Saturday 21 February 2015

Recipes-Pancakes

Although pancake day has passed, I found this recipe online last week while I was away, and I thought I'd share it as it's the best one I have used. You can use different toppings, and as the pancake recipe doesn't contain sugar, you could use savoury toppings such as smoked salmon or ham and cheese.

This recipe will make four large pancakes or several small scotch style pancakes

110g plain flour
 pinch of salt
 2 large eggs
 200ml semi-skimmed milk mixed with 75ml water
 50g butter

To serve- toppings of your choice
My favourites are
Nutella (either on it's own or topped with banana slices)
Maple syrup
Lemon juice and sugar
Jam

Method

First of all sift the flour and salt into a large mixing bowl with the sieve held high above the bowl so the flour gets an airing.

Now make a well in the centre of the flour and break the eggs into it. Then begin whisking the eggs using an electric whisk or a balloon whisk – incorporating any bits of flour from around the edge of the bowl as you do so.

When the mixture starts thicken, gradually add small quantities of the milk and water mixture, still whisking (don't worry about any lumps as they will eventually disappear as you whisk).

When all the liquid has been added, use a rubber spatula to scrape any elusive bits of flour from around the edge into the centre, then whisk once more until the batter is smooth, with the consistency of thin cream.

Now melt the butter in the pan. Spoon 2 tablespoons of it into the batter and whisk it in, then pour the rest into a bowl and use it when needed to lubricate the pan, using a wodge of kitchen paper to smear it round. 



Now get the pan really hot, then turn the heat down to medium and, to start with, do a test pancake to see if you're using the correct amount of batter. I find 1¾ tablespoons (35mls) about right for the Delia Online Frying Pan.

It's also helpful if you spoon the batter into a ladle or a small coffee cup so it can be poured into the hot pan in one go. Hold the ladle so that the base is very close to the bottom of the pan then pour in.

As soon as the batter hits the hot pan, tip it around from side to side to get the base evenly coated with batter. If you have any holes in it, add a teaspoon of the mixture just to fill them in. It should take only half a minute or so to cook; you can lift the edge with a palette knife to see if it's tinged gold as it should be.

Flip the pancake over with a pan slice or palette knife – the other side will need a few seconds only – then simply slide it out of the pan on to a plate.


Top your pancakes with whatever toppings you have, or simply enjoy them plain with a little butter.






SOURCE: http://www.deliaonline.com/recipes/cuisine/european/english/basic-pancakes.html

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