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A dutch baby is a popover-like breakfast baked good, often sweetened. Useful for using up excess backyard fresh eggs, we add fruit for a hearty and nutritious meal. Like so many simply delicious foods, a dutch baby requires proper preparation, or mise en place. I usually start with the fruit. Core and slice apples, pears, or plums thinly.
A "David Eyre's pancake" is a variation on the Dutch baby pancake named after the American writer and editor David W. Eyre (1912–2008). The recipe was published by The New York Times Food Editor Craig Claiborne in an April 10, 1966, Times article entitled "Pancake Nonpareil"; in addition to generally regularizing quantities and temperatures ...
1. Heat oven to 350 degrees F. with skillet in the oven on middle rack. 2. When warm, place butter in the skillet to melt. 3. Whisk eggs, milk, flour, salt and optional vanilla and nutmeg.
Get the most out of your Dutch oven by trying tasty recipes, like chicken soup and lentil stew, with at least 15 grams of protein in each serving.
Spoon over warm poached rhubarb and lightly dust with confectioners’/icing sugar. Serve the Dutch babies straight from the oven {on a tray in bed, if you’re feeling so inclined}. P.S. These pancakes also make a dramatic dessert and are excellent served with lemon juice and confectioners’/icing sugar, or your favorite preserves.
A pannenkoek [1] [2] (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈpɑnə(ŋ)ˌkuk] ⓘ; plural pannenkoeken [-ˌkukə(n)] ⓘ) or Dutch pancake is a style of pancake with origins in the Netherlands. [3] Pannenkoeken are usually larger (up to a foot in diameter) and much thinner than their American or Scotch pancake counterparts, but not as thin as crêpes .
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Poffertjes (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈpɔfərtɕəs] ⓘ) are traditional Dutch batter cakes. Resembling small, fluffy pancakes, they are made with yeast and buckwheat flour. [1] [2] Typically, poffertjes are sweet treats served with powdered sugar and butter, and sometimes syrup or advocaat. A savoury variant with gouda cheese is also made. [3]