3 Ways to Break Up Lumps in Stored Powdered Food - wikiHow (2024)

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methods

1Using a Blender or Food Processor

2Straining Your Powdered Food

3Preventing Clumping

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Reviewed byJennifer Levasseur

Last Updated: September 14, 2023

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Moisture or contaminants can cause your powdered food or spices to become clumpy and difficult to use. In the past, you may have even had to throw out lumpy powdered goods like cocoa, sugar, custard powder, dried milk, packet meals, and more. But before you toss your powdered food in the trash can, you may want to try breaking up lumps with a blender or food processor, by straining, or utilizing other preventative measures.

Method 1

Method 1 of 3:

Using a Blender or Food Processor

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  1. 1

    Transfer your lumpy powder into a blender or food processor. For food that is especially chunky, use your fingers or a tool, like a wooden spoon or ice pick, to break your powdered food into chunks that will fit easily in your blender or processor. After breaking up your powdered food, its ready to be blended/processed.

    • If your powdered food is less clumpy and more powdery, it may be difficult to transfer it to your blender/processor. In this case, use a funnel to prevent spilling good powder.
    • Use a tool, like a normal or wooden spoon, to guide your powdered food into the blender/processor from its container.
  2. 3 Ways to Break Up Lumps in Stored Powdered Food - wikiHow (5)

    2

    Blend or process your powdered food. Reattach the lid of your blender or processor and fasten it tight. A poor lid seal could send your powdered food flying! Then you'll have to select the right blending/processing mode for your powder.

    • Powdered food that is very lumpy might benefit from a lower speed setting, first. On some blenders/processors, this might be indicated as the "Stir" function.
    • Your powdered food shouldn't require more than a short time at a medium speed to refine it back to its original, lumpless form.
    • It is generally recommended, when using a blender/processor, to keep a hand on its top when running to prevent it coming loose.

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  3. 3 Ways to Break Up Lumps in Stored Powdered Food - wikiHow (6)

    3

    Return your powdered food to a clean container. You should prioritize a container that is airtight, as these will prevent opportunities for moisture cause more clumping. If you live in a humid climate or have regular issues with clumping, you might also want to store your powdered food in the freezer.

    • The cold temperatures in your freezer will create a dry environment for your stored powdered food and reduce the formation of lumps.
  4. 4

    Use your powdered food. You can use your powdered food straight from the freezer. However, when baking, you may want to allow powdered ingredients to come to room temperature before using. Many times these recipes are created assuming all ingredients are at their normal temperature (e.g. - refrigerator cold milk/eggs, room temp sugar/flour, etc.).

    • The temperature of the ingredients you use can influence the outcome of your recipe. If you're concerned the temperature of your powdered food might affect the outcome, it may be best to allow your ingredients to sit until they are room temperature.[1]
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Method 2

Method 2 of 3:

Straining Your Powdered Food

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  1. 3 Ways to Break Up Lumps in Stored Powdered Food - wikiHow (9)

    1

    Break up your powdered food. If moisture has made your powdered food blocky and chunky, you'll first need to break up the powder into smaller pieces. You may want to use a tool, like a wood spoon, metal spoon or ice pick to do this.

    • Try to get the lumps in your food as small as possible. Aim to have no chunks larger than roughly the size of a marble. This will make the straining process easier on you.
  2. 3 Ways to Break Up Lumps in Stored Powdered Food - wikiHow (10)

    2

    Strain your powdered food into a clean, dry container. Hold a thick tined, sturdy strainer over a clean, dry container. Then, a little bit at a time, add your lumpy powdered food to the strainer. Sift loose bits into the container and use a clean, dry tool, like a wooden spoon, to push lumps against and through the mesh of your strainer.[2]

    • Try not to be too forceful when pushing lumps through the strainer. This could cause damage to the strainer.
    • Some lumps may not break apart easily. In many cases, these will be unsalvageable and can be thrown away.
    • Tiny lumps that are small enough to fit through the spaces of your sturdy strainer may remain in the mixture. This is ok.
    • You may need to sift with your sturdy strainer a few times before your powdered food becomes consistent throughout. When you reach this point, you're ready to move on.
  3. 3 Ways to Break Up Lumps in Stored Powdered Food - wikiHow (11)

    3

    Strain again with a fine mesh strainer. Take a fine mesh strainer and position it over a clean, dry container. Pour your powdered food a little bit at a time into the strainer and sift loose powder into the container below. Then, using a tool like a wooden spoon, push remaining clumps through the fine mesh to break them apart.

