Yeast-raised Belgian Waffles.

I’ve mentioned before that the problem with “Belgian waffles” as currently served by most American restaurants that offer them is that they are only “Belgian” in shape – it’s a regular waffle batter poured into an iron with deeper ridges, creating a dense, greasy, cakey waffle that bears no resemblance to the lighter, crispier waffles that earn the Belgian moniker. I’ve even seen recipes in reputable cookbooks that make no allowance for the different shape of Belgian waffle irons and assume that your straight-up chemically-leavened waffle batter will do the trick. Of course, it won’t.

It’s not clear to me whether there is a single waffle style that qualifies as an authentic Belgian waffle, but everything I’ve read points to the inclusion of one of two methods of introducing lightness into the final batter: yeast or an egg white foam. This recipe, adapted from The 1997 Joy of Cooking, uses both to create a waffle with a light texture and crispy exterior and that brings the virtue of on-the-fly extensibility.

A quick note on equipment: The model I have, from Hamilton Beach, has been discontinued – I got it four or five years ago for $10 on clearance. It has a 7-inch diameter and nonstick grids; they’re not removable, which does make cleanup tricky, but for ten bucks I wasn’t going to be picky. The heat setting runs from 1 to 5, and I found somewhere between 3 and 4 was perfect for this recipe. If you decide to buy a Belgian waffle iron, look for nonstick grids and a variable temperature setting; I vote for a circular grid since it’s easier to spread batter on a circle than on adjacent squares. Always preheat your iron before the first waffle, and after removing each waffle close the lid and allow it to come back up to temperature.

3 cups milk, warmed to 105-110 degrees
3 eggs, separated
11 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted and cooled to lukewarm
1 Tbsp vegetable oil*
1/2 cup sugar
1 1/2 tsp salt
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 cups whole wheat pastry flour*
2 1/4 tsp instant yeast*
a pinch of cream of tartar

1. Whisk the egg yolks, butter, oil, and 1/2 cup of the milk together in a bowl.
2. Whisk in the sugar, salt, and extract.
3. In another bowl, stir the yeast into the two flours.
4. Alternate adding the flour mixture and the remaining milk (3 installments of flour, interspersed with two installments of milk), whisking thoroughly to combine each addition.
5. In yet a third bowl, beat the egg whites with the cream of tartar until you achieve soft peaks. Fold the foam into the master batter. Seal with plastic wrap and let rise at room temperature for about an hour, until roughly doubled, although any healthy rise will suffice.
6. Preheat your waffle iron about 45 minutes after you finished making the batter.
7. Stir the batter to deflate it, then pour enough batter to make one waffle on to the hot iron’s grid. For my 7″ iron, it took about 3/4 cup of batter; Joy says about 1/2 cup, which probably assumes a 6″ grid. Use an offset spatula or heat-proof silicone spatula to spread the batter quickly to the edges, then close the iron and cook until the steaming starts to subside and the waffle is golden brown; this took about two and a half minutes on my iron. Serve immediately; hold in a 200 degree oven; or cool on wire racks before freezing.

* Notes:

  • The vegetable oil will help keep the waffles from drying out. It’s a tiny sacrifice of flavor for greater shelf life.
  • I’m sure this recipe will work fine if you use 4 cups of AP flour, but I like whole wheat flour for both its flavor and nutritional benefit. Not that these waffles would qualify as health food. Pastry flour is lower in protein than regular whole wheat flour and is usually ground more finely.
  • Instant yeast is infinitely superior to the crap they sell in packets as “active dry” or “rapid-rise” yeast. Instant yeast lasts longer – I’ve taken instant yeast that was in the fridge for over two years and baked successfully with it. It doesn’t require you to bloom it separately in liquid. And it uses less packaging than other kinds. Whole Foods sells a brick of the stuff for $5, so if you use yeast even a dozen times a year it’ll save you money. Just dump the contents of the bag into an airtight container and stick it in your refrigerator.
  • If you decide at any point you want to add something to the batter – nuts, berries, dried coconut, chocolate chips (I’d grease the hell out of the iron before that one, though), even crumbled bacon – you can just drop it into the master bowl or even into one waffle’s worth of batter, stir quickly, and pour. Unlike a chemically-leavened batter, this one bounces back quite well from agitation and the resulting waffle won’t be heavier or denser for the intrusion.

Comments

  1. put in your additives (i.e. choc. chips/ pecans) just after you poor the batter into the iron. you won’t have to overly grease the pan and you can control the most important; the additive to waffle ratio it’s kinda like the most important part of a sandwich is the meat to bread ratio!!

  2. Kevin Connolly

    Keith,

    Good post, but have you tried making the batter with less yeast and letting it proof longer? Like overnight, and beat the whites in just before cooking. It should have a much better taste. I think the yeast taste is too much with 2 1/2 tsps, (but I haven’t tried the ‘slow’ method).

  3. Kevin Connolly

    Sorry, I meant overnight, in the REFRIGERATOR.

  4. Belgian waffle is just an umbrella term that encompasses two main types of waffles: the Brussels style and the Liège style. The Brussels style is closer to North American waffles whereas the Liège waffle has the crisp texture you are describing therefore I think Liège waffles is actually what you have in mind.

  5. Kevin – I haven’t made them, but I have eaten sourdough pancakes/waffles and I don’t care for them. I love sourdough bread, but that tang didn’t work for me in the breakfast pastries.

