Saturday, March 22, 2014

Easiest-ever pancakes

Ingredients 100g plain flour 2 eggs 300ml/½ pint semi-skimmed milk 1 tbsp vegetable or sunflower oil, plus extra for frying Method Put the flour in a large bowl and make a well in the centre. Crack the eggs into the well, pour in a splash of the milk and, using a balloon whisk or wooden spoon, start to stir from the centre of the bowl, drawing the flour into the eggs and milk. Beat the mix until smooth (get any lumps out now while it’s thick), then stir in the rest of the milk until it’s the consistency of single cream. Stir in the oil. The batter will keep covered in the fridge for up to a day at this point. Stir well before you use it. Put a non-stick frying pan or crêpe pan (one with a 20-23cm base is ideal) over a medium heat. Pour 1cm oil into a heatproof jug and keep it to hand. Add a drop of oil to the pan, swirl it around, tipping any excess back into the jug. Pour in a ladleful of batter, tilting the pan and swirling the batter to give a thin, even layer. Leave the pancake alone for 30 secs, no prodding, or until it starts to colour around the edge. Don’t crank up the heat if this takes longer – as you’ll scorch the bottom of the pancake and it won’t flip well. With a fish slice or palette knife, ease the edge of the pancake away from the pan, then loosen underneath. Check that the bottom is golden, then turn it over in one quick movement or give it a flip. Cook for another 30 secs before turning out onto a plate. Eat straight away. If you’re making ahead, stack the pancakes on a plate and cover with cling film. Pierce the film, then reheat in the microwave on Hig Step-by-step guide to making the perfect pancakes for Shrove Tuesday - or any night of the week h for 1 min or until piping hot.

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