(I have to quibble with calling it a Craig Claiborne recipe - it's been around forever in various incarnations.)
Well, the cookbook I have calls it David Eyre's Pancake, which is what Claiborne called it in that article. If the hippies had called it a dutch baby, I wouldn't have said that.
under German Pancake
That's good to know! I do have the cookbook. I'll have to see if I have everything I need and try it out tomorrow. Although, I'm not sure I have the right kind of pan for it. I don't have a good cast iron skillet and I'm not sure my calphalon should go in the oven.
You can use a pie plate, if you have one.
Excellent! I will try that.
I just have to say...organic strawberries, vanilla soymilk, and Nature's Party Multigrain Oatbran cereal is a great mix for the morning when you're too lazy to actually wait for steel cut oatmeal to be done cooking. Mmm.
Speaking of lazy, I finally
wasn't
and got off my ass long enough to shear my locks. Back down to 3mm. Weirdly, I'd gotten used to playing with it.
In our house, a Monster Pancake.
For sleeping in, I've gotten a lot done today. 3 loads of laundry, to the vet for catfood, recycling out, and to the pharmacy to refill a script. now we are at the Y waiting for mac's karate to start so I can run to the Dr.
Skipping right at the end of shabbat because, according to the Buffista Calendar, today is Nicole's birthday.
Happy birthday, Nicole! With lots of wishes for a great day and a wonderful year!
Well, the cookbook I have calls it David Eyre's Pancake, which is what Claiborne called it in that article. If the hippies had called it a dutch baby, I wouldn't have said that.
Oh, I get you. It kind of pinged me at first as being sort of like claiming banana bread as a particular person's creation. But the path from Craig Claiborne to hippy dippy cookbook is interesting its own self.
The hippy cookbook is this one: [link] It's good times. There's a whole section on fiddlehead ferns! And making your own butter!
mmm... fiddle head ferns.I've never seen them out here. I wonder if they are just grown on the east coast?