    • Fine mesh strainers are usually a little more delicate than the thicker variety you used previously. Use light to moderate force to prevent breaking your strainer.
    • If you notice lumps that stubbornly resist breaking up in your strainer, you should remove these and throw them away.
    • You may need to strain your powdered food several times in your fine mesh strainer before it is consistent throughout and your lumps are broken up.
    • Depending on how find your mesh strainer is, you may have very small lumps remaining in your powdered food. In this case, you can repeat the process with an even finer mesh strainer until all lumps are gone.
  4. 4

    Store your powdered food in a clean, dry container. Moisture is the major culprit that causes most clumping and lumping in food powders, so you may want to use an airtight container. Your powdered food is now ready for use.

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Method 3

Method 3 of 3:

Preventing Clumping

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  1. 3 Ways to Break Up Lumps in Stored Powdered Food - wikiHow (14)

    1

    Add a moisture absorber to your mix. As moisture causes most lumping in your powdered food, adding a moisture absorber, like dried rice or beans, to your mix prevents lumps from ever happening. Rice and beans are also relatively large, which means they'll be easy to pick out or can be caught easily in a shaker or strainer and separated from your food powder.

    • While rice and beans are common moisture absorbers, many other things might be used, like unpopped popcorn.
  2. 3 Ways to Break Up Lumps in Stored Powdered Food - wikiHow (15)

    2

    Sift your powdered food regularly. You don't have to wait until lumps have formed to start sifting. Sifting aerates your food powder, releasing moisture that may be trapped inside it. Sifting your powdered food monthly and returning it to a clean, dry, airtight container will reduce occurrences of lumping.[3]

    • If your powdered food has not started lumping yet, simply passing it through a fine mesh strainer and into a fresh, dry, airtight container should help keep it lumpless.
  3. 3

    Avoid applying powder over pans of hot food. Cooking food in a pan usually gives off steam, and steam is a form of moisture in the air. This moisture can rise from your pan to your shaker/container and get trapped there, creating future lumps.

    • To prevent this from happening, you may want to first put your food powder in your hand or a spoon and then sprinkle it onto the food you are preparing.
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      Tips

      • Sugar benefits from having a terracotta shape placed in with it during storage. These are sold in most stores that sell kitchenware.

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      • Try to keep stored food away from moisture. If your spices are above a hot stove, the hot air will likely carry moisture up to your spices and cause clumping.

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      Things You'll Need

      • Airtight container
      • Blender or food processor
      • Funnel (optional; recommended)
      • Wooden spoon

      Straining Your Powdered Food

      • Airtight container
      • Strainer (fine mesh)
      • Strainer (sturdy, thick tined)
      • Wooden spoon

      Preventing Clumping

      • Moisture absorber (dried beans or rice, for example)
      • Strainer (fine mesh)

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      About This Article

      3 Ways to Break Up Lumps in Stored Powdered Food - wikiHow (24)

      Reviewed by:

      Jennifer Levasseur

      Personal Chef

      This article was reviewed by Jennifer Levasseur. Chef Jennifer Levasseur is a Personal Chef and the Owner of The Happy Cuisiniere based in Breckenridge, Colorado. She has over 12 years of culinary experience and specializes in Mountain and Contemporary Rustic cuisine. Moreover, she can craft dishes and modify menus to accommodate dietary restrictions, such as gluten-free, vegetarian, vegan, pescatarian, and dairy-free diets. In addition to a Bachelor’s degree in Marketing and Management from the University of Houston, Chef Jennifer holds Associate’s degrees in Culinary Arts and Baking & Pastry Arts from Houston Community College. This article has been viewed 121,514 times.

      7 votes - 71%

      Co-authors: 5

      Updated: September 14, 2023

      Views:121,514

      Categories: Food Selection and Storage

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      3 Ways to Break Up Lumps in Stored Powdered Food - wikiHow (2024)

      FAQs

      3 Ways to Break Up Lumps in Stored Powdered Food - wikiHow? ›

      Method 1: Small Fine-Mesh Strainer

      Press the spices through the strainer with a spoon until there are no clumps left in the strainer. This allows you to unclump your spices with minimal mess.

      How to unclump spices? ›

      Method 1: Small Fine-Mesh Strainer

      Press the spices through the strainer with a spoon until there are no clumps left in the strainer. This allows you to unclump your spices with minimal mess.

