How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (2024)

Copyright © 2000 Sarah Phillips CraftyBaking.com All rights reserved.

Beaten Eggs

Whipping eggs (whole and/oryolks only or whites only) with a portion of the sugar is called the EGG FOAMING METHOD.Beaten eggsare one of the key's to success in making UNSHORTENED (FOAM) CAKES, such as Genoise cakes, and even for souffles, Zabaglione,and other recipes. It is beaten eggs that give the structure and puffor leavening to the recipe.

Whole eggs and/or yolks are often beaten withcrystalline dry sugar to ribbon for use in a recipe. Ribbon is a word used in baking to describetheir particular consistency. On the other hand, beaten egg whites are described by their peak stiffness(soft to stiff)achieved during their preparation.

SARAH SAYS: To beat four or more whole eggs or egg yolks,I recommend using a stand mixer, fitted with a whisk or paddle attachment, depending on what you are making.Instead, ahand-held mixer fitted with beaters or a hand-heldwire whisk can be used, buthand-held devicestake longer. When using a hand held mixer, make sure you circulate it through the mixture as though it were a whisk.Egg Temperatre

Egg Temperature
SARAH SAYS: Typical recipes call for room temperature eggs or yolks, but I have found that onescold from the refrigerator also work. Colder eggs may take afewsecondslonger to ribbon, butit will be achieved.It's really the egg's freshness that determines their foamability; newer fresh eggs will reach more volume and have greater stability when beaten than older eggs.

HOW TO BEAT EGG YOLKS WITH SUGAR AND WITH OTHER INGREDIENTS UNTIL THEY RIBBON
Egg yolks and sugar are beaten until the mixture is pale yellow, thiick and forms a ribbon. When the beaters are lifted, a bit of the mixture falls from it and forms a ribbon which slowly dissolves on the surface. This is used with Priscilla's Orange Sponge Cake Recipe.

NOTE: You must use the whisk attachment, not the paddle attachment.

To beat egg yolks with other ingredients:
1. In a mixer bowl of a stand mixer, whisk the egg yolks to break them up.
SARAH SAYS: Instead of by hand, you can clamp the mixer bowl onto a stand mixer and add the egg yolks. Fit the mixer with the whisk attachment, and mix the egg yolks on low until combined.
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (2)

2. Then, add sugar, orange juice, and vanilla and orange extracts(or zest).
SARAH SAYS: Instead of by hand, stop the mixer, and add the ingredients.
NOTE: While the egg yolks are beaten, large amounts of sugarcan beadded by tablespoons; if too much is added at once, it can cause the yolks to speckle. You beat long enough to dissolve the sugar and the mixture will ribbon.
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (3)

How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (4)

How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (5)

How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (6)

3. Attach the mixer bowl to a stand mixer fitted with awhiskattachment.

4. Start with your mixer on medium-low, gradually increasing its speed to high.

5. Stop when the egg yolk mixture is light in color, taking about 4-5 minutes
When you stop the mixer and lift the whisk attachment, the mixture should fall in a ribbon pattern that sits on top of the swirl for seconds before sinking.
SARAH SAYS: That's why it's called ribbon the egg yolks or ribboning!
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (7)

HOW TO BEAT WHOLE EGGS WITH SUGAR UNTIL THEY RIBBON
Whole eggs and sugar beaten to a beautiful thick, fluffyandfoamy light yellow cream. They triple in volume, and fall from lifted beaters in a flat, ribbon-like pattern that sits on top of the swirl for seconds andthen, slowly dissolves into the rest of the mixture. That'swhat is known as"making the ribbon."

If the mixture is not whipped long enough, it will not be able to hold the ribbon formation. Whipping the mixture too long will make it too fluffy to make the ribbons, resulting in more of a foam consistency. On the other hand, under whipping will make your recipe dense. If you have reached the ribbon stage, stop whipping the mixture and continue with your recipe.

How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (8)NOTE: Warming the ingredients simply helps dissolve the sugar better and improves the emulsifying properties of the eggs, a technique used in the Basic Genoise Cake Tutorial.As a result, it helps them reach maximum volume when beaten. I like to use superfine sugar because it dissolves faster than regular table sugar. It's very important because if the sugar is NOT dissolved all the way, the egg structure needed for ribboning won't be done correctly.

NOTE: You must use thewhisk attachment when ribboning the eggs, and not thepaddle attachment.

