I give it two thumbs up.
What you need:
2 eggs
3/4 cup half-and-half
1 tsp. vanilla
1/2 tsp. salt
1 Tbsp. granulated sugar
1/2 cup flour
1 Tbsp. butter
3 medium granny smith apples peeled, cored, and cut into 1/4 inch slices
1/4 cup packed brown sugar
2 Tbsp. powdered sugar
What to do:
Put oven rack in the middle position and preheat to 500º. Combine eggs, half-and-half, vanilla, salt, and granulated sugar in a food processor or blender and process until well mixed, about 15 seconds. Add the flour and process until lump free, about 30 seconds; set the batter aside.
Add the butter to a 10-inch ovenproof nonstick skillet and cook over medium-high heat until the butter foams. Add the apples and sprinkle them with the brown sugar. Cook for 9 or 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the apples are golden brown.
Remove pan from heat. Quickly pour the batter around the edge of the pan, then over apples; place pan in the oven. Reduce heat to 425º and bake until browned and puffed, 16 to 17 minutes. With a heatproof spatula, loosen the edge of the pancake. Invert the pancake onto a serving platter, dust with powdered sugar, and serve immediately.
(Recipe from Swiss Ms. back when she was American Ms.)
Seems good. But what is half and half ?
ReplyDeleteWhoa, nice pan! This could be a great way to spruce up your American Legion Pancake Breakfast or even to serve at a campaign rally for your favorite fake presidential candidate.
ReplyDeleteMarie-Hélène, half and half is half milk half cream. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Half_and_half#Dairy_product
ReplyDeleteYum yum!! Definitely putting this on my list of "things to make!" Thanks :)
ReplyDeleteThat is amazing. Did you notice how the finished look of your German Apple Pancake resembles the pattern of the hot pad underneath? I find myself studying this photo (I obviously have way too much time on my hands this morning) and wondering if you planned it that way, or was it just an extraordinary fluke?
ReplyDeleteEither way, the photo is quite lovely and I will definitely be giving this recipe a try! It sounds (and looks) delicious.
Thanks for sharing.
Well, I have to say I know what I'm making for breakfast this weekend.
ReplyDelete*sighs* And I've been so GOOD about watching my food intake, too...
oh how I remember my grandmother making these for me after a day of being sick. YUMMY!
ReplyDeletethanks, orangie mc orange. i was thinking about this recipe recently and sad i didn't have it along with me!
ReplyDeleteWow, that looks so yummy! p.s. When I saw this over at Flickr I thought of you.
ReplyDeletesounds wonderful...I think I will have to try it..stop by sometime.
ReplyDeletebest,
carol
YUM!
ReplyDeletei've made dutch babies before (pretty much the same thing, i think) but this looks amazing. it's a good reminder that baked pancakey things are awesome.
ReplyDeletethis so much looks like your design work!!!
ReplyDeletedede
It's like the French clafoutis, isn't it? Lovely!
ReplyDeleteRandom responses:
ReplyDeleteI did think the pattern on those old potholders went well with the apple pancake. But since I only have those and some ugly straw hot pads, it was an easy choice.
Karl Rove, thanks for the pan. Love it. And you have some excellent ideas for generating more votes. Everybody, go read Karl Rove's blog. Get the inside scoop on his 2008 campaign!
Mahan, there are no calories in these, so don't worry.
Bela, I don't know that word but it sounds very fancy and delicious.
Oh, and Carrie Sue, the image wouldn't load for me, but I'll try again later.
ReplyDeleteHere you are, Jess:
ReplyDeleteThe theory):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clafoutis (NB: it definitely has an 's' on the end in French)
The practice):
http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/database/cherryclafoutis_65873.shtml
See, the same pancake batter. It's absolutely delicious, whether you use cherries, plums, apricots...
EXCELLENT, Bela! Thanks for the links!
ReplyDeleteYou're most welcome. :-)
ReplyDeleteoh my. the weekend (aka the days of fancy breakfasts) will not be here soon enough! thanks!
ReplyDeleteAwe, this makes me miss Germany so much. Apfel kuchen is available warm and fresh in every bakery this time of year. My husband used to surprise me with bakery breakfast now and then and this was always my favorite.
ReplyDeleteLove apple pancake
ReplyDeleteoh my god. That reminds me of a very happy day in the train station in Amsterdam. They had an awesome restaurant inside the station that totally transported us to a different time in history. Our Dutch hosts recommended beer with the pancakes and I'm glad I complied! Mmmm...beer and pancakes!
ReplyDeleteMmmmm
ReplyDeleteI made this over the weekend! Yum, yum, yum!
ReplyDeleteThank you...
Delicious! I made it tonight!
ReplyDeleteI think Swiss Ms. and I would get along just great!