      How to avoid lumps in powdered milk? ›

      Sift the Milk Powder: Before mixing the milk powder with water, sift it through a fine-mesh strainer or sieve. This will help break up any clumps and ensure a smoother texture when reconstituted. Use Lukewarm Water: Use lukewarm or room temperature water for mixing the milk powder.

      What causes powder to clump? ›

      Moisture can be adsorbed from high humidity air or other ingredients at a higher water activity. If ambient humidity is higher than the water activity of a powder, the powder will clump. If the water activity of an added ingredient is higher, the powder will clump. Measure to avoid problems.

      How to break up hardened spices? ›

      If some of your spices seem to be very clumpy, overly packed, and don't sift well through the fitment, try twisting the top back and forth a few times. The simple trick of turning the sifter fitment back and forth almost mimics the function of a spice grinder, and helps release the spices.

      How to unstick powder? ›

      Take a fine mesh strainer and position it over a clean, dry container. Pour your powdered food a little bit at a time into the strainer and sift loose powder into the container below. Then, using a tool like a wooden spoon, push remaining clumps through the fine mesh to break them apart.

      How do you make powder dissolve better? ›

      This is best done by using one hand to stir with a spoon in a circular motion at about 200 to 250 revolutions per minute to form a liquid vortex into which the powder is poured with the other hand. The dispersed powder will initially circulate at the base of the container, reducing the solubility of undissolved powder.

      What removes lumps from dry ingredients? ›

      Sifting other ingredients: Sifting is not just for flour! Dry ingredients like salt, baking soda, baking powder, brown sugar, or dry milk are sometimes sifted together, to distribute them better. Both cocoa powder and confectioners' sugar are often sifted to remove lumps as they are dusted over finished baked goods.

      How do you break up flour lumps? ›

      If you still have a few small lumps you should be able to disperse them with a small wire hand whisk (sometimes called a vinaigrette whisk) or you can use a small spatula or wooden spoon to break them up by pressing them against the side of the pan.

      How to keep tomato powder from clumping? ›

      Just like spices, tomato powder should be kept in a place that is cool, dark, and low on humidity. Stored properly, tomato powder will keep indefinitely. Clumping is a common occurrence, even when stored properly. Simply use a butter knife to break up the clumps before using in your cooking.

      How to get formula to dissolve? ›

      There are a few key points to remember:
      1. Water first, then powder. Always add the powder to the water that is in the bottle, not the other way around.
      2. Boil the water when needed. ...
      3. Cool formula to body temperature. ...
      4. Test the formula temperature to make sure it is not too hot before feeding it to your baby (see below).
      Jan 4, 2024

      How to dissolve milk powder? ›

      Second, using warm or hotter water temperatures can also promote more complete dispersion and dissolution. However studies have shown that a more complete mechanical mixing has a higher degree of impact on faster and more complete dissolution of the agglomerated particles.

      How do you break up clumps of protein powder? ›

      Add most of your liquid to your glass, but keep a little back. Add the protein powder to the smaller amount of liquid and mix thoroughly with a fork until it forms a sort of loose paste consistency with no lumps! You can then slowly add that to the rest of the liquid and mix. Done and done!

      How do you keep powdered spices from clumping? ›

      How to Prevent Clumping
      1. Place rice in the spice container. It is a tried and true home solution for removing moisture from spices and seasoning. ...
      2. Use silica gel packs. ...
      3. Anti-caking agents. ...
      4. Upgrade the cap on the container. ...
      5. Improve the spice storage containers. ...
      6. High-quality manufacturing.
      Feb 13, 2024

      What makes powders stick together? ›

      Free-flowing powders do not cling together, whereas cohesive powders stick to each other and form aggregates that do not disperse well during mixing. Several factors influence the formation of aggregates, such as moisture, electrostatic charges, and inter-particle forces.

      How to keep spice mixes from clumping? ›

      Place rice in the spice container

      Since rice absorbs moisture even faster than salt, it's an easy way to prevent the salt from clumping. This same technique applies to other spice blends and seasonings.

      Why do my spices get clumpy? ›

      Steam equals moisture, and when dried herbs and spices come into contact with this moisture, they can clump together and lose their freshness (maybe even becoming a breeding ground for bacteria). This, in turn, affects the flavor of our dishes and the longevity of our (often pricey) spice collection.

      How to dry clumpy powder? ›

      Another option is to put your powders on a cookie sheet, and put the into your oven with the light on or pilot light active. Or, preheat your oven to its lowest temperature, turn it off, and place the sheets into your oven for 15-30 minutes to allow the heated air to dry your powder.

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