There any many reasons you may want to avoid eggs in baking or cooking, our main reason has been food allergies. Over the last 8 years of creating, baking and cooking for kids with food allergies I have come up with a list of the best egg substitutes in cooking and baking, and a guide on how to use them. You can download this image in PDF for print here.
Here’s a list of the best egg substitutes, and which circumstances they work the best in. Because to create delicious baking that everyone will love, I’ve learned it’s definitely not a one size fits all approach, and different substitutes suit different types of recipes.
And if you want the guess work taken out, I already provide tried and tested egg substitute suggestions in my recipes on the blog!
Egg Substitutes For Cakes, Cupcakes and Muffins
For Each whole egg you can substitute with one of the following:
- Chia seeds – 1 Tablespoon + ¼ cup water
- Flax seeds – 1 Tablespoon + ¼ cup water
- Baking powder – 2 teaspoons + 2 Tablespoons water + 1 Tablespoon oil
- Gelatin – 1 Tablespoon + 1/4 cup water
When substituting eggs in muffins, cakes and cupcakes, the name of the game is to keep them as light and fluffy as possible. The role of the egg in these baked goods is to add moisture, rise, texture and keep them light and not too dense. If you are going to use chia seeds, flax seeds or gelatin, these take care of the moisture and texture, but you will also need to add 1 extra teaspoon of baking powder, or ⅓ teaspoon baking soda and 1 tsp vinegar to help keep them light and fluffy. If using gelatin, you will need to bloom this in cold water (as per measurements above) first.
Egg Substitutes For dense baking like brownie, cookies / biscuits
For Each whole egg you can substitute with one of the following:
- ⅓ cup mashed banana
- ⅓ cup pumpkin puree
- ⅓ cup apple puree
- ⅓ cup nut butter (peanut butter, almond butter and for nut free tahini can often work as well)
The role of egg in these more densely textured baked goods is to add moisture and texture. The rise isn’t as important. These options do a great job of adding some volume and a dense, fudgy texture. These subs can also be used in muffins and cakes, however you will need to add extra baking soda or baking powder, and they don’t work consistently in all muffin and cake recipes, especially if you are avoiding multiple allergens, particularly gluten.
Egg Substitutes For waffles and pancakes
For Each whole egg you can substitute with one of the following:
- ¼ cup yoghurt (dairy free if needed)
- Chia seeds – 1 Tablespoon + ¼ cup water
- Flax seeds – 1 Tablespoon + ¼ cup water
- Baking powder – 2 teaspoons + 2 Tablespoons water + 1 Tablespoon oil
- Aquafaba (chickpea brine) – ¼ cup
The role of eggs in these goods is to add a little rise, some moisture and texture. These substitutes do a great job of this without any eggs needed. Banana can also sometimes work, but it often needs to be in a recipe formulated for banana to be used such as these waffles. You are generally free to replace the egg 1:1 using your desired substitute from the list above.
Egg Substitutes For desserts, custards, tart filling, mousse, cheesecake
For Each whole egg you can substitute with one of the following:
- Aquafaba (chickpea brine) – ¼ cup
- Tapioca / cornstarch – 2 Tablespoons + 3 Tablespoons water
- Gelatin – 1 Tablespoon + 1/4 cup water
The substitute you choose here will depend on what you are making. Tapioca and corn starch will thicken custard, tart filling and sauces. Make sure you mix it with the water before adding it and add right at the end. It needs heat to activate it to thicken.
Gelatin makes a great replacement to things that set such as tart filling and mousse. Make sure you bloom the gelatin in water first, and then heat to dissolve before adding it to the recipe. My strawberry mousse cake, and mousse tart both use gelatin instead of eggs.
Aquafaba – this works great in mousse – replace egg whites 1:1 – whip it first like you would egg whites, to stiff peaks, and you can replace any yolks in a mousse recipe with tapioca or cornstarch. Then fold the two mixes together to create a light, fluffy egg free mousse. My strawberry mousse cake also has an option to use aquafaba to make it vegan.
Egg Substitutes For meatballs / burger patties
For Each whole egg you can substitute with one of the following:
- Tapioca / cornstarch – 3 Tablespoons
- Chia seeds – 1 Tablespoon + ¼ cup water
This one is fairly self explanatory. Replace the egg 1:1 in your mince mixture. The purpose of egg is usually binding, and these do a great job of replacing that binding and keeping the patties / meatballs moist.
Egg Substitutes For meringue and pavlova
For Each whole egg you can substitute with one of the following:
- Aquafaba (chickpea brine) – ¼ cup
Aquafaba – chickpea brine – the liquid left over from a can of chickpeas! This stuff is like magic. It whips up exactly like egg whites and you can make meringue or pavlova from it, just as you would egg whites. Replace each egg white with 1/4 cup aquafaba. Make sure to use cream of Tatar to help stabilise the mixture and for refined sugar free, you can make powdered coconut sugar, or finely granulated coconut sugar by adding it to a high speed blender and blending until it’s broken down.
Egg Substitutes For pie crusts, quiche / frittata
For Each whole egg you can substitute with one of the following:
- Chickpea Flour – 3 Tablespoons + 3 Tablespoons water
Did you know – you can make an egg free quiche or frittata! Replace the eggs with chickpea flour and water as above, add your other favourite fillings and bake as you would a quiche or frittata. Adding ‘Black Salt’ can also give it an eggy flavour.
Chickpea flour also makes a great pie crust flour:
- 1 and ½ cups chickpea flour
- ½ cup coconut oil (or butter or ghee), softened
- 1/2 teaspoon sea salt
- 3-4 Tablespoons cold water
Combine all ingredients in a food processor and pulse together. Press into your desired pie dish, and place in fridge to chill for 30 mins. Cook in an oven that has been preheated to 180℃, for 20 – 25 minutes.
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