
Baking
Baking is creative, delicious, and a lovely way to share with family and neighbors. You likely already have most of what you need in the kitchen.
What you need to start
- Basic measuring cups and spoons
- A mixing bowl and whisk
- A baking sheet or pan
- Flour, sugar, butter, and eggs
At a glance
Your learning path
Three stages, taken at your own pace. Start at the top, get comfortable, then move down as you grow. There is no rush, and no wrong place to begin.
Never baked a thing? Start right here. These four walk you through your tools, how to measure, and a few easy wins, so you pull something warm and delicious out of the oven on your very first try.
How to Measure Flour the Right Way
Preppy KitchenChewy Chocolate Chip Cookies Recipe
Preppy KitchenAmazing Banana Bread Recipe
Preppy KitchenThe Most AMAZING Vanilla Cake Recipe
Preppy KitchenGot a few bakes under your belt? These build real skill: your first yeast bread, a flaky pie crust, a proper layer cake, tender muffins, and buttercream you will be proud to spread.
Easy White Bread Recipe | So Soft!
Preppy KitchenHow to make pie crust
King Arthur Baking CompanyChocolate Cake!
Preppy KitchenBEST Blueberry Muffins Recipe
Preppy KitchenDreamy Buttercream Frosting Recipe | So Easy!
Preppy KitchenReady to stretch yourself? This is the fun, showy stuff: real sourdough, buttery croissants, a beautifully decorated cake, airy cream puffs, and shaping a loaf like a pro. Take your time and enjoy the craft.
The Only Sourdough Recipe You'll Ever Need
King Arthur Baking CompanyMake Perfect Croissants With Claire Saffitz | Try This at Home
NYT CookingHow to Decorate a Cake
Preppy KitchenThe BEST Cream Puffs Recipe
Preppy KitchenShaping a sourdough batard.
Matthew James DuffyWhy baking is wonderful after 50
Baking is one of the most rewarding things you can pick up at this stage of life. It is gentle on the body, easy to do at your own pace, and it fills the house with a smell that pulls everyone into the kitchen. Measuring, stirring, and timing keep your mind sharp and your hands busy, and there is real comfort in following a recipe step by step. Best of all, baking is made to be shared. A loaf for a neighbor, cookies for the grandkids, a cake for a friend's birthday. You end up with something warm to give away and a good reason to stay connected.
Your first month, week by week
Get set up and bake something easy. Pick up a digital kitchen scale, measuring cups and spoons, a couple of mixing bowls, and one baking sheet. Then make a simple drop cookie. The goal this week is just to get comfortable turning the oven on and following a recipe.
Learn to measure by weight. Bake a banana bread or other quick bread using the scale instead of cups. You will be amazed how much more reliable your results become. Notice how the batter looks and smells before it goes in the oven.
Try a simple cake. Practice creaming butter and sugar, cracking eggs into a separate bowl first, and checking for doneness with a toothpick. Let it cool fully before you frost or slice. This is the week baking starts to feel natural.
Bake to share. Make a batch of something you loved this month and give half of it away, to a neighbor, a friend, or family. Jot a quick note about what worked and what you would change. You now have a habit, not just a one-time bake.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Measuring flour by scooping the cup straight into the bag. This packs in far too much flour and makes everything dry and dense. Use a digital scale and weigh your flour, or spoon it into the cup and level it off with a knife.
- Overmixing the batter once the flour goes in. Too much stirring builds up gluten and makes cakes and muffins tough or rubbery. Mix just until you no longer see dry flour, then stop.
- Not preheating the oven all the way. Putting batter into a cool oven ruins the rise and the texture. Turn the oven on 15 to 20 minutes before you bake, and use an inexpensive oven thermometer, since many ovens run hot or cold.
- Opening the oven door too soon or too often. Every peek lets heat escape and can make cakes and souffles sink. Wait until you are near the end of the bake time before checking, and use the oven light to look.
- Using cold butter and eggs when the recipe wants them at room temperature. Cold ingredients will not cream or blend properly. Set butter and eggs out an hour ahead, or warm eggs quickly in a bowl of warm water.
- Guessing when it is done instead of checking. Oven times are only a guide. Test with a toothpick for cakes and breads, look for set edges and golden color for cookies, and pull things a touch early rather than late.
Make it easier on your body
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- Tired hands and sore wrists? Let a stand mixer or a lightweight hand mixer do the hard work. It creams butter, whips eggs, and kneads dough so your hands and wrists do not have to.
- Heavy pans hard to lift? Choose lightweight nonstick sheets and pans, and silicone bakeware that flexes so you do not have to wrestle bakes out of the tin. They are easier to carry and to clean.
- Standing wears you out? Pull up a tall stool or sturdy chair and do your measuring, mixing, and decorating sitting down at the counter. Keep everything you need within arm's reach before you start.
- Stiff jars and stuck lids? Keep a jar and lid opener and a pair of kitchen scissors handy for flour bags and ingredient jars. A rubber grip pad gives you extra leverage when arthritis flares up.
- Kneading too hard on the joints? Use no-knead recipes that do the work with time instead of muscle, or let the stand mixer knead for you. Many wonderful breads need almost no hands-on effort.
- Hard to see the numbers? Use a digital scale and timer with a large, high-contrast display, and add good task lighting over your work area. Easy-grip silicone spatulas and spoons are kinder to the hands than thin metal handles.
Words you'll hear
- Creaming
- Beating softened butter and sugar together until the mix is pale and fluffy. This whips in tiny air bubbles that help cakes and cookies rise and stay tender.
- Proofing
- Letting yeast dough rest and rise before baking so it fills with gas and gets light. Also called proving.
- Folding
- Gently combining a light mixture (like whipped egg whites) into a heavier one with a slow, scooping motion, so you keep the air and do not deflate it.
- Blind bake
- Baking a pie or tart crust on its own, before the filling goes in, often weighted down with dried beans or pie weights so it stays flat and crisp.
- Score
- Slashing the top of a loaf with a blade just before it bakes. This controls where the bread expands and gives it that handsome split crust.
- Crumb
- The inside texture of a baked loaf or cake, meaning how open, tight, soft, or airy it is when you slice into it.
Where to find your people
- Community education and adult-ed baking classes, often run through local schools or colleges at a low cost and aimed at all skill levels.
- Your local senior center, which frequently hosts cooking demos, potlucks, and hands-on baking groups that are easy to join.
- The public library, where free baking demonstrations, cookbook clubs, and how-to events pop up on the calendar more often than you would think.
- Online baking communities, like the friendly forums and Facebook groups around King Arthur Baking and Sally's Baking Addiction, where bakers happily answer questions.
- YouTube channels you can follow and learn from at your own pace, such as Preppy Kitchen, King Arthur Baking Company, and Sally's Baking Addiction.
Start learning Baking
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