
Serving Size: About 15 Silver Dollar size
Preparation Time :0:40
This should give you a mixture that is firm enough to fry. Set a non stick electric frying pan to 325 F or use a low to medium flame. Add a tablespoon of butter to the pan, let it melt and cover the bottom of the pan. Drop rounded tablespoons of the batter onto the pan, using 2 tablespoons, one to lift and one to push off the dough. . It will be like a soft cookie dough that holds it shape when dropped. Let the bottom fry without touching the pancake or trying to flatten it. Take your time. When a nice skin has developed on one side, turn it over gently using a spatula and a fork, and gently pat down the top of the pancake to spread it a little. These should be the size of a silver dollar pancake (3/8" x 2"). Fry on both sides in butter. Use the first pancake as a test for seasoning. They are somewhat bland, so I suggest that you see the following note. They are also very tender, and a trifle hard to handle compared to flour or potato pancakes, but you will catch right on.
Note: Sweet version.
You can also make these sweet. Add 1-2 tbs sugar and a few drops of
vanilla extract, and a shake or two of cinnamon after the yolks. It
ruins the Judith story, but the kids will like them better.
Note: Farmer Cheese.
Farmer Cheese is a dry loaf of curds. It is dry enough to pick up
in the hands, much dryer than cottage cheese. Often it is in the
Deli Section instead of the Dairy Case. If you put regular (not
creamed) cottage cheese in a strainer you can get some of the
liquid out by pressing gently. If the mix turns out too loose, bind
it with a little more flour or dry baby rice cereal.
Suggested Wine: Pink Zinfandel
Notes: This is an old Polish Recipe I adapted for Hanukkah. The widow Judith fed the Assyrian General cheese pancakes, that were salty, which made him drink wine, He fell asleep and she killed him, either by cutting off his head or by a stake through the heart. (Stories vary wildly, but that's the way I tell it.) This saved the Jews from certain death at the hands of the Assyrian Army. In any event, pancakes and dairy dishes are traditional at Hanukkah, and I serve some symbolic salt in a dish with the pancakes, along with sweet wine (grape juice in a wine carafe for the children). Actually these pancakes are on the bland side, and a little salt wakes them up.
©1996, Steve K. Holzinger. All rights reserved.
This Archived Page created between 1994 and 2001. Modified August 2007

Return to the
Global Gourmet®
Main Page
Global Gourmet®
Shopping
Gourmet Food, Cookbooks
Kitchen Gadgets & Gifts
Kate's Global Kitchen
Kate's Books
Cookbook Profiles
Global Destinations
I Love Desserts
On Wine
Shopping
New Green Basics
Cooking with Kids
Archives
Conversions & Charts
Forums/Message Boards
Search
About the
Global Gourmet®
Contact Info
Advertising
Feedback
Privacy Statement
Fish Forever
Local Breads
Asian Flavors (Jean-Georges)
Morimoto: Japanese Cooking
Chocolates & Confections
Julia Child
Cook with Jamie
The World Atlas of Wine
Food: The History of Taste
Cook Everything Vegetarian
All Cookbook Winners
Egg
My Bombay Kitchen
Revolutionary Chinese
A Baker's Odyssey
Great Bar Food at Home
Chez Jacques
Super Natural Cooking
Lidia's Italy
Geography of Oysters
Cheese Essentials
Vegetable Harvest
All Cookbook Nominees
Betty Crocker Why It Works
The Bon Appétit Cookbook
Joy of Cooking
Fifth Taste...Umami
The Professional Chef
New American Cooking
Vegetable Love
Copyright © 1994-2008,
Forkmedia LLC