[net.cooks] amazingly good pancake recipe

reid@Glacier.ARPA (03/24/85)

Cooks like to show off by making fancy glamorous recipes to serve to their
friends by candle light. Here is a simple ordinary recipe to serve to your
family for breakfast in the morning. I love pancakes and I make many
varieties and I am an inveterate experimenter. This recipe is the one I have
developed over the years to replace buttermilk pancakes because I never have
buttermilk on hand in the refrigerator like my grandmother did. I made this
recipe this very morning with blueberries in it. I do have yogurt in my
fridge, though, and the yogurt can substitue for the buttermilk.

If anybody wants my ultimate pancake recipe, which I've never actually
written down, for yeast-raised buckwheats, send me a message. If there's
enough interest I will write it down, have my wife make a batch to make sure
I've written it down correctly, and then post it.
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	    Baking-powder and yogurt pancakes. Serves 4-6.

5 large eggs or 6 medium eggs
1 1/4 cups milk
8 oz Dannon plain yogurt (other brands might require different amounts)
1/2 cup vegetable oil (or less for dieters; but use at least 2 Tablespoons)
2 1/3 cups white flour (measure carefully, after sifting).
4 teaspoons of baking powder
1 tablespoon of sugar
1/2 teaspoon of salt

Preheat griddle and oil very very lightly. Separate the eggs; beat the yolks
in a bowl big enough to hold the whole recipe. Add the yogurt and beat
again; add the milk and oil and beat again. Rinse the eggbeater.

In a separate bowl, mix all the dry ingredients (flour, baking powder,
sugar, and salt). Sift together. I use a flour sifter for this, but if you
insist on measuring your flour without sifting it even though I told you to
sift it, then you can maybe use a wire whip to blend the dry ingredients.
This step is very important so don't skip it or scrimp on it, because it
evenly distributes the small amounts of baking powder and sugar and salt
among the large amount of flour.

Using a clean eggbeater (no traces of eggyolk or cooking oil on it), beat
the eggwhites until they are fluffy. Now dump the dry ingredient mixture
into the big bowl containing the yolk/milk/yogurt mixture, stir for about 2
seconds just to get the dry ingredients under the surface of the liquid, and
then dump the beaten eggwhites into the big bowl. Now beat this mixture
lightly and slowly (I use a fork, but a wire whip will do if you are
careful) until it is more or less uniform. If you beat too much, or too
fast, then all the gluten in the flour will stick together like bread dough
and the pancakes will be gummy. Don't worry about lumps; if had you sifted
your flour like I told you to, you wouldn't have them anyhow, and if you try
to get rid of them you will overbeat the batter.

Now they are ready to cook. I like to put fresh blueberries in them after I
pour them on the griddle. Make sure that your maple syrup is hot and that
your butter is soft. You can heat syrup in the microwave or you can heat it
by sticking the syrup jar in a pan of boiling water. 

This same recipe also makes really good waffles, but if you are going to
make waffles, you shouldn't cut back on the oil; if you are dieting, then
stick to pancakes.
-- 
	Brian Reid	decwrl!glacier!reid
	Stanford	reid@SU-Glacier.ARPA