Yes, popovers reheat well in a hot oven, and a short blast brings back a crisp shell far better than a microwave.
Fresh popovers are hard to beat. They rise high, the crust shatters at the first bite, and the middle stays light. Still, leftovers don’t have to be a letdown. Reheat them the right way and day-old popovers can come back with plenty of their original texture.
The trick is dry heat and a short reheating time. Popovers lose their edge when trapped steam softens the shell. A hot oven fixes that by warming the center while drying the outside. That’s why the oven works better than the microwave, which turns the shell limp in a hurry.
Can You Reheat Popovers? Oven Steps That Work
If your popovers are plain and fully baked, reheating them is simple. Set the oven to 350°F, place the popovers on a sheet pan or directly on the rack, and warm them until the crust feels dry and the center is hot. For most leftovers, that takes 3 to 8 minutes.
- Heat the oven to 350°F.
- Set the popovers on a pan with a little space between them.
- Warm small or room-temperature popovers for 3 to 5 minutes.
- Warm chilled popovers for 5 to 8 minutes.
- Let them rest for 1 minute before serving so the shell stays crisp.
If you’re reheating filled popovers, use a gentler touch. Custard, cheese, ham, or egg fillings can warm faster than the pastry around them. Split large filled popovers before reheating if you want the middle hot without overbrowning the crust.
Why The Oven Beats The Microwave
Popovers are built on steam. That steam puffs the batter in the oven and leaves behind a hollow center. Once the popovers cool, moisture settles back into the crust. Reheating in a dry oven drives some of that moisture out again, which is what gives you a crisper bite.
A microwave does the opposite. It heats water fast, so the shell softens before the crust can dry. You can still use one if all you care about is warmth, but the texture won’t be close to fresh. A toaster oven works well, and an air fryer can do a nice job too, though it browns the tops faster than a full oven.
When Leftover Popovers Are Still Worth Saving
Most plain popovers are worth reheating the next day. They may lose some lift, yet they can still taste buttery and crisp if they were baked until deep golden to start with. Popovers pulled too early, or left under foil while hot, tend to turn dense and chewy. Those can still be eaten, but they won’t spring back as well.
Filled popovers are a different story. If they hold meat, dairy, egg, or a creamy filling, handle them like other leftovers. The FDA safe food handling advice says perishables should be refrigerated within 2 hours, or within 1 hour if the room is above 90°F. That timing matters more than the reheating method.
Storing Popovers Before Reheating Them
The way you store popovers has a big effect on the reheated result. Let them cool fully before packing them away. If you seal them while warm, trapped steam will soak the crust and turn the shell rubbery.
- Same day: Keep plain popovers at room temperature, left open, if you plan to eat them within a few hours.
- Next day: Chill plain leftovers once fully cool if your kitchen runs warm, or if you want a firmer shell before reheating.
- Longer storage: Freeze them once cool and wrap them well so they don’t pick up freezer odors.
For a rough safety window, the FoodSafety.gov cold food storage chart lists many cooked leftovers at 3 to 4 days in the fridge, while frozen storage is mostly about quality. Plain popovers often taste best sooner than that, though, since texture slips before safety does.
| Starting Point | Best Reheating Setup | What You’ll Get |
|---|---|---|
| Fresh, cooled for 1 to 2 hours | 350°F oven for 3 to 4 minutes | Near-fresh crust with a warm center |
| Left out overnight, plain | 350°F oven for 4 to 6 minutes | Crisper shell, a bit less lift |
| Refrigerated, plain | 350°F oven for 5 to 8 minutes | Good crust, warmer middle, slight firmness |
| Refrigerated, filled | 325°F oven for 8 to 12 minutes | Hot filling with less risk of scorched tops |
| Frozen, thawed | 350°F oven for 6 to 8 minutes | Strong rebound in crust and aroma |
| Frozen, straight from freezer | 325°F for 6 minutes, then 350°F for 4 to 6 minutes | Even heat with less drying |
| Toaster oven | 325°F to 350°F for 4 to 7 minutes | Good for small batches, darker tops |
| Microwave | 10 to 15 seconds only | Warm, but soft and chewy |
Reheating Popovers From The Fridge Or Freezer
Cold popovers need a little more time, but the method stays the same. You don’t need to thaw refrigerated popovers first. Just put them into a preheated oven and let the crust dry out as the center warms. If they were wrapped tightly in the fridge, unwrap them a few minutes early so surface moisture can fade.
Frozen popovers can go straight into the oven. Start them at 325°F so the outside doesn’t brown before the middle loosens up, then finish at 350°F to sharpen the shell. If you have time, thawing on the counter for 20 to 30 minutes gives a slightly better texture, since the heat reaches the center faster.
If You Want The Shell Crisp Again
Deep color helps. Popovers that were baked to a rich brown the first time have more structure to regain later. In its popover baking notes, King Arthur points to high oven heat as part of what gives popovers their full rise and shell. That same shell is what you’re trying to refresh when reheating.
These small moves help:
- Reheat on an open pan, not in foil or a closed dish.
- Don’t crowd the pan, or the popovers steam each other.
- If the tops brown too fast, lower the rack instead of dropping the heat right away.
- For popovers that softened badly, split them and toast the cut sides for a minute.
| Problem | Likely Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Soggy shell | Stored while still warm | Reheat longer in dry oven and cool in the open next time |
| Tough center | Too much microwave heat | Switch to oven or toaster oven |
| Dark top, cool middle | Heat too high or rack too high | Move to lower rack and cut the heat a bit |
| Flat texture | Original bake was too pale | Bake deeper brown next time for a sturdier shell |
| Dry bite | Left in too long | Trim the time by 1 to 2 minutes |
Mistakes That Ruin Reheated Popovers
A few habits can wreck the texture fast. They’re easy to fix once you know what to watch for.
- Using a cold oven: Popovers need quick exterior heat. Starting cold makes them dry out before the shell crisps.
- Wrapping them tightly: Foil traps steam. Steam is great when they rise, not when you want crunch back.
- Leaving them in storage too long: Popovers don’t age like sturdy bread. They peak early and fade fast.
- Packing them hot: That one move creates most soggy-popover complaints.
- Expecting a microwave fix: It warms them, but it won’t rebuild the crust.
Make-Ahead Tips For Better Leftovers
If you know you’ll reheat popovers later in the day, bake them until they’re well browned, cool them on a rack, and leave them in the open until the last trace of steam is gone. Then store them loosely if you’re serving them soon, or freeze them once cool if you’re saving them for another day.
You can also refresh batches in waves. Reheat only what you’ll serve right away and leave the rest stored. That keeps each batch from going through multiple warm-up rounds, which dry the interior.
What To Expect When You Reheat Popovers
Reheated popovers can be excellent, but they won’t be identical to one straight from the oven. You’re chasing back the crisp shell and a light center, not the full dramatic rise of the first bake. If the original popovers were baked hard enough and stored well, the result can still be close.
So yes, you can reheat popovers, and the oven is the clear winner. Keep the heat dry, keep the timing short, and let the crust do its thing. Warm center, crisp shell, no soggy bite.
References & Sources
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“Safe Food Handling.”Gives the 2-hour rule for chilling perishables and leftovers.
- FoodSafety.gov.“Cold Food Storage Chart.”Lists fridge and freezer storage ranges for many cooked foods.
- King Arthur Baking.“The Art and Science of Popovers.”Explains how oven heat helps build rise and shell in popovers.