Mix in blender:
2 C milk*
1 C water
4 eggs
2 T oil
1 T sugar
1 t salt
2 C flour
**
Grease a nonstick griddle--we use spray. Heat it til it's ready? Water spits on it or it's medium or something. I don't know. Pour pancake size portions of batter onto the griddle/frying pan (if you use a frying pan, you can swirl the batter to make thinner pancakes). When the air bubbles start popping, turn pancake over. The first pancake never turns out for some reason. But the second and each following one is great.
*My mom likes them really thin and so adds a little more milk or water. I just swirl the batter around in the pan to achieve the same effect.
**Sometimes I add a little vanilla. Sometimes I don't.
We ate these for breakfast almost every Saturday morning when I was growing up. Mom cooked them on our electric griddle, which leaned on mugs and glasses for support because it’s legs were broken. My mom always served these with homemade “Mapeleine” syrup, which is still the only syrup I like. I make it just for me ‘cause my kids and husband don’t like it.
Syrup
Bring to boil, stirring occasionally:
2 parts sugar
1 part water
Add
A t or so Mapeleine maple syrup flavoring stuff. (I’ve only ever found it at Walmart.)
Turn off heat immediately or the syrup will get way too thick. The syrup is usually really thin. You can cook it longer (but not too long) or add corn syrup to thicken it a bit.
Saturday, July 25, 2009
German Pancakes
Mix in a blender (or with a handheld):
6 eggs
1 C milk
1 C flour
1 t salt
1/4 C sugar
vanilla
Melt in a 9 x 13 pan in the oven:
6 T butter
Pour batter into the pan with the melted butter and bake at 375 for 10 minutes. They puff up beautifully in the oven, then collapse immediately when you take them out.
My sister Julie used to make these for dinner when I was growing up. Only for dinner. I don't think we ever had them for breakfast. We eat them for breakfast. Gramma loves them. I like the outside pieces.
6 eggs
1 C milk
1 C flour
1 t salt
1/4 C sugar
vanilla
Melt in a 9 x 13 pan in the oven:
6 T butter
Pour batter into the pan with the melted butter and bake at 375 for 10 minutes. They puff up beautifully in the oven, then collapse immediately when you take them out.
My sister Julie used to make these for dinner when I was growing up. Only for dinner. I don't think we ever had them for breakfast. We eat them for breakfast. Gramma loves them. I like the outside pieces.
Club Soda Waffles, aka "Big Waffles"
2 C Bisquick*
1 egg
1/2 C oil
1 1/2 C club soda
Batter will thicken some if left to sit for a while.
We cook them in our Belgian waffle maker.
*I know, I know. But they really are good. We got this recipe from Stanford's secretary (whose husband was a preacher and who maintained "the Mormons" owned Coca Cola) years ago and we make it A LOT--often with strawberries, bananas, and whipped cream out of this little baby.
1 egg
1/2 C oil
1 1/2 C club soda
Batter will thicken some if left to sit for a while.
We cook them in our Belgian waffle maker.
*I know, I know. But they really are good. We got this recipe from Stanford's secretary (whose husband was a preacher and who maintained "the Mormons" owned Coca Cola) years ago and we make it A LOT--often with strawberries, bananas, and whipped cream out of this little baby.
Tapioca Pudding
Combine and bring to a boil:
3 T tapioca
1/3 C sugar
pinch salt
3 egg yoks
2 C milk
beat and stir into tapioca mixture:
3 egg whites
vanilla
3 T tapioca
1/3 C sugar
pinch salt
3 egg yoks
2 C milk
beat and stir into tapioca mixture:
3 egg whites
vanilla
Monday, June 15, 2009
Lebanese-Style bulgur Salad
The real recipe from Sprouts magazine May/June 2009
3/4 cup bulgur2 cups boiling water
1 pound baby spinach
1 cup finely chopped fresh parsley
1/2 cup finely chopped fresh mint
1 cucumber (12 ounces), peeled, seeded, and finely diced
1/2 cup coarsely chopped marinated sun-dried tomatoes
1 cup cooked chickpeas, rinsed and drained
4 cloves garlic, crushed
1 t sea salt
1/2 t freshly ground black pepper
1/2 c lemon juice
2 T flaxseed oil
2 T extra virgin olive oil
1. Place bulgur in a large bowl and cover with boiling water. Cover bowl and let sit for 1 hour. Drain bulgur in a sieve, pressing gently to expel excess water. Return to bowl.
