Pancakes ( Our diabolical regression in the Art of cooking)
January 30, 2013
Of course, our eating habits have changed. Who would have thought mums now buy a plastic bottle with the advice ‘just shake it’? The ‘just shake it’ seems to be a prepared kind of pancake mix. I would imagine the intending cook fills up the empty space in the plastic bottle with milk and then ‘just shake’ it, with mixture ready for pancake making. It probably makes about five or six pancakes and at $ 1.85 works out at the outrageous price of 30cents a pancake, not including the golden syrup or jam on top. Perhaps the ‘just shake it’ has been embedded from a latent subliminal message from eager husbands pestering tired wives late at night. A clever use of product enhancement.
It must be back-breaking work to put flour in a bowl, and then add some milk, a couple of eggs and whisk the lot together and get the old fashioned pan-cake mixture for a quarter of the cost. Walking slowly past the supermarket’s shelves there were other similar products. A cheese in a tube, some powder that turns into instant mashed potato, but the most irksome of them all, and H is so sick of me commenting on them, are…simmering sauces. My eyes forever keeping guard on our dietary habits, I even spotted a kind of meat-spread in a tube. It was called, I think, devilish spread which came in mild and spicy.
Yet, again, I switched on the telly and it’s almost obligatory now to find and watch a cooking show. No matter what time, there is someone with eyes turned heavenly upwards, saying ‘oh, how yum’ or ‘wow’. Fresh ingredients are tossed together; fish, meat, snails, frogs are being infused, thrown about and cooked almost to the point of a kind of Le Mans’ car race.
It’s all very confusing. There are options in watching French, Italian; Spanish cooks either cooking away in their own country or in top restaurants in Britain. They seem so enthusiastic, you wonder if they have mattresses tucked behind those huge gleaming stainless steel stoves and just take quick naps in between the stacking of delicious looking char-grilled hearts of goats and noodles with infused ginger and deep fried shreds and strips of celeriac with chanterelle-shiitake mushrooms on giant plates.
Then there are culinary delights shown in Vietnam, Indonesia, Burma, even Thailand. Fresh fish swimming, frogs are croaking and eels or snakes still slithering about. Within minutes it is all cooked and on the table with huge smiling families feasting away.
If pancake making is the only thing my grandkids will remember me by; so be it. It would be nice to have an epitaph on my pebble crete slab; “here lies the greatest pancake- maker” (but keep off the grass).
Cooking needs to be an act of love. You can never cook something in total indifference. When the kids are over, pancake making has almost religious overtones. Their own parents’ pancakes seem to lack ‘crispy edges’, I was told by Max who is the youngest of the three grandsons adding, ‘they are alright though’, not wanting to dob in his parents.
It is not as if I swoon over every pancake but I do hand mix the dough adding water and pinch of salt. I use real butter and cook on two cast iron solid pans on high heat. When I gently lower the mixture into the pan, the edges frizzle and sizzle out into the much desired golden crispy and crunchy edging. While hot, I rush them over to the kids seated at the round table, fork and knife in hand and at the ready. I squeeze some lime juice and sprinkle a light dusting of sugar.
I leave the rest to them.
Tags: Britain, Burma, France, Indonesia, Italy, Le Mans, Spain, Thailand, Vietnam Posted in Gerard Oosterman | Edit | Leave a Comment
Gerard – Glad to hear you use butter and cast iron pans – the only way to go. Also glad the topping is citrus and sugar – also the only way to go.
LikeLike
What about lemon and honey?
LikeLike
Cooking again recorded in the style of Elizabeth David and Alice B. Toklas, Australia’s John Downes among no doubt others providing social history and the immediate setting of the execution of the specific dish. O, how I love it.
LikeLike
By execution I nay dinna mean laddie I think y’ murdered it, nay…
LikeLike
I am never going to eat snails, tripe, or battered calamari rings, or eel….never, ever…
LikeLike
There I was hoping to romantically surprise (and entice) you with a bottle of French Champagne and a nicely bow-tied bunch of smoked young eels tucked under the pillow!
LikeLike
Of course, (we all know that); the Rolls Royce of all pancake mixtures is using butter milk.
LikeLike
How was that Malay CURRY you sneaked in the other day. let us know?
LikeLike
It was Kimchi, at least that’s what it said on the lid. One of those temptations that seems to bedevil me. It turned out one of those packages of instant noodles that you fill with boiling water and wait for three minutes. It was awful and after I chucked most of it out I discovered at the bottom of the noodle dregs, it had a spoon in two parts which you were supposed to clip together. Mea culpa. The plastic spoon was the only edible part.
It’s the picture that got me in! Mea culpa again. Helvi looked triumphant as I chucked it out.
LikeLike
I prefer regular milk. Butter milk is really the whey and has less good stuff in it. Now marketed with the addition of god knows what to appear less wasteful.
LikeLike
I’ve just got home from work where the young girls were discussing…you guessed it, pancake in a bottle, replete with hand actions!
