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2006-10-20 07:48:20 · 5 answers · asked by jess 2 in Food & Drink Cooking & Recipes

5 answers

Yes.
Baking soda is four times as strong as baking powder — so if your recipe calls for 1 teaspoon of baking soda, you would need four teaspoons of baking powder to produce the same amount of lift. Unfortunately, though, it’s not that simple.

Baking powder is made of baking soda and exactly the right amount of acid to react with the soda (it also includes corn starch to keep the ingredients from prematurely reacting in the privacy of their container). So if your recipe already has acidic ingredients that were going to neutralize the baking soda called for, you are adding other ingredients that may not sit well with them.

Substituting for a lack of baking powder is very easy: 1/4 teaspoon of baking soda plus 1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar (ignoring the cornstarch) for each teaspoon of baking powder required.

We’ve looked in dozens of books to be sure, but no one provides information for the reverse procedure — substituting baking powder when you don’t have soda on hand. To do so, you would have to consider the acidic ingredients in the recipe, and perhaps reengineer the recipe to replace them with more neutral ingredients (using whole milk instead of buttermilk, perhaps). But at that point, you would see, it would be easier and probably a lot more successful to pick up a box of baking soda.

2006-10-20 07:49:50 · answer #1 · answered by Shayna 6 · 2 0

Baking powder and/or baking soda is used as leavening in many cookie recipes. Baking soda helps neutralize acidic ingredients. Baking powder and baking soda are not interchangeable and there is no substitution for baking soda.

Try the pharmacy, or the pharmacy section of the supermarket, and ask for bicarbonato. Baking soda is also called sodium bicorbonate in Britian, or NaHCO3.

Baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) is used as a leavening agent when a recipe contains acid ingredients. Baking soda, an alkaline ingredient, plus an acid ingredient, such as buttermilk, vinegar, molasses or sour cream creates a chemical reaction to form carbon dioxide gas in a baked product making it rise and become light and porous. Heat is not necessary for the chemical reaction, so the reaction begins as soon as liquid ingredients are added. Therefore, products leavened with baking soda should be baked immediately after mixing or the gases will escape and the product will not rise.

2006-10-20 07:58:15 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Proceed with your recipe as is. The only reason for the use of baking soda is to neutrize ingredients that are acidic like fruits (banana's). IT DOES PROVIDE LIFT BUT YOU CAN GET THAT FROM THE BAKING POWDER. THE RATIO OF POWDER TO SODA IS 4 TO 1. JUST ADD 1/4 TEAS OF POWDER & CONTINUE WITH THE RECIPE.

2006-10-20 07:52:53 · answer #3 · answered by wittlewabbit 6 · 1 0

cooking soda i hear works pretty well

2006-10-20 07:58:23 · answer #4 · answered by LoLa 3 · 0 0

I wouldn't want to mess the recipe up....

2006-10-20 07:57:21 · answer #5 · answered by GD-Fan 6 · 0 0

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