I thought I had a great recipe but then I was inspired by the buttermilk pancake recipe I found in Fine Cooking Dec09/Jan10 issue. They looked so light and fluffy and delicious I had to try it - with spelt and no extra sugar. Why do they add sugar to something we ladden with syrup?!? So here is our new delicious recipe that will now be our staple. Sorry I cannot take pictures like they do in the magazine. Trust me, they are great.
See the notes below if you don't have spelt and xanthan gum.
Spelt Buttermilk Pancakes
2 cups spelt flour
2 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 - 1/2 tsp xanthan gum
2 cup milk or rice milk * see notes below
2 Tbsp vinegar
2 eggs - lightly beaten
3 Tbsp melted butter
Combine the milk and vinegar and allow to sit to "sour" before being mixed in.
In a medium bowl, mix the "buttermilk" and eggs and pour into the dry ingredients. Stir until just combined. Add the melted butter and gently stir until the batter is evenly moistened (there will be lumps). Let the batter rest while you heat the griddle.
Preheat the griddle (375F) or skillet (medium to medium low), lightly season the surface with butter. Pour the batter onto the griddle for each pancake ( about 1/3 cup of batter for each). Let them cook until the edges appear to be set and bubbles rise to surface. The top surface should still look wet. Flip the pancakes and continue to cook until the second side is nicely browned.
Transfer the pancakes to a waiting recipient so they can start eating while the pancakes are freshest and most enjoyable...or put on a platter and wait until the rest of the batter is cooked.
Serve with butter, pure maple syrup and fresh fruit!
Cook's notes:
Milk: The original recipe calls for buttermilk and one can substitute that with milk and vinegar as noted in the ingredient list. I have also done this recipe with rice milk and yogurt (1 cup of each) and that works too. Or you could do the original 2 cups of buttermilk if you have.
Xanthan Gum: If you don't have Xanthan gum, you can still make these successfully with spelt flour or white flour if you prefer, however, the texture is better and the pancakes stay fluffy when Xanthan is used with spelt.
Lumpy Batter: I saw a cooking show on the perfect pancakes and to my surprise, they insist on leaving lumps in the batter. So I had to try it and am now a firm believer - lumps make better pancakes. I think it works because the batter is not whipped like one would need to do to get the lumps all out. Be sure to leave the lumps.
Rating: 5 Star!
A basic recipe but they are delicious and easy too. The perfect weekend breakfast!
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