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?
In the Good Eats episode on popovers, Alton talks about Dutch babies in his own inimitable fashion and I believe credited the moniker for them back to the Original Pancake House owner who was looking for a variation on a theme of German pancakes.
I'm watching it now. It's hard to stay focused when I have the option of pausing and screaming at shit.
mmm... fiddle head ferns.I've never seen them out here. I wonder if they are just grown on the east coast?
I've only encountered them in Canada.
The "He doesn't understand" thing is irritating at best.
Ha,I just complained about that again, Trudy.
we had fiddlehead ferns in CT-- but I first had them in Nova Scotia
nope -- looks like I won't see them here
[link]
Happy Birthday Nicole!
I am sad about Paul Newman, don't care how old he was.
What Buffista cookbook?