2 cups (8.5 oz.) flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cardamom (optional)
2 cups buttermilk
3 egg yolks
3 egg whites beaten to soft peaks
Whisk together the flour, salt, baking soda and cardamom until well mixed.
Mix in the buttermilk and egg yolks and mix until smooth.
Fold in the egg whites.
Grease or spray an æbleskiver pan and heat over medium heat. When water sizzles, the pan is hot.
Fill each cup 2/3s full and cook for approximately 3 minutes until it expands slightly above the rim of the pan.
Using a skewer, turn them so the cooked side is on top and cook the other side about 3 minutes.
When an inserted skewer comes out clean, they’re done, transfer to a wire sheet to cool.
Eat however you’d like pancakes. Cut them open, stuff them with butter and jam, sprinkle powdered sugar on top, syrup, whatever floats your boat.
Batter says it makes 35 to 40, I’m 21 in and there’s still a LOT of batter left.
Alternate recipe:
Fill each cup 1/3 full, add whatever filling you’d like, then the remaining 1/3 of batter. Turn and cook as normal.
There’s absolutely nothing wrong with the frozen ones, I used to buy them all the time, but there’s something satisfying about doing it yourself. :)
It’s the difference between making your own waffles vs. buying Eggos. ;)
Yeah, the only reason I’m on the fence is honestly the accumulation of highly specific cookware - I move around a bit and get into food, so I am already looking for two different types of waffle irons as well as a crepe pan.
Then again, whenever I end up leaving Denmark it will be hard to find the frozen ones, and maybe impossible to find a pan. So I guess I should go for it - I can justify it by considering it a souvernur rather than a kitchen utensil. ;)
Yeah, I used to get the frozen ones from Trader Joe’s here in the US, but they stopped carrying them. :( Glad I can do them myself now!
If having a unitasker bugs you though, I think you could also cook eggs in it. :)
https://food52.com/hotline/11927-what-else-can-you-use-an-aebleskiver-pan-for
Sounds like it might be ideal for some take on Korean pancakes, which are absolutely delicious (but challenging to make, I’ve heard). Thanks for the link!