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Wikipedia

Pancake

A pancake (or hotcake, griddlecake, or flapjack) is a flat cake, often thin and round, prepared from a starch-based batter that may contain eggs, milk and butter and cooked on a hot surface such as a griddle or frying pan, often frying with oil or butter. It is a type of batter bread. Archaeological evidence suggests that pancakes were probably eaten in prehistoric societies.[1]

Pancake
A stack of American style blueberry pancakes
TypeBatter
  • Cookbook: Pancake
  •   Media: Pancake

The pancake's shape and structure varies worldwide. In the United Kingdom, pancakes are often unleavened and resemble a crêpe.[2] In North America, a leavening agent is used (typically baking powder) creating a thick fluffy pancake. A crêpe is a thin Breton pancake of French origin cooked on one or both sides in a special pan or crepe maker to achieve a lacelike network of fine bubbles. A well-known variation originating from southeast Europe is a palačinke, a thin moist pancake fried on both sides and filled with jam, cream cheese, chocolate, or ground walnuts, but many other fillings—sweet or savoury—can also be used.

Commercially prepared pancake mixes are available in some countries. Like waffles, commercially prepared frozen pancakes are available from companies like Eggo. When buttermilk is used in place of or in addition to milk, the pancake develops a tart flavor and becomes known as a buttermilk pancake, which is common in Scotland and the US. Buckwheat flour can be used in a pancake batter, making for a type of buckwheat pancake, a category that includes blini, kaletez, ploye, and memil-buchimgae. When potato is used as a major portion of the batter, the result is a potato pancake.

Pancakes may be served at any time of the day or year with a variety of toppings or fillings, but they have developed associations with particular times and toppings in different regions. In North America, they are typically considered a breakfast food and serve a similar function to waffles. In Britain and the Commonwealth, they are associated with Shrove Tuesday, commonly known as "Pancake Day", when, historically, perishable ingredients had to be used up before the fasting period of Lent.

History

The Ancient Greeks made pancakes called τηγανίτης (tēganitēs), ταγηνίτης (tagēnitēs)[3] or ταγηνίας (tagēnias),[4] all words deriving from τάγηνον (tagēnon), "frying pan".[5] The earliest attested references to tagenias are in the works of the 5th-century BC poets Cratinus[6] and Magnes.[7] Tagenites were made with wheat flour, olive oil, honey, and curdled milk, and were served for breakfast.[8][9][10] Another kind of pancake was σταιτίτης (staititēs), from σταίτινος (staitinos), "of flour or dough of spelt",[11] derived from σταῖς (stais), "flour of spelt".[12] Athenaeus mentions, in his Deipnosophistae, staititas topped with honey, sesame, and cheese.[13][14][15] The Middle English word pancake appears in English in the 15th century.[16][17]

The Ancient Romans called their fried concoctions alia dulcia, Latin for "other sweets". These were much different from what are known as pancakes today.[18]

Regional varieties

Africa

Horn of Africa

 
This meal of injera and several kinds of wat or tsebhi (stew) is typical of Ethiopian and Eritrean cuisine.

Pancakes in the Horn of Africa (Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia and Somalia) are known as injera (sometimes transliterated as enjera, budenaa (Oromo), or canjeero (Somali)). Injera is a yeast-risen flatbread with a unique, slightly spongy texture. Traditionally, it is made out of teff flour and is a national dish in Ethiopia and Eritrea. Canjeero, also known as lahooh or lahoh, is a similar kind of flatbread eaten in Somalia and Yemen.

 

In Eritrea and Ethiopia, injera are usually served with one or more stews known as wat or with salads (especially, for instance, during periods of Ethiopian Orthodox fasting) or with other injera (injera firfir). The right hand is used to tear small pieces from the injera to use to pick up and eat the stews or salads. The injera under these stews soaks up juices and flavours and, after the stews and salads are finished, is also consumed. Injera thus acts simultaneously as food, eating utensil, and plate. When the "tablecloth" formed by the injera is finished, the meal is over.

Lahoh is a pancake-like bread originating in Somalia, Djibouti and Yemen.[19][20] It is often eaten along with honey, ghee and tea. During lunch, lahoh is sometimes consumed with curry, soup or stew.

Kenya

In Kenya, pancakes are eaten for breakfast as an alternative to bread. They are served plain with the sugar already added to the batter to sweeten them. Kenyan pancakes are similar to English pancakes and French crepes.

South Africa

A "pancake" in South Africa is a crêpe. In Afrikaans, it is known as a pannekoek (plural pannekoeke) and, traditionally, is prepared on gas stoves and eaten on wet and cold days. Pannekoeke are usually served with cinnamon-flavoured sugar (and, sometimes, lemon juice) that is either allowed to dissolve into and soften them or, if their crispy texture is to be retained, eaten immediately. They are a staple at Dutch Reformed Church fêtes.[21]

Plaatkoekies ("flapjacks", or lit. "plate cookies") are American-style "silver dollar" pancakes.

Uganda

In Uganda, pancakes are locally made with bananas (one of the staple foods of the country) and usually served as a breakfast or as a snack option.

East Asia

China

Chinese pancakes may be either savoury or sweet, and are generally made with dough rather than batter.[22] The dough mostly consists of water, flour, and vegetable oil.[23] The dish can be served as a side, usually alongside duck, or as a snack, topped with scallions along with hot and sour sauce.[23]

Japan

 
Japanese style souffle pancakes

In Japan, okonomiyaki are made from flour, egg, cabbage and a choice of ingredients. Oyaki are pancakes often stuffed with anko, eggplant, or nozawana. Dorayaki are a sort of sandwich made from Western-style pancakes and anko. Sweet crepes are also very popular.

The Japanese have also created a soufflé-style cooked-in rings-pancake, which is taller and fluffier than the American pancakes it is inspired by,[24] and found in Singapore,[25] Toronto,[26] Australia, and the United Kingdom.[27]

Korea

In Korea, pancakes include savoury buchimgae (Korean pancakes) and jeon (egged and battered pan-fries, sometime pancakes), bindae-tteok (pan-friend mung bean cakes), as well as sweet hotteok (filled sweet pancake). These may be served during all times of the day as side dishes or just snacks. Variants of the dish use the batter of the pancake to make deep fried vegetables, meat, or fish.[28]

South Asia

India

India has many styles of pancake. Variations range from their taste to the main ingredient used. All are made without the use of added raising agents.

Pancakes prepared using a north Indian cooking style are known as cheela. Sweet cheela are made using sugar or jaggery with a wheat flour-based batter. North Indian salty pancakes are made using batter prepared from gram flour or green gram paste (moong daal) and are sometimes garnished with paneer, a cottage-style cheese.

Dosa, appam, neer dosa and uttapam are pancakes made in a south Indian cooking style. They are prepared by fermenting rice batter and split-skinned urad bean (black lentil) blended with water. Meetha pooda – sweet pancakes often eaten with pickles and chutney – are a common breakfast food item in the Punjab. Most of the pitha in Assam are types of pancakes served on occasions such as Bihu festivals. The Bengali semi-sweet pancake pati-shapta is stuffed with grated coconut or thickened milk.