  6. “Whole Foods sells a brick of the stuff for $5 …”

    OK, that just covered the cost of my subscription to The Dish.

  7. Where does one get whole wheat pastry flour? I’ve never seen that before. I asumed it existed but figured it was like a unicorn – more legend than reality.

  8. brian: Whole Foods sells it in their bulk aisle, $1.39/pound. Might be organic, but I’m not positive.

  9. I just got the waffle maker from my friend and will try this recipe. By the way, have you tried the one from “Good Eats?” Alton Brown introduced sweet potato waffle with meringue. What I found is basic waffle recipe though…

    http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/basic-waffle-recipe2/index.html

  10. This is actually in response to your twitter (since I don’t have twitter) comment that the Felix deal will complicate the King to Boston or NY trade rumors… Lets be honest, it really wont have any effect. Most of the people making those rumors don’t care to deal in anything like reality. I can see it now in Thursday’s chat… Bill from Long Island writes: “Is there any truth to the rumor on the radio this morning that the Yanks are looking to trade Brett Gardner, Sergio Mitre, and a bushel of apples to Seattle for…”

  11. If Gardner is in the deal, we’d need to get Gutierrez included to fill the 3rd OF slot. Probably move Granderson to LF. We could throw in Igawa.

  12. Hi Keith,

    Thanks for sharing the recipe. How many waffles did it yield?

  13. Keith – A little off topic, but my wife recently launched a wine/food blog, with more of an emphasis on wine. Her idea is to be educational and introduce new and interesting wines to the public. She also emphasizes that you can get great wine without paying too much.

    I know from reading you for some time you’re not a big wine drinker, but perhaps you would enjoy it and consider linking to it on your page. If so, I would really appreciate it.

    ALSO – on the breakfast pastry front, this past weekend I was introduced to ebelskiver, a Danish stuffed pancake and I am a fan.

  14. John – I’ll check it out. Throw the link in a comment.

    Dr. Tom – Eight or nine, as I recall. We were eating as we went, so I’d call that an estimate.

  15. Thanks Keith – If you scroll down, there are some good primers on French and Italian wines.

    http://wineforalloccasions.blogspot.com/

  16. Sounds great, Keith! I’ll be saving this one for a weekend morning with the family…

    I laughed aloud at your Tweet about my beloved Mets and their best offseason move yet. Certainly a great thing – however, you could at least admit that the Igarashi and Escobar signings were very good, right? I wish they would fork over the money for Piniero (2 years 16 mil) AND Sheets (1 year 9 mil) so we could once again call our rotation “decent”.

  17. Or simply call your rotation “filled”.

  18. In other matters of food, “Pizza Man” of Milwaukee–a place I enjoyed, and you reviewed–burned down last week. I’d say it was a very good representation of Milwaukee style pizza. It is a town with many good pizza options actually, so it wasn’t like the town is now without pizza.

    A few other places went down in that same fire, a greek spoon (another milwaukee staple), a wannabe yuppie club and I believe one other place.

    I’m sure some people have suggest Zafiros for Milwaukee pizza. While it may be the most distinctive milwaukee pizza, truly cracker crust, I don’t think it is the best. There are many other options, such as Ann’s Pizza or if you must stick to an area new stadium, Balistreri’s on 68th and Wells St. A little over 5 min from stadium. There are 2 locations, both nearby, but 68th might have a more consistent version of the original pizza.

    Of course Milwaukee Pizza is thin, stiff, sometimes cracker cust. It is cut into squares. If you are from NY, you will think the sauce is probably over seasoned, maybe too sweet and the pizza over topped. Of course that is just a comparison, not the answer key to a test.

  19. Another thing, I do live in the NYC area and have tried pizza all over the place, incl New Haven, the approach to toppings is something one should consider. In New York on an authentic NY style pizza, being wispy and all, you should limit yourself to cheese and maybe, maybe 1 topping.

    I’ve learned that 1 topping can’t be sausage. I love quality sausage (insert joke if you like) I discovered NY really doesn’t have much to offer here, on pizza or anywhere else for that matter. I’m sure you can find it, somewhere….but the point is, it is not that common. In Milwaukee, most places have excellent sausage, so if you like it, please do choose that for your topping and don’t be afraid to add another, it works on Milwaukee style pizza. I prefer saus/onion, typically.

    I love cheese only in the NYC/New Haven style area, but I really don’t pull that in Milwaukee. Just felt you would be interested.

    Sorry, not to HI–Jack this thread, at least it was a stale post.

  20. Hey Klaw –

    Nothing to do with any kind of waffles, but…

    I’ve already read most of the Klaw 101, and have mostly agreed with your write-ups. I have a reading question, though, as I set out to tackle your #1.

    While at the library recently, I saw “The Master and Margarita” on the “Staff Recommendations” shelf, and took it out. I was immediately hit with the same conundrum as when I read “Crime and Punishment” and “Fathers and Sons”: how much do I just read through the text, taking the story for what it is, and how much should I consult the annotations, which inform and enrich the text but, through the process of consultation, take away from the momentum of the story?

    I go back and forth. What say you?

  21. Brian – whoops, just saw that question. I read it straight through for a class, but also was pretty familiar with the Gospels, which I think is required to follow much of the story.