Welcome to my cookbook! I have several recipes that folks have asked for, so I decided to post them here. Some are included in the ward cookbook, but many of them are things I found after that was published so I wanted a place to put them so my family had access to them. I'll add to this as I find things that I think need to be shared. If you have a recipe you'd like to add, let me know and I'll add you as a contributor.
Showing posts with label pancake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pancake. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Pancakes and Blueberry pancakes

1cup flour
1 tbs. baking powder
2 tbs. sugar
½ tsp. salt
1 cup milk
1 egg
2 tbs. salad oil
1 tsp. vanilla

Mix sugar, salt, milk, egg, oil, and vanilla together.  Add baking powder and flour and mix until smooth.  If batter is too thick, add water.  It's better to have batter a little too thin than have it too thick. Cook on greased hot griddle.   To make Blueberry Pancakes:  Use a little more sugar in the batter, and after you ladle the batter on the griddle, sprinkle fresh blueberries on each pancake.  

To cook on griddle:  Heat griddle to 375 or 400 degrees, depending on griddle.  Lightly grease griddle and wipe with paper towel.  Ladle batter onto griddle (about 1/4 cup per pancake, maybe a little less, especially with thinner batter.)  Pancakes will form bubbles.  This is NOT the time to flip them.  Wait till the majority of the bubbles have popped and the edges of the pancakes look a little bit dry.  Flip one time only.  Let cook on second side till done.  If the pancakes are too brown, lower the heat.  

When the kids were little I used to make pancakes with their initials on them.  Make a capital letter backwards (easier for some than for others!) and let it cook a few moments, then fill it in with batter till the batter spills over and makes a circle, looking as close to a "normal" pancake as possible.  Then when you flip it, you can see the initial in the middle.  It'll be a slightly darker shade than the rest of the pancake, but even if it's the same color you can still see the outline of the initial.  This used to really tickle the kids.  It's also fun to do shapes like Mickey Mouse for them.  (Okay, I admit I got the biggest kick out of the Mickey pancakes...)

Swedish Pancakes

3 eggs
1 ½ cups flour
3 cups milk
½ tsp. salt
2 tbs. sugar

Mix all ingredients in a blender.  This batter is VERY thin.  Pour approx. ¼ cup batter onto buttered griddle, let cook till dry on the edges.  Turn, cook till done.  If you have a large griddle you can cook several at once, but if it’s not perfectly flat they will run together.  To serve, lightly butter pancake, add jam or powdered sugar, roll up and eat.  Re-butter griddle as needed.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Hootinany Pancake

First turn on oven to 400. Put 4-8 Tablespoons (to taste) of butter in a 9x13 pan, put in oven to melt. By the time the pancake batter is done, the butter is melted.

Mix in a blender:
6 eggs
½ tsp salt
1 c. milk
1 cup flour

Blend up above mixture and pour into hot melted butter. Bake at 400 for 15-20 minutes. The pancake will be all puffed up in crazy "hills" and golden. Serve hot with syrup and sprinkled with lots of berries.