What
Is the Difference Between Baking Soda & Baking Powder?
Question: What Is the Difference Between Baking Soda
& Baking Powder?
Answer: Both baking soda and baking powder are
leavening agents, which means they are added to baked goods before cooking to
produce carbon dioxide and cause them to 'rise'. Baking powder contains baking
soda, but the two substances are used under different conditions.
Baking Soda
Baking soda is pure sodium
bicarbonate. When baking soda is combined with moisture and an acidic
ingredient (e.g., yogurt, chocolate, buttermilk, honey), the resulting chemical
reaction produces bubbles of carbon
dioxide that expand under oven temperatures, causing baked goods to
rise. The reaction begins immediately upon mixing the ingredients, so you need
to bake recipes which call for baking soda immediately, or else they will fall
flat!
Baking Powder
Baking powder contains sodium bicarbonate, but
it includes the acidifying agent already (cream
of tartar), and also a drying agent (usually starch). Baking powder is
available as single-acting baking powder and as double-acting baking powder.
Single-acting powders are activated by moisture, so you must bake recipes which
include this product immediately after mixing. Double-acting powders react in
two phases and can stand for a while before baking. With double-acting powder,
some gas is released at room temperature when the powder is added to dough, but
the majority of the gas is released after the temperature of the dough
increases in the oven.
How Are Recipes
Determined?
Some recipes call for baking soda, while
others call for baking powder. Which ingredient is used depends on the other
ingredients in the recipe. The ultimate goal is to produce a tasty product with
a pleasing texture. Baking soda is basic and will yield a bitter taste unless
countered by the acidity of another ingredient, such as buttermilk. You'll find
baking soda in cookie recipes. Baking powder contains both an acid and a base
and has an overall neutral effect in terms of taste. Recipes that call for
baking powder often call for other neutral-tasting ingredients, such as milk.
Baking powder is a common ingredient in cakes and biscuits.
Substituting in Recipes
You can
substitute baking
powder in place of baking soda (you'll need more baking powder and it may
affect the taste), but you can't use baking soda when a recipe calls for baking
powder. Baking soda by itself lacks the acidity to make a cake rise. However,
you can make
your own baking powder if you have baking soda and cream of tartar.
Simply mix two parts cream of tartar with one part baking soda.
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