They say a picture is worth a thousand words, and in the case of the above photo, I would have to agree with them. These pancakes were my everything yesterday late morning when I ate them minutes after having taken them off the hot pan and minutes before dashing to work and leaving Matt with all of the clean-up. (Thanks again, Matt!)
I knew I was pushing it when at 11:17, I was still in my pajamas, flipping pancakes, and in order to be on time to work, I would have to be in my car at 11:35, but I also knew that I really wanted these pancakes and that to eat a few before I left would keep me going well into the afternoon.
Oh, and I haven't even told you the best part. When I came home from the grocery store the other day, I found this container of organic blueberries that I had neither put in my cart nor, upon checking my receipt, paid for. In other words, these blubes were a gift from the universe! So, of course, I pledged right then and there to make good use of them.
And boy did I! I mean, these probably aren't going to be your new standby pancake recipe that you turn to every Saturday morning, what with the separating of the eggs and beating of the egg whites until stiff, but I would definitely make these on special occasions and/or for dinner alongside some scrambled eggs. They're at once savory and sweet, light and fulfilling, good and evil (Evil because I guess, technically, I should have driven back to Glendale and returned the unpaid-for blubes?) (Was never gonna happen.)
Point being, if to choose an author photo is to convey a thousand words about myself, what do I want those words to say? Well, I've studied the field and narrowed it down to six specific categories. Thoughts? Favorites?
Blueberry Pancakes with Ricotta and Orange Zest via Nigel Slater's Ripe8 oz. ricotta (about 1 cup)
4 tablespoons sugar
3 eggs, separated
zest of one orange
2 tablespoons plus a little extra melted butter
7 tablespoons all-purpose flour
3.5 oz. (about 2/3 cup) blueberries
In a large bowl, mix the ricotta, sugar, and egg yolks together. Grate the orange zest into the bowl and stir it in gently with the melted butter. Add the flour and carefully fold in.
Beat the egg whites with a balloon whisk in a large bowl until stiff, then fold them lightly into the ricotta mixture. It is important not to knock the air out. Carefully fold in the blueberries.
Warm a nonstick frying pan over medium heat, brush it with a little butter, then place a heaping tablespoon of the mixture in the pan, followed by another two or three depending on the size of your pan. Let them cook for a minute or two until they have risen somewhat and the underside has colored appetizingly, then, using a thin spatula, flip them over to cook the other side. Nigel says to "do this as if you mean it," and he's right! Otherwise they collapse as you turn them. Cook them for a couple of minutes more, then serve immediately, hot from the pan. (Matt ate them with maple syrup, but they're amazing on their own!)
Considering I am currently finishing my undergrad thesis on Proust, that author photo's got my vote.
ReplyDeleteAnd I love how Nigel Slater can take something as humble (and apparently already perfect) as a pancake and turn it into something grand, making you doubt every other pancake that has ever come out of your kitchen. I can't wait to try them.
Hey Emily! Congrats on being the FIRST COMMENTER!
Deletestealthy.
DeleteFREE BLUBES!! XOXOX
ReplyDeleteDUDE! It's so appropriate that your likely author photo (I assume/hope) is channeling Kenny Shopsin. Could we say that your author photo is a Shopsin ATTEMPT??
ReplyDeleteAlso, I wonder if you can just make these pancakes the normal way? I.e., can I make them with ricotta and blubes and NOT go to all the trouble of separating/stiffening the eggs? What's gonna happen? They'll be a little flatter? Whatevs!
ReplyDeleteI can't wait to try this recipe. I love blueberry pancakes. Your blog is fantastic. You make me laugh which is always nice. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteOh yum yum! These pancakes look so delish! I love the touch of orange zest!
ReplyDeleteA) nice blubes!
ReplyDeleteB) Robyn leggings didn't make the cut? Bollocks!
Sometimes, I think I'm writing a book *just* so that I can get all glammed up for the author photo. Sigh.
ReplyDeleteWe also say blubes at our house. Glad to see the term is slowly taking over the world.
The pancakes look gorgeous. I think the serious pet lover photo is hilarious!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful pancakes and berries! Let me know how the timeless author photo thing pans out. If you have as good of luck as Amy Hempel, maybe I will give it a shot as well. Looking older every day here...
ReplyDeleteBlubes! My new favorite word. These pancakes look wonderful, but I don't know how you'll ever pick an author photo. Celebratory? Serious animal lover? How could you choose?
ReplyDeleteIt's a toss up between relaxed and happy in the kitchen. Actually, no. Celebratory. I'd like to open a book jacket one day and see someone's face be all "what up, mother f-er, I wrote a stinkin' book, I'm so happy about it I could pee my pants." I think you should start a revolution.
ReplyDeleteBlueberry score!
ReplyDeleteAnd, haha, I love the Animal Lover, serious version. Perfect :) Although, you look so lovely in the Happy in the Kitchen one that it could seriously be your author photo. Problem solved. Next problem!
Oh yum! These look like the perfect little brunch. I've never made ricotta pancakes before, but this makes me want to...
ReplyDeleteHahaha! Those are all excellent choices. Who is the celebrating author?
ReplyDeleteAlso, I love Matt's film in the Funfetti post! Please please please can someone recreate the Shut Up and Dance T-shirt, including the pink ballet slippers?
XOXO
Celebratory! You're getting a book published!
ReplyDeleteI think the difference that whipping the egg whites makes in pancakes is a revelation. However, I am skeptical of ricotta, it's a texture thing mostly but I'm not wild about the taste either. Is it the star of this recipe or do the blubes (love that) take center stage?
Hi Kaitlyn: I don't think the ricotta is center stage necessarily, but it adds this really nice richness/savoryish element to the dish. Alsooo, I used the freshest most delicious ricotta known to man, so that helped!!
DeleteMade these yesterday , Nigel can do no wrong. Are all your pretty dishes from Heath? Xo
ReplyDeleteHI there!
DeleteAnd why yes, just about all of my dishes are from Heath... perk of the job!!
uh-mazing! clearly it's the season for pancakes! i made coconut ones with roasted rhubarb and strawberry filling:
ReplyDeletehttp://cheesy-mash.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/roast-rhubarb-and-strawberry-pancakes.html
zx
Happy in the kitchen!
ReplyDeleteOppositely (a word?), I lost a tomato in the checkout last week and it still haunts me. What happened to it? Was it eaten? Was it put into a sandwich as it was clearly intended to be? Etc.
These look fabulous! I love how they're a pretty simple pancake, but done a little bit better. I can't wait to try this!
ReplyDeleteI just made homemade ricotta today. I will try this recipe in the morning. I just found your site today - so it must be fate. Thanks from a very new blogger, thegermangranddaughter.com
ReplyDeleteYum! These pancakes look totally incredible...yum. Making me hungry :)
ReplyDeleteDie sehen fantastisch aus und schmecken vermutlich auch so. Werde ich bei nächster Gelegenheit auch einmal versuchen.
ReplyDelete