
I can’t bake. I don’t know why.
I have demonstrated over the last six months or so that I can follow a recipe. I’m not good yet at going “off-book,” for lack of a better phrase– I’m not able to look at my pantry and come up with a meal as opposed to deciding “I want this,” finding a recipe for it, and then going out and buying everything I might need to make that recipe. But there haven’t been that many categories of food so far that I don’t seem to be able to handle *except* for baking. Any dish involving anything called “batter” is going to go wrong in my hands. It’s annoying and I hate it.
This one shoulda been simple. Peel and chop up some apples, toss them with sugar and cinnamon, melt butter in my two 5 1/2″ skillets (the idea is that there’s one apple pancake per skillet, right?) then sauté the apples in the butter. Meanwhile, mix up the batter, which is your basic butter/flour/egg/milk/salt mixture, pour it over the sautéed apples, then bake the whole mess for ten minutes in the oven.
The recipe was seriously like five sentences long. This shoulda been simple.
Issues were as follows:
- Waaaay too much butter for what I was trying to do. This I blame on the recipe. It said to melt the butter then use “half” of the melted butter for the batter; no. There were pools of melted butter rising to the top of the batter when I poured it into the skillets. This may possibly be related to issue #2, but I don’t think issue #2 would have been as much of a problem if I’d just had less butter to begin with.
- I don’t think I sautéed the apples for quite long enough. There was too much apple for the skillets (leaving me with several pieces of cut, peeled, sugar-and-cinnamoned raw apple, which isn’t exactly a problem) but even with a bunch of them held back there was too much apple in the skillets and I didn’t cook them down long enough. This one’s my fault; I was trying to get everything done before Bek left for work so I figured I’d be able to cut short the apple-cooking part. It ain’t like raw apples taste bad; they’re just crunchier than properly cooked ones would have been.
- Forgot the salt. Dumbass rookie move; on the other hand, it was just supposed to be a pinch of salt per skillet’s worth of batter so I can’t imagine it made a huge difference other than to the taste.
- After that, though? The oven turned into a smoky hell, because the skillets flat weren’t big enough to hold the batter. “You should have used bigger skillets,” you say? Pfah. The recipe and the cookware are both from the same brand, and the cookbook I used is by the same company that makes the skillets. The recipe was literally tuned specifically for this skillet. The one you’re looking at turned into some sort of Fourth of July magic snake-lookin’ bullshit and the other one just flat didn’t cook at all; the butter boiled over the edges and burned in the oven, which meant that when I opened it the fires of hell poured out and I had three fire alarms going in my house at 6:45 in the morning with a sleeping baby not too far away. WHICH IS ALL SORTS OF AWESOME AND FUN LET ME TELL YOU.
The one I pulled the apples out of and then threw away, deeming it unsalvageable. The pictured “pancake” was at least edible but tasted awful, possibly due to lack of salt but possibly also just due to the recipe generally being crap. I may try this once more and make two of them in a much bigger skillet, which ought to minimize spillage and also give me a bit more room to sauté the apples properly before pouring the batter in. This ought to be something that tastes good, dammit; it’s bloody apple pancakes and apple pancakes are supposed to be fuckin’ tasty.
Bah. Food is stupid.
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Baking tip…no matter how much batter you have, only fill the pans half full to leave rising room. It looks like this would be tasty! I’d give it another shot. With salt 🙂
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What Biggs said about filling pans half full. The salt doesn’t make a huge difference, exactly–basically, it enhances the flavor of anything sweet and cuts the sugar taste a little, so in frosting, it’s the difference between super sweet and just sweet, but unless it’s bread, leaving out the salt isn’t going to ruin a recipe. (If you’re using salted butter, you don’t need it at all.)
In general, though, part of why I usually get recipes online is that the reviews let you know of common issues with the recipe. Cookbook recipes are sometimes good and sometimes totally fucked. This one…I have some doubts. Even in a 5 1/2″ skillet, 10 minutes is a really short baking time.
Should you want any baking assistance or input, I could help. 🙂
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The butter was salted, so there’s that. And they actually cooked for about 12-13 minutes or so; I checked them at ten and they clearly weren’t done and by thirteen one of them looked like that and the other still was completely raw, plus the aforementioned brimstone pouring out of the oven so DEAR GOD GET THEM OUT NOW had to happen. I left that step out. 🙂
I will call you when I decide I’m brave enough for pie.
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Cookware companies are in the business of selling cookware, not writing great recipes. Get thee to Cooks Illustrated, America’s Test Kitchen, and allrecipes.com.
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I get a lot of stuff from allrecipes. Most of them have worked pretty well– in fact, I can really only think of one that didn’t, and that one was much much better the second day. I still wanna see what happens if I try and make one big-ass pancake instead of two smaller ones, though.
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My guess is better luck with one big-ass pancake. What temperature did it tell you to bake it at?
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425.
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Oof! That explains all the brimstone. 425 is awfully high for a pan full of butter(1). I wonder whether you might have better success at lower temperature for longer time: 375-ish? A bigger pan would moderate all the magic-snaking, too.
(1) though I wonder whether clarified butter (ghee) would work nicely
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Just thought to compare to other posted recipes:
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/german-apple-pancake/
Only 2T butter for a 10-inch skillet! And a reduction in oven temp.
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That does look like basically the same recipe, although there’s a bit more in the way of spices and seasonings– which would probably be good, as the batter ended up being really bland among its many other issues.
Maybe this weekend sometime.
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Also, I haven’t tried baking with ghee yet– basically used it for Indian foods (predictable) and occasional sauteeings of other things. Bek used it for salmon the other day, I think, and the next time I sear a steak I’m going to try ghee precisely because of the higher smoke point.
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