To accomplish:
1. Hand-whiskthe eggs and sugar together in the mixer bowl with a large balloon whisk.

2. Then, heat the mixture about 2 to 4 minutes, until it is foamy, slightly pale, and reads 110 to 120 degrees F on an instant-read thermometer.

One way is to place the bowl over a pan of simmering water, taking care not to touch the water, and, whisking steadily,
SARAH SAYS: A technique I use when warming the eggs and sugar, is to turn a stove burner on low, and then continually rotate the bowl's bottom over the burner, while whisking. Be careful, because the handle of the bowl gets hot! Hold it with a kitchen mit.
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (9)

Beat until the eggs are foamingthroughout and slightly pale, indicating the sugar has dissolved.
SARAH SAYS: Check and make sure the sugar is dissolved by rubbing a small amount of mixture in between your fingers. It should not be sandy. If it is, stir rapidly until the sugar is dissolved.

To measurethe mixture'stemperature, remove the bowl from the stove or the simmering water, stir the mixture and, place the end of the thermometer half way in, making sure you don't touch the bottom of the bowl. It should read 110 to 120 degrees F.
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (10)

When ready, remove the bowl from the heat source or water immediately, and dry the bottom.

2. Fit the bowl to a mixer fitted with awhisk attachment.

3. Beat the mixture on medium-high speed (speed #8 on a KitchenAid 325-watt mixer), until it cools to room temperature, triples in volume, the sugaris completely dissolvedand is pale yellow in color, taking about8 to10 minutes. It should then ribbon.

SARAH SAYS: The egg foam passes through various stages during beating - it first becomes foamy, then light and aerated and finally it thickens.Take the time to do this carefully. During the last four to five minutes of beating, stop the mixer from time to time and test the mixture for ribbon thickness.

When the mixture ribbons, it should fall from its beaters or a rubber spatula, and hold together like a sheet of batter and then, fall very slowly into a thick ribbon
back into the mixing bowl.
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (11)

The ribbonwill sit on top and then, spread slightly and then, slowly flatten as it dissolves. The ribbon will still have some definition to it in the bowl.
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (12)

4. Use the ribboned eggs immediately in the recipe.

HOW TO BEAT WHOLE EGGSAND YOLKS TOGETHER WITH SUGAR
For example: Beat the eggs and yolks together with sugar for a total of 5 minutes or until the mixture becomes thick, fluffy, and triples in volume. This is used with the Vanilla Scented Biscuit Roulade CakeRecipe.
SARAH SAYS: This is a VERY important step.
1. Fit the stand mixer with a paddle attachment. Do NOT use a whisk attachment.

2. Placethelarge eggs and yolks in a mixing bowl of a stand mixer.
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (13)

3. Add the sugar.
SARAH SAYS: Do not let the sugar sit on top of unbeaten egg yolks for any length of time.
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (14)

4. Beat the egg mixture on high speed for a total of 5 minutes or until it becomes thick, fluffy, and triples in volume:
SARAH SAYS: If your egg mixture does NOT achieve this, make a sweet omelet with it, and start again with new!
Here's how:
a. Start the mixer on low for a few seconds and then adjust it to high speed. Beat for one minute.
The mixture will start to look bubbly.
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (15)

b. Stop the mixer. Scrape the side and bottom of the bowl without squashing the egg foam.
Be gentle.
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (16)

c. Add the vanilla to the beaten egg mixture.
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (17)

d. Resume beating on high for 3 or 4 additional minutes, or until thick, fluffy, and triples in volume.
You will have beaten the egg mixture for a total of 5 minutes.
How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 | CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (18)

Other How-tos

Chocolate - Heart Toppers

Cakes - How to Decorate

Cakes - Baking Time and Batter Amounts

How to Beat Eggs - Beating Techniques for Whole Eggs and Yolks | Crafty Baking | Formerly Baking911 |  CraftyBaking | Formerly Baking911 (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Ray Christiansen

Last Updated:

Views: 5656

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (69 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Ray Christiansen

Birthday: 1998-05-04

Address: Apt. 814 34339 Sauer Islands, Hirtheville, GA 02446-8771

Phone: +337636892828

Job: Lead Hospitality Designer

Hobby: Urban exploration, Tai chi, Lockpicking, Fashion, Gunsmithing, Pottery, Geocaching

Introduction: My name is Ray Christiansen, I am a fair, good, cute, gentle, vast, glamorous, excited person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.