In Western India, the multi-grain thalipeeth is popular. In Goa, a traditional crêpe-like pancake known as alebele or alle belle is eaten at tea-time. It is usually filled with jaggery and coconut.

In Eastern India, malpuas are sometimes prepared in the form of pancakes.

In some regions of Middle India, thin green Cheelas are made with ginger or garlic leaves' paste, and rice flour batter. Other ingredients included are salt, cummin seeds, green chili, oil, curry leaves and coriander leaves.

Nepal

In Nepal, the Newar people have a savoury rice pancake called chataamari cooked with meat or eggs on top. This dish is also known as the Newari Pizza, as it is served and eaten similarly to American pizza. Besides being served with meat or eggs, it can also be served plain.[29]

Pakistan

In Pakistani cuisine, rishiki is a pancake, slightly thicker than a crepe, which is made from whole wheat flour, water and eggs and usually served with honey. It is widely consumed in the far north and is a staple of Chitrali cuisine.

Southeast Asia

Banana pancakes are a menu item in backpacker-oriented cafes in Southeast Asia. This has given rise to the term Banana Pancake Trail or Banana Pancake Circuit, given to the growing routes travelled by backpackers across Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam.[30]

Indonesia

 
Indonesian serabi

Pancakes in Indonesia are called panekuk. The Indonesian pancake serabi is made from rice flour and coconut milk. The dish is often served with kinca, a thick, brown-colored coconut sugar syrup. Other toppings may include sugar, ground peanuts, sliced bananas, jackfruit, and other fruits, and chocolate. Other variations include cheddar cheese, corned beef, shredded chicken, and sausage.[31]

Other types of pancakes in Indonesia are burgo, dadar gulung, kue ape, kue apem, kue cubit, kue cucur, kue leker, kue terang bulan, laklak, martabak, pannenkoek, poffertjes, roti canai, and roti jala.

Malaysia and Singapore

 
Malay Pek Nga also known as Lempeng Kelapa

The traditional Malay pancake in Malaysia and Singapore is called Pek Nga or Lempeng Kelapa. Cooked very similarly to an American or Canadian –style pancake, albeit without a rising agent, it is a savoury pancake usually served during the breakfast hours with fish curry, coconut sticky rice, dried fish, rendang,[32] or sambal.

Myanmar (Burma)

The traditional Burmese pancake is called bein mont, and is a traditional Burmese snack or mont. The pancake is baked in a rice flour batter immersed in jaggery, coconut shavings and garnished with sesame seeds, peanuts and poppy seeds.[33]

Philippines

 
Filipino traditional salukara pancakes made from rice, coconut milk, water, and sugar

In the Philippines, traditional dessert pancakes include salukara, a rice pancake made from glutinous rice, eggs, and coconut milk. The batter is placed in a clay pot or pan lined with banana leaves or greased with oil (traditionally lard), and is baked over hot coals. Salukara is a subtype of bibingka (Philippine baked rice cakes).[34] Panyalam, a similar rice pancake from Mindanao, is deep-fried rather than baked.[35]

Traditional savory pancakes in the Philippines include pudpod (smoked fish flake pancakes) and okoy (a pancake made of battered shrimp, pumpkin, or sweet potatoes).

The American style of pancakes is also a common offering in fast-food establishments in the Philippines, usually as a breakfast fare, as well as in specialty restaurants like IHOP and the local restaurant brand Pancake House. The inexpensive local counterpart, called hotcakes, aside from being commonly prepared for breakfast, is also prepared as an afternoon snack, with street kiosks selling small hotcakes topped with the choice of margarine, sugar, or condensed milk and flavored syrups.

Vietnam

 
Bánh xèo, the Vietnamese equivalent of a pancake

In Vietnamese cuisine there is a variety of dishes that are called pancakes (bánh xèo, bánh khọt, which are sometimes called Vietnamese pancakes), as well as similar dishes such as bánh căn and bánh khoái in central Vietnam.[36]

Europe

Austria, Czech Republic, and Romania, Slovakia, and former Yugoslavia

 
Palacinky, Slovak pancakes

In Austria, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia, pancakes are called palatschinke, palačinka and palacinka, respectively (plural: palatschinken, palačinky, and palacinky). Kaiserschmarrn is an Austrian pancake including raisins, almonds, apple jam or small pieces of apple, split into pieces, and sprinkled with powdered sugar. In Romania, they are called clătită (plural: clătite). In countries of former Yugoslavia, they are called palačinka (plural: palačinke). In these languages, the word derives from the Latin placenta, meaning "cake". These pancakes are thin and filled with apricot, plum, lingonberry, apple or strawberry jam, chocolate sauce, or hazelnut spread. Eurokrem, Nutella, and Lino-Lada fillings are favourite among the younger population. A traditional version includes filling pancakes with cheese, pouring yoghurt over them, and then baking in an oven.

Eastern Europe

 
Blinchiki filled with cheese and topped with blackberries

Eastern-Slavic cuisines have a long tradition of pancake cooking and include a variety of pancake types. In Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine, pancakes may be breakfast food, appetizers, main courses, or desserts.

Blini (Russian: блины) or mlynci (Ukrainian: млинцi) are thin pancakes, somewhat thicker than crêpes, made from wheat or buckwheat flour, butter, eggs, and milk, with yeast added to the batter. The preparation of blini/mlynci dates back to pagan traditions and feasts, which are reflected in today's "pancake week" celebrated in the winter before the Great Lent. In pre-Christian times, blini and mlynci were symbolically considered by early Slavic peoples as a symbol of the sun, due to their round form.[37]

Blintzes (Russian: блинчики blinchiki) are thin crêpes made without yeast. Filled blintzes are also referred to as nalysnyky (Ukrainian: налисники), nalistniki (Russian: налистники) or nalesniki (Russian: налесники).[38] A filling such as jam, fruits, quark, or cottage cheese, potato, cooked ground meat or chicken, and even chopped mushrooms, bean sprouts, cabbage, and onions, is rolled or enveloped into a pre-fried blintz and then the blintz is lightly re-fried, sautéed, or baked.

Traditionally, Ashkenazi Jews who, prior to 1945, lived in what is today Poland, portions of the Czech Republic, Hungary, and other portions of the former Pale of Settlement also created blintzes, with the key difference of always using a kosher cheese filling with no rennet. The majority of recipes are sweet and are often served with berries or sour cream. These crepe-like dishes would often be served during Shavuot, and today the recipe still survives in places like Israel and New York. Latkes, potato pancakes with finely shredded or grated potato, can be eaten as part of the celebration of Hanukkah.

Small thick pancakes are called oladyi (Russian: оладьи) or oladky (Ukrainian: оладки). The batter may contain various additions, such as apple and raisins.

There also exists a style of pancake made out of quark called syrniki.

Denmark

 
Æbleskiver

Æbleskiver are traditional Danish pancakes made in a distinctive spherical shape. (The name literally means "apple slices" in Danish, although apples are not an ingredient.) Æbleskiver are cooked on the stove top by baking in a special cast iron pan with several hemispherical indentations. Batter is poured into the oiled indentations and as the æbleskiver begin to cook, they are turned with a knitting needle, skewer or fork to give the cakes their characteristic spherical shape. Æbleskiver are not sweet themselves but are traditionally served dipped in raspberry, strawberry, lingonberry or blackberry jam and sprinkled with powdered sugar.

