posted by
ctseawa at 04:09pm on 18/11/2006
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I recently purchased the King Arthur Flour Baker's Companion cook book. This book is a hefty tome with 450+ recipes and lots of other cool stuff (for example, did you know that "gas mark 5" is 375 degrees F?).
I sat down to look through it for the first time this afternoon. I got as far as the first recipe, The Simple but Perfect Pancake. The name is right. At 2:30pm on Saturday afternoon I read the recipe. By 3:15 I had a batch made and was devouring them with the kind of gusto a starving man might apply to his first taste of Beef Wellington or a dieter might attack a Death By Chocolate cake.
In other words, it was beyond damn good. I suspect these will be a regular weekend breakfast item for me now.
The scary part is, this was just the first recipe. I know they won't all be this good (or this distracting) but still... oh dear. Do these make me look fat?
I sat down to look through it for the first time this afternoon. I got as far as the first recipe, The Simple but Perfect Pancake. The name is right. At 2:30pm on Saturday afternoon I read the recipe. By 3:15 I had a batch made and was devouring them with the kind of gusto a starving man might apply to his first taste of Beef Wellington or a dieter might attack a Death By Chocolate cake.
In other words, it was beyond damn good. I suspect these will be a regular weekend breakfast item for me now.
The scary part is, this was just the first recipe. I know they won't all be this good (or this distracting) but still... oh dear. Do these make me look fat?
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hmmmm
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I make poffertjes ("fluffy dutch pancakes") all the time, though, and those bad boys are seriously good. Folded-in egg whites are the secret.
How is this recipe of yours made?
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I vary the consistency of the mix to vary the height of the pancake, and never ever use plain flour (without baking soda of course).
gotta have the fluffiness!
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What's the difference between that recipe and, say, the Joy of Cooking recipe, which seems equally simple?