitchen Techniques
Ingredients
Test Kitchen Techniques
Ingredients
Test Kitchen Techniques
Why This Recipe Works
Crumpets—thick, yeasted rounds with moist, slightly elastic, honeycombed interiors and holes that cover the surface—can be hard to find in the United States, and homemade versions rarely live up to commercial products. Most home cooks don't own special crumpet rings to corral the batter, so instead we made three large crumpets in a small nonstick skillet and cut them into wedges to share. Combining all-purpose flour with bleached cake flour lowered the overall gluten content of our crumpet batter and the temperature at which it set, allowing the crumpets to cook through rapidly. Trading the conventional low-and-slow cooking method (which results in dense crumpets with few holes) for an initial blast of high heat quickly converted the water in the batter to steam; this expanded air bubbles already in the batter and powered their upward expansion before the crumpet had a chance to firm up, producing the proper spongy texture and holey appearance. Lowering the heat allowed the crumpets to cook through without burning on the bottom, and lifting a small amount of raw batter off the top of the crumpets before flipping them ensured that the maximum number of holes was preserved.
Want more? Read the whole storyBefore You Begin
Because the heavily leavened batter will continue to rise as you cook, we call for dividing it into thirds rather than measuring by volume. (The cooked crumpets will all be about the same size.) We developed this recipe on a gas stovetop, which is very responsive. If you're using an electric stovetop, use two burners: Heat the skillet on one burner set to low for 5 minutes, and then increase the heat to medium for 1 minute before adding the batter and set the second burner to high. Move the skillet between the medium and high burners for the appropriate heat level. A digital timer is helpful for this recipe.
Instructions
- Whisk 1 cup (5 ounces) all-purpose flour, 1 cup (4 ounces) cake flour, 2 teaspoons instant or rapid-rise yeast, ¾ teaspoon baking powder, and ½ teaspoon table salt together in 8-cup liquid measuring cup. Add 1¼ cups warm water and whisk until smooth. Cover and let rise in warm place until doubled in volume, about 40 minutes.
- Heat ½ teaspoon vegetable oil in 8-inch nonstick skillet over low heat for at least 5 minutes. While skillet heats, add remaining ¼ cup warm water to batter and whisk until smooth.
- Increase heat to medium and heat skillet for 1 minute. Using paper towel, wipe out skillet, leaving thin film of oil on bottom and sides. Pour one-third of batter into skillet and increase heat to high. Cook for 45 seconds (bubbles will be visible just under surface of entire crumpet). Reduce heat to medium-low and continue to cook until edges are risen, set, and beginning to dry out, about 4 minutes longer. (Gently lift edge and peek at underside of crumpet occasionally; reduce heat if underside is getting too dark, and increase heat if underside doesn't appear to be browning.)
- Slide skillet off heat. Place dry, flat spatula on top of crumpet and pull up sharply to remove excess batter and reveal holes. Scrape excess batter from spatula back into measuring cup. Repeat procedure until holes are exposed over entire surface.
- Flip crumpet, return skillet to burner, increase heat to high, and cook until edges of second side are lightly browned, 1 to 2 minutes. Invert crumpet onto wire rack. Immediately add half of remaining batter to skillet. Return skillet to high heat and repeat cooking process (omitting 5-minute preheat). Repeat with remaining batter. Let crumpets cool completely.
- To serve, cut each crumpet into 4 wedges and toast until crumpets are heated through and exteriors are crisp. Spread crumpets generously with salted butter and jam or creamed honey and serve. (Untoasted crumpets can be transferred to zipper-lock bag and refrigerated for up to 1 week or frozen for up to 1 month.)
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