Up until this past year, I had been doing wrong.  All wrong.  I would:

1. Buy a bag.

2. Carefully attempt to open the top, inevitably tear the bag too much, see the fated shower of sugar graduals flying through the air as I spill sugar all over my kitchen.

3. Take out the amount I need.

4. Roll top of bag down as far as I could and pretend it will stay closed.

5. Set bag in a cupboard or pantry.

How to Store Sugar!

 

Now, since I baked so often and used so much sugar, I didn’t experience too many clumps or moisture issues.  But I did occasionally, and it all could have been avoided if I had done just a few easy things!

First, I bought this lovely glass canister from The Container Store. (not an affiliate link)  They have a silicone seal inside which makes it air tight.

I got two, one for sugar and one for flour, and they sit on the shelf in my pantry.  (It is recommended that granulated sugar be stored in a cool, dry and odorless place. Make sure your onions and garlic are somewhere else!)

PRO TIP: Set the container in the sink and open the bag next to it. Any sugar that may spill out with be contained in the sink and you have one less thing to clean up!

How to Store Granulated Sugar!

 

It works like a charm!  Now when I need sugar I either bring my ingredient bowl to the pantry or bring the canister to my counter.  Either way, so much easier.

But then I took in one step further.

How to Store Sugar

PRO TIP:

(doing this one little thing can make the difference in a baking recipe working beautifully or failing!)

I put a 1/2 cup measuring cup into the sugar and I leave it there.  I do this for one main reason:

Consistency in baking.  Using the same measuring cup to measure my sugar means that I always have the same amount.  As you may already know, measuring cups can vary greatly in size/volume.  If I use the same cup every time, I know my measurement of 1/2 cup is true.

Being a recipe creator, or someone who shares recipes publicly, I need to make sure they are as accurate as possible.  This is just one small way I can ensure I am doing everything possible to share a quality recipe.

How to Store Sugar!

For the sugar canister I use the 1/2 cup size, and the 1 cup size in my flour canister.  A typical American recipe has flour is measured in 1 cup increments (that is a total generalization, I know flour amounts greatly vary), while sugar can differ a bit more.  Using the 1/2 cup in the sugar gives me a bit more wiggle room.

Bonus:  One less measuring cup to clean!

Moral of the story?  Get one of these pretty glass canisters, use it to store your sugars and flours, and keep a measuring cup in the canister.  Voila!  Happy bakers everywhere.

Share with your friends!

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Meet Amanda Rettke

Amanda Rettke is the creator of I Am Baker, and the bestselling author of Surprise Inside Cakes: Amazing Cakes for Every Occasion – With a Little Something Extra Inside.Over the course of her 15+ year blogging adventure, she has been featured in and collaborated with the Food Network, New York Times, LA Times, Country Living Magazine, People Magazine, Epicurious, Brides, Romantic Homes, life:beautiful, Publishers Weekly, The Daily Mail, Star Tribune, The Globe and Mail, DailyCandy, YumSugar, The Knot, The Kitchn, and Parade, to name a few.

Reader Comments

  1. I just the glass jar method as well. I was finding that I was still getting clumps. I purchased a bunch of the Food Safe Silica Gel packs from Amazon, wrap them in a paper towel and place them in the bottom of the container…no more clumps!

    1. Hello Bakers,
      This sugar tip is from baker, author, Erin Jeanne McDowell…Add a large of couple of Marshmallows to your sugar. It works FABulously to keep your sugars from becoming rock hard or clumpy. All my sugars are stored with marshmallows and it’s a game changer. I love it when a tip really works! Happy Baking❣️

  2. great idea Amanda. My mother went one step further. She worked as a baker in the school cafeteria. She baked a lot at home also. She purchased her flour and sugar in the 25 pound lots to save money. So she would store her flour and sugar in large buckets with tight fitting lids( like cherry buckets or frosting buckets). Those lids fit so tight, it was like trying to skin a bear trying to get them off when you needed to refill your canister again but it worked. So it was kind of the same idea.

  3. Hi,is it okay to use a plastic airtight container or is using glass vital. I’m attempting your white cake today. Is there one in particular you’d recommend. I’m a Kiwi, still living in N.Z. btw. Thanks, Nicci.

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