Finland

 
An Åland pancake (Ålandspannkaka), a traditional food in Åland[39]

Finnish pancakes greatly resemble plättar (see the description in the Sweden section below) and are called lettu, lätty, räiskäle or ohukainen. In Finland pancakes are usually eaten as dessert with whipped cream or pancake-jam, sugar or vanilla ice cream. Besides the plain lettu, there is also a version with stinging nettle added (nokkoslettu, pl. nokkosletut).[40] In Finnish, lettu and pannukakku (literally "pancake") have different meanings, the latter having a structurally closer resemblance to a hotcake, and is baked in an oven instead of using a frying pan. Ålandspannkaka, literally "pancake of Åland", is an extra thick variety of oven-made pancake that includes the addition of cardamom and either rice pudding or semolina porridge to the dough; it is only served in Åland and usually on its Autonomy Day.[39] Besides the sweet lettu, which is eaten as a dessert, there are savory spinach pancakes (pinaattilettu, pl. pinaattiletut), which are eaten as a main course, typically with boiled potatoes and lingonberry jam. These are available ready-made from multiple brands.[41]

France, Belgium, Italy, Portugal, and Switzerland

 
Crêpe

Crêpes, popular in France, Belgium, Switzerland and Portugal, are made from flour, milk, and eggs. They are thin pancakes and are served with a sweet (fruit, ice cream, jam, chocolate spread, powdered sugar) or savoury filling (cheese, ham, seafood, spinach). In Francophone Europe, crêpes are often sold in special stands. In Italy there is a similar dish called crespella or scrippella. In this country are also popular some traditional waffle cookies called pizzelle and in some part of Tuscany there are typical thin crispy pancakes named brigidini, made with aniseed. In Brittany, a galette (or galette bretonne) is a large thin pancake made of buckwheat flour, often cooked on one side only.

Crêpes are popular in many South American countries such as Argentina, Brazil, and Chile. They are consumed with sweet fillings (marmalade, dulce de leche) or with salty fillings (ground meat (Brazil), vegetables, tomato sauce, cheese).

They have also become popular East Asian countries, including Japan, South Korea and China, and Southeast Asian countries, such as the Philippines and Thailand, where they are sold in crêpe stands and kiosks. They are often served with whipped cream and fruits, or non-sweet spreads such as vegetables.

Farinata are popular in Mediterranean regions, including Nice. Also called socca, these are pancakes made from chickpea flour and seasoned with black pepper. They are popular street food in Nice.

Germany

German pancakes are known as Pfannkuchen (from the German Pfanne and Kuchen meaning "pan" and "cake") except in Berlin, Brandenburg and Saxony, where Pfannkuchen are Berliner pastries and pancakes are known as Eierkuchen. They are generally thicker than French-style crêpes and usually served with sweet or, occasionally, savoury fillings. Usage of a leavening agent or yeast is uncommon. Fried apple rings covered by pancake dough and served with sugar and cinnamon are called Apfelküchle. Kaiserschmarrn, a thick but light caramelized pancake popular in Bavaria and regions of the former Austria-Hungary, is usually split into pieces, filled with fruits or nuts, sprinkled with powdered sugar and served with a fruit sauce. It is believed[by whom?] that this was first prepared for Kaiser Franz Joseph I of Austria.

In Swabia, pancakes sliced into ribbons (Flädle) are often served in soup.

Great Britain

England

English pancakes have three key ingredients: plain flour, eggs, and milk, though Gervase Markham's 1615 version in The English Huswife used water instead of milk, and added sweet spices.[42] The batter is runny and forms a thin layer on the bottom of the frying pan when the pan is tilted. It may form some bubbles during cooking, which results in a pale pancake with dark spots where the bubbles were, but the pancake does not rise. English pancakes are similar to French crêpes and Italian crespelle. They may be eaten as a sweet dessert with the traditional topping of lemon juice and sugar, drizzled with golden syrup, or wrapped around savoury stuffings and eaten as a main course. On Shrove Tuesday, it is custom to eat pancakes, and lemon juice and sugar may be added on top. Yorkshire pudding is made from a similar recipe, but baked instead of fried. This batter rises because the air beaten into the batter expands, without the need for baking powder; the result is eaten as part of the traditional roast beef dinner. Oatcakes are a savoury variety of pancake particularly associated with Staffordshire.

A variation of pancake is the crumpet, made from a batter leavened with yeast (or with both yeast and baking powder) and fried in butter to produce a slightly raised flat cake. They are also eaten in the rest of the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland, and certain areas of the Commonwealth.

Scotland
 
Pancake and fruit crumpet

Pancakes (also called Scotch pancakes or Scottish pancakes) are more like the American type. In parts of Scotland they are also referred to as drop scones or dropped scones.[43][44][45] They are made from flour, eggs, sugar, buttermilk or milk, salt, bicarbonate of soda and cream of tartar.[43][44][45] Smaller than American or English pancakes at about 9 cm (3.5 inches) in diameter, they are made by the traditional method of dropping batter onto a griddle (a girdle in Northumberland or in Scots). They can be served with jam and cream or just with butter. In Scotland pancakes are generally served at teatime.

Wales

Welsh pancakes, known as crempog, ffroes and other names, vary considerably. Generally, they are thick and layered on top of each other to form a tall mock-cake, but some are very much like American pancakes, others may be made with yeast (called crempog furum) or oatmeal (although this is also true of American pancakes) and some are like Scotch pancakes.[46][47] Crumpets and pikelets are sometimes considered a variety of pancake.

Greece and Cyprus

Greek pancakes are called teganites (τηγανίτες and are smaller sized pancakes that can be either sweet or savoury. Their main ingredients are flour, olive oil or butter, milk and eggs. They are usually drizzled with plain sugar or honey and cinnamon and sometimes topped with cheese, nuts, fruits or vegetables. Teganites can be served for breakfast or dessert, and in some places like Corfu and Patras are customarily served in the feast days of Saint Spyridon and Saint Andrew.

In Cyprus, pancakes are also called teganites and are used in an alternative dish called Genoese cannelloni, which includes ground meat with tomato sauce, cheese and occasionally bechamel sauce.

Hungary

In Hungary, pancakes known as palacsinta (derived from the Latin placenta) are made from flour, milk or soda water, sugar, and eggs. Sweet wine may be added to the batter. The filling is usually jam, sugared and ground walnuts or poppy seeds, sugared cottage cheese, sugared cocoa, or cinnamon powder, but meat and mushroom fillings are also used (see Hortobágyi palacsinta). Gundel palacsinta is a Hungarian pancake stuffed with walnuts, zest, raisins and rum that is served in chocolate sauce and is often flambéed. Hungarian pancakes are served as a main dish or as a dessert.

