image from barnesandnoble.com |
My apologies to Maurice Sendak for the title of this post. Because, of course, in In the Night Kitchen, it's thanks to Mickey we have cake in the morning. We read that book countless times to our kids when they were little. That Mickey, what a scamp!
This post, however, is not about Maurice Sendak, or Mickey, or night kitchens. It's about the classic breakfast cake -- pancakes.
Even when I am in a cooking funk, I can be counted on to rustle up a batch of pancakes for weekend breakfasts. We have two competing pancake recipes at our house. Our son much prefers buttermilk pancakes -- he is even a little militant about it -- so when he is home and there is a call for pancakes, that's what I usually make. Our daughter prefers a recipe called Fluffy Hot Cakes, but she seldom gets to have them. This past weekend, though, she was the only child around, so I made her preferred cakes.
This recipe is an older one. My aunt gave me a cookbook when I was in college called Kitchen Kollege Recipes by Phila Rawlings Hach. Phila Rawlings grew up in the same community north of Nashville as my mother and her siblings. She became quite a well-known cook and caterer in Tennessee. The Kitchen Kollege book was initially published in 1954 when Rawlings Hach (Miss Rawlings at that time) was hosting a local TV cooking show of the same name in Nashville. The book was reprinted in 1975. It's a very basic cookbook which includes no photographs but which does include an assumption of a certain amount of knowledge on the part of the cook. For example, in the section "Foods from the Wild," she will just tell the reader, "Clean turtle. Cut up." I don't know about you, but I would need a lot more info before I knew how to clean a turtle.
You don't need any special, secret knowledge to prepare Rawlings Hach's Fluffy Hot Cakes recipe. It is easy to follow and easy to eat! At our house, we call these pancakes "Phila's Fluffies." I often throw in a tablespoon of sesame seeds to add a little body to the pancakes.
On the griddle: Look at all those bubbles! That's the fluffy! |
Fluffy Hot Cakes
Slightly adapted from
Kitchen Kollege Recipes by Phila
Rawlings Hach
1 cup flour, sifted
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons baking powder
2 tablespoons sugar
1 egg
3/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons milk
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 tablespoon sesame seeds (can omit)
Sift dry ingredients together. Beat egg , milk and oil together and add to
dry ingredients. Mix with wire whisk
until smooth. Add sesame seeds and mix
well.
Bake on electric griddle at 375 degrees F. until fluffy and
brown. Turn only once.