If I can't find baking soda or baking powder, what should I do?

If I can't find baking soda or baking powder, what should I do? - Side view of cheerful female in apron and casual t shirt standing in modern kitchen and mixing ingredients with whisk in stainless bowl while preparing dough

Suppose I'm somewhere where stores don't seem to stock baking soda or baking powder. Are there other names either of those might be sold under? Or are there things I could substitute?

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Best Answer

1. Chemical leaveners

There are two "oldfashioned" chemical leaveners, both still used today in traditional German and Scandinavian gingerbread recipes:

  • Potassium carbonate (potash or pearl ash) and
  • Ammonium bicarbonate (salt of heartshorn)

They do have their own quirks and pitfalls, but if nothing else is available...

If you can get baking soda, mix with cream of tartar to make baking powder.
If your store does not stock it, you pharmacy most likely will carry "sodium hydrogen carbonate" (which is another name for baking soda) either as treatment for heartburn, it's an antacid (because it reacts with acid, neutralzing it and making these nice bubbles, as we know from baking...) or as topical treatment for allergic reactions of the skin (poison ivy and others).

2. Biological leaveners

This boils down to Saccharomyces cerevisiae, aka. baker's yeast or brewer's yeast. Of course you get very different results and have to follow a different procedure. But here are some recipes where they are used somewhat interchangeably, e.g. some types of pancakes or waffles and, obviously, bread (vs. sodabread).
The charming thing about yeast is, that if your are really, really far from a store, you can still get your hands on yeast: Start a sourdough using the yeasts naturally occuring on fruits or the air around you.
Probably not the kind of substitution you had in mind, though.

3. No leaveners

With good technique, you can incorporate a lot of air (because that's what all leaveners are supposed to do) in your baking goods by whipping your eggs well. There are various approaches:

  • You can whip the whole eggs.
  • Whip the yolks (with hot water or over a water bath to stabilize them) to Zabaione-like consistency.
  • Whip the whites and fold into your batter.

You will want to bake these batters right away before the bubbles get a chance to burst. The air will expand during baking and the hardening egg/flour-mixture will trap them in the baked goods. Contrary to many recipes out there there is no real need to bake a pound cake or even sponge cake with baking powder if it's done right.

Other recipes without leavener (or rather with the egg trapping steam generated by a rather high water content) are the members of the popover family (Yorkshire pudding in the UK, Pfitzauf in Swabia, some dutch pancakes) and pâté a choux.

Puff pastry relies on thin layers of butter separating the layers of floury dough and trapping steam between them.




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Can you replace baking soda with something else?

For example, if it calls for 1 teaspoon of baking soda, use 3 teaspoons of baking powder to make up for the product being cut with cream of tartar. With this substitution, you also might want to use less salt, as that amount of baking powder could add a slightly salty and acidic flavor to whatever you are making.

How can I replace baking powder in a recipe?

Replace each teaspoon of baking powder in the recipe with a \xbc teaspoon of baking soda + \xbd teaspoon of vinegar.



50 Cent - If I Can't




More answers regarding if I can't find baking soda or baking powder, what should I do?

Answer 2

For baking, you may be able to find flour with leaveners already mixed in. Look for self-rising or self-raising flour. Note that in the US at least, self-rising flour also has salt added.

Answer 3

depending on the recipe, you could try using beer instead of baking powder.

Answer 4

Depending on your cookies, cake or funnel cake, you could use self rising flour.

Answer 5

Baking soda is just sodium bicarbonate, you may find it under that name everywhere. European Union encoded this food additive as E500. Sodium bicarbonate is widely available in any pharmacy or drugstore. pubchem open chemistry database - sodium bicarbonate drugs.com sodium bicarbonate. Anywhere you can buy aspirin, you can but sodium bicarbonate.

Baking powder is baking soda plus an acidic compound, maybe cream of tartar or citric acid, and the addition of cornstarch for stability.

You may substitute baking powder with backing soda and add the acidic agent (buttermilk, yoghourt, lemon juice, vinegar, etc) wikihow - How to Make Substitute Baking Powder

And here are a list of common denominations for sodium bicarbonate: commonchemistry.org - Sodium Bicarbonate

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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