Iceland

 
Rolled pönnukaka

Icelandic crepe-like pancakes are called pönnukaka (pl. pönnukökur), whereas smaller, thicker and denser pancakes resembling North American pancakes are called lumma or skonsa. The pancakes are usually a bit browner than traditional Swedish ones. Pönnukökur are usually cooked on a special Icelandic pancake pan, which is made to get the pancake as thin as possible, which is traditionally never washed or rinsed, not even with water. Pönnukökur are traditionally served rolled up with sugar or folded with jam and whipped cream, but if eaten at a café they might contain ice cream instead. Pönnukökur are also a popular dessert in North America among people of Icelandic descent.

In Iceland, North American-style pancakes are cut in half and used as sandwich bread, similar to Icelandic flatbread.

Netherlands

 
Pannenkoek with bacon and Gouda cheese

In the Netherlands, pancakes are known as pannenkoeken and are mostly eaten at lunch and dinner time. Pancake restaurants are popular with families and serve many sweet, savoury, and stuffed varieties. Pannenkoeken are slightly thicker than crêpes and usually quite large, 30 cm (12 inches) or so in diameter. The batter is egg-based and fillings include such items as sliced apples, cheese, ham, bacon, and candied ginger, alone or in combination.

Stroop, a thick molasses-like sugar beet-based syrup is also popular, particularly in a classic filling of bacon and stroop.

Poffertjes are another Dutch quick bread, similar to American pancakes but sweeter and much smaller. Made in a specially dimpled copper or cast iron pan, they are flipped once with a fork. Unlike Dutch pancakes, the batter for poffertjes contains baking powder and therefore they have a softer interior than pancakes.

A spekdik is a pancake-like food which is traditionally eaten in the provinces Groningen and Drenthe in the Netherlands around New Year. Unlike pancakes, a spekdik is cooked with a waffle iron. The main ingredients of a spekdik are syrup, eggs and rye-flour, and some varieties include bacon.

Poland

 
Home-made Polish naleśniki filled with sweet white cheese

In Poland, thin crêpe-style pancakes are called naleśniki (pronounced [naˈlɛɕɲikʲi]). They are usually rolled and served with a variety of savoury or sweet fillings as a main dish or a dessert. Sweet fillings include fresh fruits (e.g. bilberries), jams (often apple jam), and soft white cheese with sugar. Savoury fillings include fried vegetables, fried chicken, minced meat, spinach, and a variety of added ingredients such as potatoes, mushrooms, cabbage or ham. Another Polish dish reassembling pancakes are racuchy. They are smaller and thicker than naleśniki and can be stuffed with apple slices.

Spain and Portugal

 
Frixuelos

Iberian pancakes are called frixuelos or filloas and are very popular in Portugal and the north-west of Spain. They are made from flour, milk, and eggs. They are thin and are usually served with a large amount of sugar or honey. They are a typical Carnival sweet dessert in Portugal, Galicia, Asturias and León.

Sweden and Norway

 
Nordic pancakes

Nordic pancakes are similar to French-style crêpes. In some Nordic countries, they are served with jam or fruit, often lingonberry or strawberry jam as a dessert with a variety of savoury fillings. Traditional Swedish variations can be exotic. Besides the usual thin pancakes, called pannkakor, which resemble the French crêpes and, often served with whipped cream and jam, are traditionally eaten for lunch on Thursdays with pea soup, the Swedish cuisine also has plättar — very small pancakes, which resemble tiny English pancakes, and are usually fried in a special pan called a "plättlagg", a sort of frying pan with indentations to allow for several (normally seven) to be made at once. Another type of pancake is the ugnspannkaka (oven pancake), which is very thick and resembles German pancakes and is baked in the oven. There is also a variant that includes fried pork in the batter, fläskpannkaka (pork pancake).

Potato pancakes called raggmunk contain shredded raw potato, and may contain other vegetables (sometimes the pancake batter is omitted, producing rårakor). Raggmunk and rårakor are traditionally eaten with pork rinds and lingonberry jam. A special Swedish pancake is saffron pancake from Gotland, made with saffron and rice, baked in the oven. It is common to add lemon juice to the sugar for extra taste. The pancakes are often served after a soup. Another special "Swedish pancake" is the äggakaka (eggcake), also called skånsk äggakaka (Scanian eggcake), which is almost like an ordinary Swedish pancake but it is a lot thicker and also much more difficult to make due to the risk of burning it. It is made in a frying pan, is about four to five centimetres (1+12 to 2 inches) thick, and is served with lingonberries and bacon. The Norwegian variety is commonly eaten for dinner, traditionally with bacon, jam (typically bilberry) or sugar.

North America

Costa Rica

Costa Rican chorreadas are similar to cachapas.

Guatemala

Guatemalan pancakes are called panqueques. They are made with the same ingredients as American pancakes. The toppings are usually fruits and honey. They are a very popular breakfast meal in Guatemala. Depending on the region, the panqueque can be thin as a crêpe or as fluffy as a North American pancake.

Mexico

Mexican hotcakes are similar to American pancakes. Crêpes became popular toward the end of the 19th century after their introduction by the French sometime between the First French Intervention (1838) and the Second French Intervention in Mexico (1861–67).[48][49] Hotcakes are often made with cornmeal, as well as, or instead of wheat flour. Hotcakes are popular breakfast items at restaurants throughout the country and are often sold by street vendors in cities and during the local celebrations of towns throughout the day. They are also sold during fairs; the vendors sell a single hotcake topped with different sauces such as condensed milk, fruit jam or a sweet goat milk spread called cajeta.

United States and Canada

American and Canadian pancakes (sometimes called hotcakes, griddlecakes, or flapjacks) are usually served at breakfast, in a stack of two or three, topped with maple syrup or table syrup, and butter. They are often served with other items such as bacon, toast, eggs or sausage. Other popular topping alternatives include jam, peanut butter, nuts, fruit, honey, powdered sugar, whipped cream, cane syrup, cinnamon and sugar, and molasses. In addition, when a pancake is occasionally served as a dessert, toppings such as ice cream, chocolate syrup, and various fruits are often used.

The thick batter contains eggs, flour, milk, and a leavening agent such as baking powder. The batter can have ingredients such as buttermilk, blueberries, strawberries, bananas, apples, chocolate chips, cheese, or sugar added. Spices such as cinnamon, vanilla and nutmeg can also be used. Yogurt may be used to give the pancakes a relatively moist consistency. Pancakes may be 1 cm (12 inch) thick and are typically between 10 and 25 cm (4 and 10 inches) in diameter.

Bannock The European version (Scotland) was traditionally made of oatmeal. The bannock of native North Americans was made of corn, nut meal and plant bulb meal. Each region had its own variation of flour and fruit. Today, bannock is most often deep-fried, pan-fried and oven-baked.[50]

Johnnycake (also jonnycake, johnny cake, journey cake or Johnny Bread) is a cornmeal flatbread that was an early American staple food, and is still eaten in the West Indies and Bermuda.[51] The modern johnnycake is stereotypically identified with today's Rhode Island foods, though they are a cultural staple in all of the northern US.[52] A modern johnnycake is fried cornmeal gruel, which is made from yellow or white cornmeal mixed with salt and hot water or milk, and frequently lightly sweetened.

