Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Mile High Pancakes
I like pancakes in general, the kind you can get at a truck stop or diner, the kind at a pancake house, the kind my mom made. Sometimes though they can sit in my stomach, and I feel so uncomfortable that I am left wondering why I thought it was a good idea to eat them.
Here's a simple recipe that I discovered on Recipezaar. With the one tablespoon of baking powder in the ingredients, the pancakes that are so light and fluffy that they almost float off plate. I've renamed the recipe to better describe their quality.
Mile High Pancakes
1 egg
3/4 cup milk
2 tablespoons butter, melted
1 cup flour
1 tablespoon sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder (that's right, l tablespoon)
1/2 teaspoon salt
In a medium sized mixing boil, beat the egg until fluffy. Add milk and melted butter (okay, use margarine if you have to, but we use butter in this house), mix until combined. Add dry ingredients and mix just combined. (At this point I added a tad more milk because I thought the batter was too thick, and I wanted a thinner pancake.) The batter will start to foam up into huge bursting bubbles, but that's a good sign; it means your baking powder is working and your pancakes will have the loft you're looking for. Do not overbeat; overbeating will deflate your batter.
Heat a heavy griddle or fry pan which has been greased with a little butter or vegetable oil on a paper towel. The pan is hot enough when a drop of water breaks into several smaller beads which 'dance' around the pan. Or, you if you have one, you can use an electric fry pan or griddle, heated to 375F.
Pour a small amount of batter (about 1/4 cup) into pan and spread in a circle with the back of a spoon or spatula (the kind used to frost a cake). When bubbles appear on surface and begin to break, and the edges look dry, turn over and cook the other side. You can also slightly raise one corner and see if the color is to your liking.
If you really want to make it nice, warm the maple syrup and serve in a nice pitcher.
I have the same problem with pancakes! Marshall loves them but I rarely eat them as I am left feeling like a brick is in my stomach.
ReplyDeleteThese sound marvelous!
Jam
Now you knew I was going to fall in love w/ those heart shaped pancakes, didn't you? ;o)
ReplyDeleteI make pancakes often on Sunday mornings for Grumpy! Your photo looks so appetizing! Of course, I'm eying the bacon.. ;)
ReplyDeleteThose fluffy bad boys are screaming out for this syrup:
ReplyDeletehttp://allrecipes.com/Recipe/Absolute-Best-Pancake-Syrup/Detail.aspx
:)
We have pancakes a couple times a month; they're one of our weekend treats. This is one of my favorite recipes, they work up quickly, no fancy ingredients, and they are light in the tummy.
ReplyDeleteSusie, I've had that recipe in my recipe box for a while. I'm making a German apple pancake probably this weekend...hmmm... with that wonderful cinnamon, it just might be the ticket! Thanks!
I'll keep you posted bwhahahahah!
Katypi, I clicked on the photo so I could get a close-up of the buttah melting on those pancakes--everything looks SO good!
ReplyDeleteYuuummm Pancakes!
ReplyDeleteThat plate was made for that meal; what a wonderful photo!
ReplyDelete