National Pancake Day

In honor of National Pancake Day March1st 2011:

Pancakes are one of the earliest forms of bread and are served up geographically in many different ways. You can be-all-traditional with baking powder, or try prospecting with sourdough pancakes like the early pioneers. Flip’em with oatmeal or buckwheat when in Vermont; or for a Dutch style treat serve with lemon, powdered sugar and jam. Substitute the flour for cornmeal and you’ll be enjoying it as Native American speciality.

Go Pollack by designing your own pancake creations with sliced apples, bananas, blueberries, strawberries, chocolate chips, chopped nuts.  

Traditional Pancake Recipe

Makes eight pancakes | recipe by George Hirsch

1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour

3 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

1 teaspoon salt

1 Tablespoon pure cane sugar

1 1/4 cups milk

1 teaspoon vanilla

1 egg, beaten

3 Tablespoons butter, melted

In a large bowl, mix together well with a whisk all dry ingredients the flour, baking powder, salt and sugar. In a separate bowl mix all wet ingredients the milk, vanilla, egg and melted butter. Yes, use two bowls so the dry and wet ingredients blend better when combined. Add the wet to the dry and just strip with a large spoon or spatula until the dry ingredients have absorbed the wet. There may still be a few lumps, thats OK. Do not over mix, or pancakes will become tough.

Pre heat a non stick pan or lightly grease a griddle over medium high heat at 375 degrees F. Test the temperature by dropping a drop of water on surface of pan. Water will dance across the surface when at the correct temperature. You can test one cake before proceeding.

Pour one 1/4 cup scoop of batter onto the griddle for each pancake. If adding any fresh fruit or creations add at this time. You will begin to see bubbles form on the top side when brown on bottom, flip and brown on second side. Serve hot with syrup or favorite topping eaten immediately right off the griddle.

Finish off your stack with honey, molasses, can syrup, preserves, Nutella, or maple syrup.

Back Pocket Dish

I'm often asked - What's your favorite food to cook? Honestly, I enjoy all forms of cooking + baking - especially for my family, friends + my TV viewers. But, if pressed for a specific category or recipe - which is a bit difficult, sort of like asking a parent who your favorite child is... I might lean towards dishes that I make often and consider these my back pocket dishes. Having a few of these tried-n-true recipes in your repertoire is a must. These are those recipes that you can make in a moments notice, do well + have fun with. It being a crowd pleaser is always a plus for your guests. My back pocket recipe's ingredients are practically universal, flavors easily available, and doable for the at-home chef. 

A good back pocket recipe can come from a recipe handed down within the family, a friend or maybe from your favorite TV chef. Well, wherever it comes from I encourage you to share + spread your good food.

Here's one of my favorite Back Pocket Dishes.

Linguine Pepperoncino

The Morelli Pasta Factory is a fifth generation family owned + operated company using ancient Italian pasta making techniques.  The Morellis say the secret in their pasta formula is wheat germ, the heart of the grain, which is full of beneficial vitamins A + D as well as protein. Normally, this valuable wheat germ is removed from every factory-made pasta during the semolina grinding process, for a longer shelf of product. The Morelli Pasta Factory kindly adds the wheat germ back in. How polite. 

Their Red Chili Linguine, made with pepperoncino has quite a bite + deserves a bit of seafood to balance out the flavor.

Linguine Calamari Sauce Recipe

available at specialty food shops in the USA.

Yielding From Tuscany's Own

The McEvoy Ranch in California is evidence of dreams into action. The 500+ acres of farmland, once with fields of cows for dairy is now filled with award winning Tuscan olive varietals, yielding fruits + oils. So talk about choices - would you rather grow an olive tree, create your own orchard, get some olives or some olive oil? Yes, you can have any or all of the above from The McEvoy's Ranch. And they will teach you how to raise your tree.

The McEvoy's were artisans of food before it became cool, with all the buzz words like sustainable, organic, wind powered, bee friendly farmer... and the list goes on. The McEvoy Ranch is an incredible example of ideal co-creators with mother earth. BTW, their Tuscan Table Olives live up! to their reputation.

The McEvoy Ranch in California

Community Oven

Calling all bread trucks that look like this. Baguettes, a whole mini truck filled with thick crusted bread. This is the kind of bread that was birthed from a real brick oven. This kind of baking is an art that every village should experience.

A good Idea: In Europe, communal ovens date back to the 14th-15th century, mostly owned by churches, and charged a fee to bake your families loaf. Eventually taken over by the village, the community people were then in charge of the oven + no fee. Once a week the oven would be fired up and the villagers would gather, talk + bake. Looking forward to seeing a community bread oven in a town near me soon. Unique experience that deserves the flame to fired.


image, unknown