Yaniqueques or yanikeke are a Dominican Republic version of the johnnycake. They are a fried bread rather than a pancake, and are a popular beach food.[53][54]

Sourdough was used by prospectors and pioneers to make pancakes without having to buy yeast. Prospectors would carry a pot of sourdough to make pancakes and bread, as it could last indefinitely, needing only flour and water to replenish it.[55] Sourdough pancakes are now a particular speciality in Alaska.[56] They are also found in many American pancake houses and restaurants elsewhere in America.

A silver dollar pancake refers to a pancake about 5–7 cm (2–3 inches) in diameter, or just a bit bigger than the pre-1979 silver dollar coins in the United States. This is usually made by frying a small spoonful of the same batter as any other pancake. One serving usually consists of five to ten silver dollar pancakes.

German pancakes or Dutch baby pancakes served in American pancake houses are bowl-shaped. They are eaten with lemons and powdered sugar, jam, or caramelized apples, as well as fritters.[57] A David Eyre's pancake is a variation on the German pancake named for the American writer and editor David W. Eyre (1912–2008).

Toutons are small, tall pancakes traditional in Newfoundland. They are usually served with dark molasses.

Oceania

Australia and New Zealand

In Australia and New Zealand, small pancakes (about 75 mm or 3 inches in diameter) known as pikelets or drop scones are also eaten. They are traditionally served with jam or jam and whipped cream, or solely with butter, at afternoon tea, but can also be served at morning tea. They are made with milk, self-raising flour, eggs, and sometimes a small amount of icing sugar.

In some circles in New Zealand, very thin, crêpe-like or English pancake-like pancakes (around 20 cm or 8 inches in diameter) are served with butter, or butter and lemon, sugar, and then rolled up and eaten.

American-style pancakes are also popular. They are eaten for breakfast or as a dessert, with lemon juice and sugar, butter and maple syrup, fruits (sometimes stewed) such as strawberries and cream, ice cream, or mascarpone.

South America

Brazil

Tapioca (Portuguese pronunciation: [tɐpiˈɔkɐ]), beiju ([bejˈʒu]) or biju ([biˈʒu]) are cassava (manioc) starch flour unleavened pancakes. They are slightly thicker than crêpes and can be eaten plain or with sweet or savoury toppings. Tapioca flour must be moistened and strained through a sieve to become a coarse flour. The heat of an ungreased hot griddle or pan makes the starchy grains fuse into a flatbread which resembles a grainy pancake. Popular tapioca toppings include molten butter and dried, shredded coconut.

Panquecas ([pɐ̃ˈkɛkɐs]) are generally made from cow's milk and refined wheat flour, and generally eaten with savoury fillings as rolls (although dessert panquecas also exist). For those with celiac disease, corn starch might substitute for the wheat flour.[58] Common fillings include shredded, seasoned chicken breast with tomato paste/sauce, and ground beef, seasoned with fried onion cubes or fried salted smashed garlic (refogado), and often bell pepper cubes and tomato paste/sauce. Both kinds are generally topped with Parmesan cheese. Vegan recipes also exist, with texturized soy protein (carne de soja, [ˈkaʁni dʒi ˈsɔʒɐ]) being particularly popular. Savoury panqueca is generally eaten for lunch or dinner, accompanied of white rice and salad, and less often pulses (prominently the beans Brazilian cuisine is famous for).

The exotic Brazilian pancake blinis ([bliˈnis]) is made from a mixture of coconut milk (leite de coco, [ˈlejtʃi dʒi ˈkoku]) and puba ([ˈpuβɐ]), a paste extracted from fermented cassava, most prominent in the cuisines of the Northern and Northeastern regions and relatively unknown elsewhere. The resulting product is significantly more watery, filling and strongly flavored than the unfermented tapioca, and care should be taken in rolling the pancakes if desired because it breaks very easily. Common toppings include molten butter and common sorts of savoury panqueca filling, but creative recipes might arise, such as fake lasagne.[59]

Colombia and Venezuela

Cachapas are corn pancakes, popular in Venezuelan cuisine.

In Colombia a similar preparation to cachapas is "arepa de choclo" (sweetcorn arepa).

Argentina and Uruguay

In Argentina and Uruguay pancakes are called panqueques and are usually sweet preparations filled with dulce de leche or whipped cream and strawberries. In savory preparations, pancakes are used to make cannelloni.

Restaurant chains

 
An IHOP restaurant in Poughkeepsie, New York

In the US, Mexico and Canada, the franchised restaurant chain International House of Pancakes (IHOP) serves pancakes all day. The Original Pancake House is another chain of pancake restaurants across the US, and Walker Brothers is a series of pancake houses in the Chicago area that developed as a franchised spin-off of The Original Pancake House.

 
A man eating pancakes from a popular restaurant chain

The popularity of pancakes in Australia has spawned the Pancake Parlour and Pancakes on the Rocks franchised restaurants. In British Columbia and Alberta, Canada, the restaurant chain De Dutch serves Dutch and Flemish-style pannenkoeken.

Syndrome

Pancake syndrome is an allergic reaction which some people have after eating pancakes in tropical regions where certain mites can contaminate the flour in pancakes.[60]

Day

Pancakes are traditionally eaten on Shrove Tuesday, which is known as "Pancake Day" in Canada,[61] the United Kingdom,[62] Ireland,[63] New Zealand, and Australia,[64] and "Pancake Tuesday" in Ireland and Scotland. (Shrove Tuesday is better known in the United States, France, and other countries as Mardi Gras or Fat Tuesday.) Historically, pancakes were made on Shrove Tuesday so that the last of the fat or lard was used up before Lent. No meat products should be eaten during Lent.

 
A pancake race in Olney, England

Charity and school events are organized on Pancake Day: in a "pancake race" each participant carries a pancake in a frying pan. All runners must toss their pancakes as they run and catch them in the frying pan. This event is said to have originated in Olney, England in 1445 when a housewife was still busy frying pancakes to eat before the Lenten fast when she heard the bells of St Peter and St Paul's Church calling her to the Shriving Service. Eager to get to church, she ran out of her house still holding the frying pan complete with pancake, tossing it to prevent it from burning, and still wearing her apron and headscarf.[65][66] Every Shrove Tuesday since 1950, the towns of Olney[67] and Liberal, Kansas have competed in the International Pancake Race. Only local women may compete; they race, and their times are compared to determine the international winner. In Olney the main women's race is augmented by races for local schoolchildren and for men.

