Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Pancakes, England-style!

Today is Shrove Tuesday, the last day before Lent starts. In England, it is called "Pancake Day" even though most people don't recognise Lent. The funny thing is, because people don't follow a religious calendar, everyone forgets about this day until the Sunday or Monday or even the Tuesday itself. Then Facebook erupts with posts about pancakes and at 9:00 this morning I even got invited to a last minutes pancake dinner. Now, Simon and I are not the type of people to forget about pancakes or Lent, and we had invited our friend Rachel and our neighbours to pancake dinner tonight. It's becoming a family tradition. We had Rachel over last year, too.

I went shopping yesterday for ingredients. Note that the supermarket had erected a helpful floating frying pan to remind us all about the day. I waited for these people to move but they spent forever looking at the display! From left to right, the display shows pancake mix, cooking spray (not a common product in the UK), vanilla sugar, pouring syrup (just corn syrup. Maple syrup is available but expensive), pancakes (English pancakes are what I would call crepes), and lemon juice. The most traditional way to eat pancakes in the UK is with lemon juice and a dusting of icing sugar. As you can see, you can also use vanilla sugar or syrup.

Simon and I tend to have some form of savoury crepe/pancake because it just makes more sense to have it for dinner in a weeknight.

I use the recipe from the Be-Ro cookbook, which is published by a flour company. You obtain one by sending a cheque for £1.50 to the company. Simon's grandmother gave this one to me shortly after I got married.


The proportions in their batter recipe are exactly the same as the ones in other cookbooks I have: 100 g plain flour, pinch of salt, 1 medium egg, and 300 ml milk or milk/water mixture. I doubled the recipe today and had about 18 smallish, thin crepes. I remember when i moved here I was amazed that you could get cartons of medium eggs or mixed size eggs (usually cheaper) and that the standard UK egg is brown but they sell special cartons of white eggs.


I'm really proud of how well the pancakes turned out this year. I fried them early which was really helpful. I hate spending the whole time in the kitchen when we have people over! I also hate how the smell of frying pancakes clings to everything, and getting the frying done early means time to shower and air out the apartment before guests arrived.


For the savoury filling, I roughly chopped portobello, chestnut, and button mushrooms, and sautéed them with red onion and thyme. Then I added walnut pieces and "Greek-style salad cheese," which tasted better than it sounds, but not as good as feta. I will not buy it again.
I put a few tablespoons of the filling in each pancake and rolled it, and arranged them in a baking pan, and put them under the broiler to heat up. Then I went in the other room to talk to my guests, allowing the top of all the pancakes to burn. So no pictures. They still tasted good, and the filling was delicious. We had enough pancakes left over for everyone to have a pancake with Nutella for dessert.

Do you ladies have Shrove Tuesday traditions?

6 comments:

  1. Aw, that's too bad that they burned! Can I just say... British eggs are SO CUTE!!

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    1. Yes! The next time I get a mixed-size carton with some really small ones I'll show you guys. Definitely not the jumbo ones my mom buys in Canada.

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  2. I have never successfully made crepes or pancakes before. They've always burned and tasted doughy. That crepe looks amazing. Is that a cast-iron skillet?

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    1. Practice makes perfect! This is by far the most successful batch of pancakes I have ever made, and of course I posted a photograph of the most perfect one. Up until very recently, I used to make the batter, start trying to fry pancakes, make a mess of it, and then Simon would have to rescue me and actually fry some edible ones for us to eat. I'm not sure what's changed other than me deciding to practice until I figured it out.

      It is indeed a cast iron skillet. I can't stand teflon. Pancakes are one of the best ways to season cast iron, and this pan definitely needed it!

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  3. amazing! Thanks Ana. I don't own any cast-iron yet--I hate heavy things. I think I'm also weirded out by how they never really seem to get clean?

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    1. Sam you need cast iron!! They do get clean, they only look icky if they are used cinstantly for eggs and aren't reseasoned properly.

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