As the family pancake cook, I find it extraordinary that someone would even conceive such a concept. Then again, tinned, whole cooked chicken (only in the US), all sorts of bloody simmer sauces (garlic ‘flavour’, peppercorn ‘flavour’, etc), packets to add to pasta sauce… f@#$ knows why??
I’m orff to bed!
LikeLike
Spot on Gerard. When I first saw the pancake thing on a supermarket shelf I could hardly believe it. Insane. Must be flour, salt and dried egg or god knows what. Errkk.
LikeLike
I would think there is milk powder in that bottled mix, so you add only WATER.
LikeLike
Bet it has that peculiar flavour of ‘plastic custard’, custard out of a shop. That goes down with me as the strangest taste on the planet. We coined the term ‘plastic’ in the whole life earth 1960s for anything like it hence ‘plastic custard’.
‘Plastic pancakes’ sounds pretty grim. 🙂
LikeLike
Oh, how I loved my Elizabeth David cook books, I still have them all, the pages are falling when I open them…certain things are meant to be kept…
LikeLike
I am far less filled with neurosis since I bought a replacement copy of her ‘Spices etc. for the English Kitchen’.
True!
It was my first cookbook as we did exchange some notes about Helvi on a previous occasion at the Pigs Arms bar and that it was purchased as a surrpise gift and came home up the mountain range with the load of plastic piping (the rats ate through nevetheless) for the pump down the creek for the water. I opened it up and amazed at its revelation it wasn’t written as a list of recipes and the wood stove crackling away as it was the end of the day and the labourers and hunters and gatherers were coming in for their evening meals… whoooooo… I was 21… lucky me in some respects of experience when I think on it. 🙂
Elizabeth David…
LikeLike
Sandshoe – I still use that expression – “plastic food” – and it all does taste strange. Unfortunately the majority of our supermarkets are filled with it
LikeLike
Of interest Shoe seems to me to be the fact that we are the same age and did a lot of things similarly at the same time. However, I did first make pancakes/crepes (crepes really) at about 12 as it was the only way for me to get a snack. My mother and grandmother then discovered how good they were (yes, with lemon and sugar and if lucky a dollop of ice cream) I had orders coming in and then repeats. Everytime a neighbour arrived (for a few sherries late in the arvo) I was commissioned to make pancakes. Around that time I also made small ones and wrapped then around asparagus and poured cheese sauce over and it was Sat night dinner before going out on the town.
LikeLike
Images of my children cooking come to mind from your descriptors whereas myself I did not cook when I was a child at home. My poor mother could not tolerate the disruption to her kitchen which was retrograde thinking poor her, she wasn’t well with stupendous migraine headaches. I really learned to cook once i was ‘dropped out’ into the alternate existence of pioneering a home and had a wood stove in my early 20s. I think in retrospect that is lucky even though I had not cooked much until experience leading up to then, when everything non-plastic and survival oriented grabbed my interest, but I had done two years at University and Elizabeth David’s approach bridged the lifestyles for me, she felt like a kindred spirit. Yes, I reckon we are the same age and when i joined the piglets i think we touched on the subject and our families through our heritage. I was born in 1950, Vivienne.
LikeLike
Maybe so – I’ve not inspected the container and its contents. BUT, why is Gerard speaking of adding water to his handmade pancakes. Mental typo perhaps. Surely he adds milk to his flour and egg. I always kept one good flat frypan just for pancake/crepe making. Hidden from hubby who is famous here for buggering up pans. I just bought two new ones. I also bought him a new iron as the teflon was peeling off current one. New one is for ‘serious ironers’ and is stainless steel, top of the range. It got the big thumbs up as he christened it yesterday preparing for trip to Rod Laver Arena to see Keith Urban concert with daughter.
LikeLike
Viv, I don’t know with Gerard puts in his mix, his pancakes are very good.
My mum used full cream milk but to make the pancakes lighter she used to add a half cup of water, in her days on the farm there was no selection of different types of milk, I do the same unless I happen to have low fat milk in the fridge….I don’t run to the shops just for that….
LikeLike
Interesting this – are we talking about pancakes or crepes. Self raising flour or plain flour. I think I might be talking in cross purpose mode. I say this because a pikelet is with self raising flour and I have found that some people are calling pikelets a pancake. Whereas to me a pancake is a pancake and a crepe is a fancy name for a finer pancake- made thinner. The thinness is basically a matter of more milk to make the ‘batter’ thinner or lighter and more care taken in the making.
Would your mum have added water because of depression years habit, or wartime scarcity etc. It just seems an odd thing to do, to me anyway.
LikeLike
Viv, I think Gez is takling about crepes, they are very light, thin… daughter makes pancakes and uses selfraising flour. According to my mum the little bit of water made crepes very light. We had a farm and milking cows, so it was never lack of full cream milk…that we had plenty of 🙂
LikeLike