The Rehab UK Parliamentary Pancake Race takes place every Shrove Tuesday, with teams from the British lower house (the House of Commons), the upper house (the House of Lords), and the Fourth Estate, contending for the title of Parliamentary Pancake Race Champions. The fun relay race is to raise awareness of the work of the national brain injury charity, Rehab UK, and the needs of people with acquired brain injury.[68][69]

Gallery

See also

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Further reading

  • Albala, Ken (2008). Pancake: A Global History. Reaktion Books. ISBN 978-1-86189-392-5. ( via archive.org.)
  • Annear, Steve (20 January 2016). "Olin College students create machine that makes pancakes". The Boston Globe. Device that automatically 'prints' pancakes onto a griddle based on images designed on a computer screen

External links

  • History of the pancake at foodtimeline.org

pancake, this, article, about, food, other, uses, disambiguation, griddle, cake, redirects, here, irish, style, bread, soda, bread, banana, pancakes, redirects, here, jack, johnson, song, between, dreams, hotcakes, redirects, here, album, darkness, cakes, albu. This article is about the food For other uses see Pancake disambiguation Griddle cake redirects here For the Irish style bread see Soda bread Banana pancakes redirects here For the Jack Johnson song see In Between Dreams hotcakes redirects here For the album by the Darkness see Hot Cakes For the album by Carly Simon see Hotcakes album A pancake or hotcake griddlecake or flapjack is a flat cake often thin and round prepared from a starch based batter that may contain eggs milk and butter and cooked on a hot surface such as a griddle or frying pan often frying with oil or butter It is a type of batter bread Archaeological evidence suggests that pancakes were probably eaten in prehistoric societies 1 PancakeA stack of American style blueberry pancakesTypeBatterCookbook Pancake Media PancakeThe pancake s shape and structure varies worldwide In the United Kingdom pancakes are often unleavened and resemble a crepe 2 In North America a leavening agent is used typically baking powder creating a thick fluffy pancake A crepe is a thin Breton pancake of French origin cooked on one or both sides in a special pan or crepe maker to achieve a lacelike network of fine bubbles A well known variation originating from southeast Europe is a palacinke a thin moist pancake fried on both sides and filled with jam cream cheese chocolate or ground walnuts but many other fillings sweet or savoury can also be used Commercially prepared pancake mixes are available in some countries Like waffles commercially prepared frozen pancakes are available from companies like Eggo When buttermilk is used in place of or in addition to milk the pancake develops a tart flavor and becomes known as a buttermilk pancake which is common in Scotland and the US Buckwheat flour can be used in a pancake batter making for a type of buckwheat pancake a category that includes blini kaletez ploye and memil buchimgae When potato is used as a major portion of the batter the result is a potato pancake Pancakes may be served at any time of the day or year with a variety of toppings or fillings but they have developed associations with particular times and toppings in different regions In North America they are typically considered a breakfast food and serve a similar function to waffles In Britain and the Commonwealth they are associated with Shrove Tuesday commonly known as Pancake Day when historically perishable ingredients had to be used up before the fasting period of Lent Contents 1 History 2 Regional varieties 2 1 Africa 2 1 1 Horn of Africa 2 1 2 Kenya 2 1 3 South Africa 2 1 4 Uganda 2 2 East Asia 2 2 1 China 2 2 2 Japan 2 2 3 Korea 2 3 South Asia 2 3 1 India 2 3 2 Nepal 2 3 3 Pakistan 2 4 Southeast Asia 2 4 1 Indonesia 2 4 2 Malaysia and Singapore 2 4 3 Myanmar Burma 2 4 4 Philippines 2 4 5 Vietnam 2 5 Europe 2 5 1 Austria Czech Republic and Romania Slovakia and former Yugoslavia 2 5 2 Eastern Europe 2 5 3 Denmark 2 5 4 Finland 2 5 5 France Belgium Italy Portugal and Switzerland 2 5 6 Germany 2 5 7 Great Britain 2 5 7 1 England 2 5 7 2 Scotland 2 5 7 3 Wales 2 5 8 Greece and Cyprus 2 5 9 Hungary 2 5 10 Iceland 2 5 11 Netherlands 2 5 12 Poland 2 5 13 Spain and Portugal 2 5 14 Sweden and Norway 2 6 North America 2 6 1 Costa Rica 2 6 2 Guatemala 2 6 3 Mexico 2 6 4 United States and Canada 2 7 Oceania 2 7 1 Australia and New Zealand 2 8 South America 2 8 1 Brazil 2 8 2 Colombia and Venezuela 2 8 3 Argentina and Uruguay 3 Restaurant chains 4 Syndrome 5 Day 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistoryThe Ancient Greeks made pancakes called thganiths teganites taghniths tagenites 3 or taghnias tagenias 4 all words deriving from taghnon tagenon frying pan 5 The earliest attested references to tagenias are in the works of the 5th century BC poets Cratinus 6 and Magnes 7 Tagenites were made with wheat flour olive oil honey and curdled milk and were served for breakfast 8 9 10 Another kind of pancake was staitiths staitites from staitinos staitinos of flour or dough of spelt 11 derived from staῖs stais flour of spelt 12 Athenaeus mentions in his Deipnosophistae staititas topped with honey sesame and cheese 13 14 15 The Middle English word pancake appears in English in the 15th century 16 17 The Ancient Romans called their fried concoctions alia dulcia Latin for other sweets These were much different from what are known as pancakes today 18 Regional varietiesSee also List of pancakes Africa Horn of Africa This meal of injera and several kinds of wat or tsebhi stew is typical of Ethiopian and Eritrean cuisine Pancakes in the Horn of Africa Djibouti Eritrea Ethiopia and Somalia are known as injera sometimes transliterated as enjera budenaa Oromo or canjeero Somali Injera is a yeast risen flatbread with a unique slightly spongy texture Traditionally it is made out of teff flour and is a national dish in Ethiopia and Eritrea Canjeero also known as lahooh or lahoh is a similar kind of flatbread eaten in Somalia and Yemen Lahoh is a staple in Somalia Djibouti and Yemen In Eritrea and Ethiopia injera are usually served with one or more stews known as wat or with salads especially for instance during periods of Ethiopian Orthodox fasting or with other injera injera firfir The right hand is used to tear small pieces from the injera to use to pick up and eat the stews or salads The injera under these stews soaks up juices and flavours and after the stews and salads are finished is also consumed Injera thus acts simultaneously as food eating utensil and plate When the tablecloth formed by the injera is finished the meal is over Lahoh is a pancake like bread originating in Somalia Djibouti and Yemen 19 20 It is often eaten along with honey ghee and tea During lunch lahoh is sometimes consumed with curry soup or stew Kenya In Kenya pancakes are eaten for breakfast as an alternative to bread They are served plain with the sugar already added to the batter to sweeten them Kenyan pancakes are similar to English pancakes and French crepes South Africa A pancake in South Africa is a crepe In Afrikaans it is known as a pannekoek plural pannekoeke and traditionally is prepared on gas stoves and eaten on wet and cold days Pannekoeke are usually served with cinnamon flavoured sugar and sometimes lemon juice that is either allowed to dissolve into and soften them or if their crispy texture is to be retained eaten immediately They are a staple at Dutch Reformed Church fetes 21 Plaatkoekies flapjacks or lit plate cookies are American style silver dollar pancakes Uganda In Uganda pancakes are locally made with bananas one of the staple foods of the country and usually served as a breakfast or as a snack option East Asia China Chinese pancakes may be either savoury or sweet and are generally made with dough rather than batter 22 The dough mostly consists of water flour and vegetable oil 23 The dish can be served as a side usually alongside duck or as a snack topped with scallions along with hot and sour sauce 23 Japan Japanese style souffle pancakes In Japan okonomiyaki