Baking Soda Basics
Baking Soda Basics
Baking Soda Basics
Become a better baker by learning the real differences between baking powder and
baking soda– in easy-to-understand language!
If there is one thing that you take away from today’s lesson, let it be this: baking powder
and baking soda are absolutely not the same.
Baking powder and baking soda are both leaveners, however they are chemically
different.
Good rule of thumb: I usually use around 1/4 teaspoon of baking soda per 1 cup of flour
in a recipe.
Baking soda CAN leaven a baked good when exposed to heat. However, unless it is
neutralized with an acid, your finished baked good will likely have a metallic aftertaste–
like I mention above. Get it? Got it? Good
Since baking powder already contains an acid to neutralize its baking soda, it is most
often used when a recipe does not call for an additional acidic ingredient. Like my sugar
cookies. However, this isn’t always the case. You can still use baking powder as the
leavening agent in recipes calling for an acidic ingredient. Like my lemon blueberry cake.
In my recipe development, I based my lemon cake recipe off of my vanilla cake recipe. I
used buttermilk (acid) instead of regular milk for added moisture and a little tang and
subbed a little brown sugar (acid) for granulated sugar– again, for added moisture. I was
pleased with the rise and taste of the cake, so I did not experiment with using baking
soda.
Good rule of thumb: I usually use around 1 teaspoon of baking powder per 1 cup of
flour in a recipe.
Basically, the reason for both is because sometimes you need more leavening than you
have acid available in the recipe. It’s all about balance.
Another reason to use both baking powder and baking soda is because they affect both
browning and flavor. Fine Cooking breaks it down easily: let’s take my buttermilk
pancake recipe. In my recipe, buttermilk is used partly for its tangy flavor. If we used
only baking soda, it could neutralize all of the buttermilk’s acid. And we’d lose that
tanginess! However, by including baking powder as well (which has its own acid), some
of the buttermilk’s flavor is left behind, and there is still enough leavening for fluffy
pancakes.
How to Substitute
It’s tricky, which is why I never recommend it without background knowledge (and the
expectancy that your baked good will not taste as intended).
If you have a recipe calling for baking soda, you might be able to substitute baking
powder. However, you will need up to 4x as much baking powder to get the same amount
of leavening. And, depending on the recipe, you might end up with a baked good that’s a
little bitter with that much baking powder. You can sub baking soda for baking powder
only if you increase the amount of acid in the recipe– which likely changes the taste and
texture of your baked good. You’d also need less baking soda since it is about 3-4x
stronger.