Thanks.

Here is one for you. I prefer the Kerby Lane Cafe version here in Austin over these, but they are both good. I haven't found a recipe for making the Kerby Lane one's, but I have purchased a bag of their mix at the restaurant in the past.Gingerbread Pancakes
Magnolia Cafe, Austin
3 eggs
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup buttermilk
1/2 cup water
1/4 cup brewed coffee
21/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon ground cloves
1 tablespoon cinnamon
1 tablespoon ginger
1 tablespoon nutmeg
4 tablespoons (1/2 stick) unsalted butter, melted
Cream eggs and sugar together. Stir in buttermilk, water, and coffee and set aside. In a separate bowl sift together remaining dry ingredients.
Stir egg mixture into dry ingredients (do not overbeat), then mix in melted butter. Add more water or buttermilk if necessary, but batter should be thick. Cook until done on a lightly greased hot griddle or in a heavy skillet (turn once when bubbles appear on upper side and start to break). Pancakes will be thick and cakelike in texture. Makes 8 to 10 five-inch pancakes.
How to Separate Eggs
You can always cheat and purchase a plastic egg-separator. If you don't think it's worth it, follow these simple steps to separate your egg yolks from their whites:
1) Crack the egg lightly, as close to the middle as possible, being careful not to break the yolk.
2) Hold half the shell, with the yolk in it, in one hand, and the other half-shell in the other.
3) Allow as much of the egg white as possible to run out of the shell and down into a bowl, then transfer the yolk to the other half of the shell, in the process allowing more of the white to run out.
It should not be necessary to perform this transfer more than twice to get the yolk almost completely clear of egg white. The process is a little awkward, however, and takes some practice. It is a good idea to have extra eggs on hand, in case the first few tries are less than successful.
If you want to keep the yolks, it doesn't matter very much if one breaks. If you want to keep the whites, it is necessary to be much more careful, and use one bowl in which to keep the whites already separated, and a different bowl over which to separate the current egg. A little white in the yolks doesn't matter, but a fleck of egg yolk can make a batch of egg whites unusable because the fat in an egg yolk will stop the whites from fluffing up when they are whipped.
Egg whites can be saved by freezing. It is not, however, worth the effort to try to save egg yolks.
you aren't kidding about the absurdity of the room rates...Pherr the Dorf wrote:There is this place... a near mythical place in Vermont called twin farms ( http://www.twinfarms.com/home.html ) where the room rates are absurd
Actually what you get is... everything, nothing at all can cost you one cent over your rate, want to drink a great cab with your 6 course dinner... no charge, ski, horseback, 2 massages and facials a day, ok! Twin Farms is THE premier Inn in America, it stands apart from all the rest. Interestingly they bought a huge chunk of land near me (Cazadero) and planned on opening a west coast version but ran into massive planning problems, pity, the west coast can afford a place like that up here, not many places canTenuvil wrote:you aren't kidding about the absurdity of the room rates...Pherr the Dorf wrote:There is this place... a near mythical place in Vermont called twin farms ( http://www.twinfarms.com/home.html ) where the room rates are absurd
http://www.twinfarms.com/rates_right.html
mind you I've stayed in very nice B&Bs, and even spent 4 months in the Renaissance on Wacker Drive in downtown Chicago, but nowhere I've stayed even comes close to those room rates. For those prices I'd better be getting a blowjob too
I love peanut butter on pancakes.Talac wrote:Plain old traditional pancakes + creamy peanut butter + syrup = win
spread the peanut butter on the pancakes while they're hot so it melts.
If you guys haven't tried this before... do it. It's the best.
noel wrote:Not pancakes, but... following on the Peanut butter/Maple Syrup tangent:
French Toast with Peanut-Butter Maple Syrup
Ingredients:
1 egg egg
2 T milk fat-free milk
1 t vanilla extract vanilla extract
2 bread white or whole wheat bread
1/4 c maple syrup light maple syrup
4 T peanut butter chunky peanut butter
Directions:
Mix together the eggs, milk, and vanilla in a large flat dish. Dip the bread in the egg mixture, and then flip it so both sides are coated. Heat both sides of the toast in a nonstick skillet until golden brown.
Stir the maple syrup and peanut butter together in a separate bowl and microwave until warm. Pour over the French toast.
Open mouth. Eat.
Analysis
Servings: 2
Calories: 365
Protein: 13
Carbs: 35
Fiber: 3
Fat: 19
There is but one Jewish food worth noting and that is challah. Incidentally, this makes THE best french toast bread, bar none.Tenuvil wrote:just as an aside, cinnamon raisin bread is thewhen used for French toast. Especially with extra cinnamon in the syrup.
Man speaks the truth.Sylvus wrote:p.s. i love pancakes
Ahhhhh what you need is a trip to Louisiana with Master Chef Arb and Sous Chef Bok! We'll put you in prep to start!Nick wrote:Man speaks the truth.Sylvus wrote:p.s. i love pancakes
We don't need no libations, this is Ireland for christs sake!![]()
I used Chidoro's and Aabidino's basic recipes, I will be more adventurous next time. I'm just getting into this cooking malarky, I am experimenting as I go, these are my college years afterall.