are made from flour egg cabbage and a choice of ingredients Oyaki are pancakes often stuffed with anko eggplant or nozawana Dorayaki are a sort of sandwich made from Western style pancakes and anko Sweet crepes are also very popular The Japanese have also created a souffle style cooked in rings pancake which is taller and fluffier than the American pancakes it is inspired by 24 and found in Singapore 25 Toronto 26 Australia and the United Kingdom 27 Korea In Korea pancakes include savoury buchimgae Korean pancakes and jeon egged and battered pan fries sometime pancakes bindae tteok pan friend mung bean cakes as well as sweet hotteok filled sweet pancake These may be served during all times of the day as side dishes or just snacks Variants of the dish use the batter of the pancake to make deep fried vegetables meat or fish 28 South Asia India India has many styles of pancake Variations range from their taste to the main ingredient used All are made without the use of added raising agents Pancakes prepared using a north Indian cooking style are known as cheela Sweet cheela are made using sugar or jaggery with a wheat flour based batter North Indian salty pancakes are made using batter prepared from gram flour or green gram paste moong daal and are sometimes garnished with paneer a cottage style cheese Dosa appam neer dosa and uttapam are pancakes made in a south Indian cooking style They are prepared by fermenting rice batter and split skinned urad bean black lentil blended with water Meetha pooda sweet pancakes often eaten with pickles and chutney are a common breakfast food item in the Punjab Most of the pitha in Assam are types of pancakes served on occasions such as Bihu festivals The Bengali semi sweet pancake pati shapta is stuffed with grated coconut or thickened milk In Western India the multi grain thalipeeth is popular In Goa a traditional crepe like pancake known as alebele or alle belle is eaten at tea time It is usually filled with jaggery and coconut In Eastern India malpuas are sometimes prepared in the form of pancakes In some regions of Middle India thin green Cheelas are made with ginger or garlic leaves paste and rice flour batter Other ingredients included are salt cummin seeds green chili oil curry leaves and coriander leaves Nepal In Nepal the Newar people have a savoury rice pancake called chataamari cooked with meat or eggs on top This dish is also known as the Newari Pizza as it is served and eaten similarly to American pizza Besides being served with meat or eggs it can also be served plain 29 Pakistan In Pakistani cuisine rishiki is a pancake slightly thicker than a crepe which is made from whole wheat flour water and eggs and usually served with honey It is widely consumed in the far north and is a staple of Chitrali cuisine Southeast Asia Banana pancakes are a menu item in backpacker oriented cafes in Southeast Asia This has given rise to the term Banana Pancake Trail or Banana Pancake Circuit given to the growing routes travelled by backpackers across Malaysia Thailand Cambodia and Vietnam 30 Indonesia Indonesian serabi Pancakes in Indonesia are called panekuk The Indonesian pancake serabi is made from rice flour and coconut milk The dish is often served with kinca a thick brown colored coconut sugar syrup Other toppings may include sugar ground peanuts sliced bananas jackfruit and other fruits and chocolate Other variations include cheddar cheese corned beef shredded chicken and sausage 31 Other types of pancakes in Indonesia are burgo dadar gulung kue ape kue apem kue cubit kue cucur kue leker kue terang bulan laklak martabak pannenkoek poffertjes roti canai and roti jala Malaysia and Singapore Malay Pek Nga also known as Lempeng Kelapa The traditional Malay pancake in Malaysia and Singapore is called Pek Nga or Lempeng Kelapa Cooked very similarly to an American or Canadian style pancake albeit without a rising agent it is a savoury pancake usually served during the breakfast hours with fish curry coconut sticky rice dried fish rendang 32 or sambal Myanmar Burma The traditional Burmese pancake is called bein mont and is a traditional Burmese snack or mont The pancake is baked in a rice flour batter immersed in jaggery coconut shavings and garnished with sesame seeds peanuts and poppy seeds 33 Philippines Filipino traditional salukara pancakes made from rice coconut milk water and sugar In the Philippines traditional dessert pancakes include salukara a rice pancake made from glutinous rice eggs and coconut milk The batter is placed in a clay pot or pan lined with banana leaves or greased with oil traditionally lard and is baked over hot coals Salukara is a subtype of bibingka Philippine baked rice cakes 34 Panyalam a similar rice pancake from Mindanao is deep fried rather than baked 35 Traditional savory pancakes in the Philippines include pudpod smoked fish flake pancakes and okoy a pancake made of battered shrimp pumpkin or sweet potatoes The American style of pancakes is also a common offering in fast food establishments in the Philippines usually as a breakfast fare as well as in specialty restaurants like IHOP and the local restaurant brand Pancake House The inexpensive local counterpart called hotcakes aside from being commonly prepared for breakfast is also prepared as an afternoon snack with street kiosks selling small hotcakes topped with the choice of margarine sugar or condensed milk and flavored syrups Vietnam Banh xeo the Vietnamese equivalent of a pancake In Vietnamese cuisine there is a variety of dishes that are called pancakes banh xeo banh khọt which are sometimes called Vietnamese pancakes as well as similar dishes such as banh căn and banh khoai in central Vietnam 36 Europe Austria Czech Republic and Romania Slovakia and former Yugoslavia Palacinky Slovak pancakes In Austria the Czech Republic and Slovakia pancakes are called palatschinke palacinka and palacinka respectively plural palatschinken palacinky and palacinky Kaiserschmarrn is an Austrian pancake including raisins almonds apple jam or small pieces of apple split into pieces and sprinkled with powdered sugar In Romania they are called clătită plural clătite In countries of former Yugoslavia they are called palacinka plural palacinke In these languages the word derives from the Latin placenta meaning cake These pancakes are thin and filled with apricot plum lingonberry apple or strawberry jam chocolate sauce or hazelnut spread Eurokrem Nutella and Lino Lada fillings are favourite among the younger population A traditional version includes filling pancakes with cheese pouring yoghurt over them and then baking in an oven Eastern Europe Main article Blini Blinchiki filled with cheese and topped with blackberries Eastern Slavic cuisines have a long tradition of pancake cooking and include a variety of pancake types In Belarus Russia and Ukraine pancakes may be breakfast food appetizers main courses or desserts Blini Russian bliny or mlynci Ukrainian mlinci are thin pancakes somewhat thicker than crepes made from wheat or buckwheat flour butter eggs and milk with yeast added to the batter The preparation of blini mlynci dates back to pagan traditions and feasts which are reflected in today s pancake week celebrated in the winter before the Great Lent In pre Christian times blini and mlynci were symbolically considered by early Slavic peoples as a symbol of the sun due to their round form 37 Oladyi Blintzes Russian blinchiki blinchiki are thin crepes made without yeast Filled blintzes are also referred to as nalysnyky Ukrainian nalisniki nalistniki Russian nalistniki or nalesniki Russian nalesniki 38 A filling such as jam fruits quark or cottage cheese potato cooked ground meat or chicken and even chopped mushrooms bean sprouts cabbage and onions is rolled or enveloped into a pre fried blintz and then the blintz is lightly re fried sauteed or baked Traditionally Ashkenazi Jews who prior to 1945 lived in what is today Poland portions of the Czech Republic Hungary and other portions of the former Pale of Settlement also created blintzes with the key difference of always using a kosher cheese filling with no rennet The majority of recipes are sweet and