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Food

They. Are. Not. Pancakes

(80 Posts)
Soutra Sun 02-Mar-14 20:09:24

Full page ad by Asda in today's Sunday Telegraph Stella magazine for "Scotch Pancakes" - all 9 flavours apparently.
May I make this clear
1) there is nothing "Scotch" about them under this designation
2) They. are. not. pancakes
They are drop scones - also known as girdle scones.
Not pancakes.
Got it?
As such they may well be Scottish, but I imagine other areas such as Yorkshire or Wales can lay claim to a similar baked good.

Rant over (just so long as you remember) smile

annodomini Mon 03-Mar-14 13:43:32

I love watching the cooks in a creperie swirling just the right amount of batter on a hotplate and coming up with a perfect crepe. Sorry - I can't do accents, apart from acutes, on this keyboard.

jinglbellsfrocks Mon 03-Mar-14 13:57:37

I bought a wooden T shaped thing for spreading the batter for crepes from a kitchen gadget shop just before Christmas. Haven't round to trying it yet. hmm

Chap at the Exeter Xmas market folded them over and actually flippedthem straight into the cardboard holder. Very brave! grin

rosequartz Mon 03-Mar-14 14:07:58

They make pancakes (crepes style), as you wait, with various fillings, sweet or savoury, at John Lewis restaurant. Very nice, very filling. Cheese and pineapple is my favourite.

Agus Mon 03-Mar-14 14:26:02

Definitely known as pancakes here and also at school and Girl Guides where we were taught to cook them on a girdle.

MrsEggy Mon 03-Mar-14 14:49:09

Where I come from the things with holes in are Pikelets.

rosesarered Mon 03-Mar-14 17:53:46

sylvia I make wheat and gluten free pancakes [ and very nice they are too!] I just use Dove SR flour [ I expect purists use plain flour.]Pancakes are so easy to make that you don't need a packet or bought ones. Nothing could be easier than flour an egg and a pint of milk.You need the frypan nice and hot and sizzling with a blob of butter, a few mins later [don't forget to flip] it's ready to eat.

rosesarered Mon 03-Mar-14 17:55:17

soutra you are right, by the way, scotch pancakes are not pancakes, in any case they taste horrible, neither one thing nor the other.

Agus Mon 03-Mar-14 17:55:29

I love the French savoury crêpes filled with Ham, melted Gruyère and fried egg. Yum!

Agus Mon 03-Mar-14 18:00:05

Depends who's making them Roses smile

durhamjen Mon 03-Mar-14 18:34:35

The French Galettes are made with buckwheat flour, which despite its name is not wheat. It's glutenfree and a member of the rhubarb family.
I make pancakes with it, and almond milk.
I will make the batter tonight, so it will cook properly tomorrow.

Agus Mon 03-Mar-14 19:49:12

That is the recipe for Gallettes Bretonnes Jen. Other pâte de crêpes use plain flour which is used more for sweet crêpes.

rosequartz Mon 03-Mar-14 19:49:34

I bought some dove's farm gf flour last week, might try that.

grannyisland Mon 03-Mar-14 20:11:12

Digressing a little - do you think of fruit loaf as cake or tea-bread? I put butter on and DBH protests that you don't put butter on cake! I say it's tea- bread and you put butter on bread.

durhamjen Mon 03-Mar-14 20:17:00

Being vegetarian, it was really good being able to find creperies in Brittany and Normandy when we used to go to France. I thought Brittany was French, Agus. Anyway, they are delicious. I used to make them for breakfast in my vegetarian guest house. Filled with bananas and sunflower seeds, or mushrooms with sesame seeds.

thatbags Mon 03-Mar-14 20:34:53

standard ingredients for pancakes: eggs, flour, milk. Some people add sugar.

Standard ingredients for Scotch pancakes: eggs, flour, milk in slightly different proportions. Some people add sugar.

But Scotch pancakes are not pancakes.

Gotta love gransnet logic.

jinglbellsfrocks Mon 03-Mar-14 20:48:53

patronising

Agus Mon 03-Mar-14 20:52:19

Brittany is French Jen. I was just saying your recipe was regional and there are other Gallettes recipes in different regions. Regardless of all that though, as you say, they are delicious.

Way off track here but I read that Welsh people moving France do in fact choose Brittany as Breton is very similar to Welsh Gaelic.

Definitely tea bread with butter on it for us grannyisland

storynanny Mon 03-Mar-14 20:59:48

Well you can make them both in a pan. The difference is the thickness of batter mixture.

Galen Mon 03-Mar-14 21:07:36

Dd,who is staying until Thursday, is going to make pancakes tomorrow. Both dgd1 and I adore then. Dgd2 at 4/12 is a little too young!

granjura Mon 03-Mar-14 22:10:28

Granny23- we always had pancakes with jelly at home- but not THAT sort of jelly, but apple, gooseberry or redcurrant jelly (clear jam).

Soutra Mon 03-Mar-14 22:16:23

The last word on the subject of pancakes?

If politicians were to make (and flip) pancakes, would that make them t*ssers??? grin

durhamjen Mon 03-Mar-14 22:19:36

Oh, right. Thanks, Agus. I've only ever been to Brittany and Normandy. I did not realise they made galettes differently elsewhere in France.

rosequartz Mon 03-Mar-14 22:29:34

Pancakes - aka as hotcakes or flapjacks in America according to wikipedia!

Now a flapjack to me is - well we all know don't we? Or do we, I'm beginning to wonder with all these regional variations

rosesarered Tue 04-Mar-14 17:54:12

Soutra you really started something here! grin

NfkDumpling Tue 04-Mar-14 21:08:17

How can a pancake be a flapjack? The world is going mad!