2. Blanch spinach in plenty of boiling salted water for 30 seconds. Drain, plunge in cold water, and drain thoroughly until dry. Chop finely and add to bulgur. Add parsley, mint, cucumber, tomatoes, and chickpeas, stirring well.
3. Combine garlic and salt in a small bowl; add pepper, lemon juice, flaxseed oil, and olive oil. Whisk until emulsified. Add to bulgur mixture. Stir well and let sit for at least 15 minutes. Serve with feta and quartered tomatoes.
My version based on what I had on hand:
bulgar
green peppers
red peppers
chickpeas
Italian parsley
3--5 cloves garlic
red onion
1 lemon
Olive oil
Served with grilled chicken and homemade bread. De-lish.
Friday, March 6, 2009
Green Goddess Sauce
3/4 C mayo
1/4 C sour cream
4 anchovy fillets (I used paste)
3 T chives
2 T parsley
1 T capers
2 t lemon zest
1 t lemon juice
1/8 t salt
pepper
We put it on salmon burgers--well, I do. Stanford isn't a big fan of salmon burgers. Also good on veggies--fresh and cooked.
Monday, February 23, 2009
Apple Salad
Cut up an/some apple(s)
Sprinkle with sunflower seeds
Poppy seed dressing (optional--good without; probably better with)
I've been eating it almost every day.
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Grandma Nielsen's Aeblerskivers
Mix together:
3 C flour
1 t baking powder
1 t baking soda
2 T sugar
1 1/2 t salk
3 C buttermilk
3 egg yolks
Fold in:
3 beaten egg whites
Heat cast iron aeblerskiver pan. Add a little oil to each cup--or spray. Put a T or a little more into each cup. Turn over with a fork when golden brown. You have to play with the heat, cooking time and the amount of oil/spray.
Serve with syrup, powdered sugar, jam or cinnamon sugar.
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Mahi Mahi Marinade
3 T honey
3 T soy sauce
3 T blasamic vinegar
1 t fresh ginger
1 clove garlic (sliced)
2 t olive oil
4 mahi mahi steaks
salt and pepper to taste
1 T vegetable oil
I'd use less ginger next time
Tandoori Chicken (adapted from an Emeril Legasse recipe)
4 chicken breasts (tandoori usually calls for legs, but we always just have breasts in the freezer--Emeril called for a 4-412 lb. chicken cut into 8 pieces)
2 T vegetable oil
1/2 c chopped white onion
2 T chopped garlic (6-7 cloves)
1/2 t ground ginger (his calls for 2 T chopped fresh--don't always have that)
1/2-1 t chile powder (Emeril called for 1 t serrano or jalapeno chile, finely chopped--I didn't have it and most of the tandoori recipes I read called for chile powder and his didn't. It worked fine)
1 T paprika
1 1/2 t salt
3/4 t t ground cumin ( Emeril called for 1 t--I think it was too strong)
1 t turmeric
1 t ground coriander
1 t garam masala
1/2 t cayenne (I skipped that part)
1/2 C plain yogurt
1 T lemon juice
Blend all ingredients-except chicken and oil. Cut chicken into 1 inch slices (against the grain). Pour marinade over chicken and let sit in fridge for up to 4 hours--I did it just 30 minutes and it was good. Add oil to mix just before you cook and mix well. Cook on a grill pan on a medium high or high flame until just done or put on kabob skewers on the grill. (The skewers didn't work on the grill pan--couldn't get the end pieces to cook). If you use thighs or whole breasts, cut slices in the meat so that the marinate can penetrate better.
Super delish. We eat with basmati rice, pita bread, hummus, and raita--yogurt and cucumber sauce with herbs--parsley or mint or whatever herb you want.
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