are often served with berries or sour cream These crepe like dishes would often be served during Shavuot and today the recipe still survives in places like Israel and New York Latkes potato pancakes with finely shredded or grated potato can be eaten as part of the celebration of Hanukkah Small thick pancakes are called oladyi Russian oladi or oladky Ukrainian oladki The batter may contain various additions such as apple and raisins There also exists a style of pancake made out of quark called syrniki Denmark AEbleskiver AEbleskiver are traditional Danish pancakes made in a distinctive spherical shape The name literally means apple slices in Danish although apples are not an ingredient AEbleskiver are cooked on the stove top by baking in a special cast iron pan with several hemispherical indentations Batter is poured into the oiled indentations and as the aebleskiver begin to cook they are turned with a knitting needle skewer or fork to give the cakes their characteristic spherical shape AEbleskiver are not sweet themselves but are traditionally served dipped in raspberry strawberry lingonberry or blackberry jam and sprinkled with powdered sugar Finland An Aland pancake Alandspannkaka a traditional food in Aland 39 Finnish pancakes greatly resemble plattar see the description in the Sweden section below and are called lettu latty raiskale or ohukainen In Finland pancakes are usually eaten as dessert with whipped cream or pancake jam sugar or vanilla ice cream Besides the plain lettu there is also a version with stinging nettle added nokkoslettu pl nokkosletut 40 In Finnish lettu and pannukakku literally pancake have different meanings the latter having a structurally closer resemblance to a hotcake and is baked in an oven instead of using a frying pan Alandspannkaka literally pancake of Aland is an extra thick variety of oven made pancake that includes the addition of cardamom and either rice pudding or semolina porridge to the dough it is only served in Aland and usually on its Autonomy Day 39 Besides the sweet lettu which is eaten as a dessert there are savory spinach pancakes pinaattilettu pl pinaattiletut which are eaten as a main course typically with boiled potatoes and lingonberry jam These are available ready made from multiple brands 41 France Belgium Italy Portugal and Switzerland Crepe Crepes popular in France Belgium Switzerland and Portugal are made from flour milk and eggs They are thin pancakes and are served with a sweet fruit ice cream jam chocolate spread powdered sugar or savoury filling cheese ham seafood spinach In Francophone Europe crepes are often sold in special stands In Italy there is a similar dish called crespella or scrippella In this country are also popular some traditional waffle cookies called pizzelle and in some part of Tuscany there are typical thin crispy pancakes named brigidini made with aniseed In Brittany a galette or galette bretonne is a large thin pancake made of buckwheat flour often cooked on one side only Crepes are popular in many South American countries such as Argentina Brazil and Chile They are consumed with sweet fillings marmalade dulce de leche or with salty fillings ground meat Brazil vegetables tomato sauce cheese They have also become popular East Asian countries including Japan South Korea and China and Southeast Asian countries such as the Philippines and Thailand where they are sold in crepe stands and kiosks They are often served with whipped cream and fruits or non sweet spreads such as vegetables Farinata are popular in Mediterranean regions including Nice Also called socca these are pancakes made from chickpea flour and seasoned with black pepper They are popular street food in Nice Germany Kaiserschmarrn German pancakes are known as Pfannkuchen from the German Pfanne and Kuchen meaning pan and cake except in Berlin Brandenburg and Saxony where Pfannkuchen are Berliner pastries and pancakes are known as Eierkuchen They are generally thicker than French style crepes and usually served with sweet or occasionally savoury fillings Usage of a leavening agent or yeast is uncommon Fried apple rings covered by pancake dough and served with sugar and cinnamon are called Apfelkuchle Kaiserschmarrn a thick but light caramelized pancake popular in Bavaria and regions of the former Austria Hungary is usually split into pieces filled with fruits or nuts sprinkled with powdered sugar and served with a fruit sauce It is believed by whom that this was first prepared for Kaiser Franz Joseph I of Austria In Swabia pancakes sliced into ribbons Fladle are often served in soup Great Britain England English pancakes have three key ingredients plain flour eggs and milk though Gervase Markham s 1615 version in The English Huswife used water instead of milk and added sweet spices 42 The batter is runny and forms a thin layer on the bottom of the frying pan when the pan is tilted It may form some bubbles during cooking which results in a pale pancake with dark spots where the bubbles were but the pancake does not rise English pancakes are similar to French crepes and Italian crespelle They may be eaten as a sweet dessert with the traditional topping of lemon juice and sugar drizzled with golden syrup or wrapped around savoury stuffings and eaten as a main course On Shrove Tuesday it is custom to eat pancakes and lemon juice and sugar may be added on top Yorkshire pudding is made from a similar recipe but baked instead of fried This batter rises because the air beaten into the batter expands without the need for baking powder the result is eaten as part of the traditional roast beef dinner Oatcakes are a savoury variety of pancake particularly associated with Staffordshire A variation of pancake is the crumpet made from a batter leavened with yeast or with both yeast and baking powder and fried in butter to produce a slightly raised flat cake They are also eaten in the rest of the United Kingdom the Republic of Ireland and certain areas of the Commonwealth Further information crumpet Scotland Pancake and fruit crumpet Pancakes also called Scotch pancakes or Scottish pancakes are more like the American type In parts of Scotland they are also referred to as drop scones or dropped scones 43 44 45 They are made from flour eggs sugar buttermilk or milk salt bicarbonate of soda and cream of tartar 43 44 45 Smaller than American or English pancakes at about 9 cm 3 5 inches in diameter they are made by the traditional method of dropping batter onto a griddle a girdle in Northumberland or in Scots They can be served with jam and cream or just with butter In Scotland pancakes are generally served at teatime Wales Crempog Welsh pancakes known as crempog ffroes and other names vary considerably Generally they are thick and layered on top of each other to form a tall mock cake but some are very much like American pancakes others may be made with yeast called crempog furum or oatmeal although this is also true of American pancakes and some are like Scotch pancakes 46 47 Crumpets and pikelets are sometimes considered a variety of pancake Greece and Cyprus Greek pancakes are called teganites thganites and are smaller sized pancakes that can be either sweet or savoury Their main ingredients are flour olive oil or butter milk and eggs They are usually drizzled with plain sugar or honey and cinnamon and sometimes topped with cheese nuts fruits or vegetables Teganites can be served for breakfast or dessert and in some places like Corfu and Patras are customarily served in the feast days of Saint Spyridon and Saint Andrew In Cyprus pancakes are also called teganites and are used in an alternative dish called Genoese cannelloni which includes ground meat with tomato sauce cheese and occasionally bechamel sauce Hungary Hortobagyi palacsinta In Hungary pancakes known as palacsinta derived from the Latin placenta are made from flour milk or soda water sugar and eggs Sweet wine may be added to the batter The filling is usually jam sugared and ground walnuts or poppy seeds sugared cottage cheese sugared cocoa or cinnamon powder but meat and mushroom fillings are also used see Hortobagyi palacsinta Gundel palacsinta is a Hungarian pancake stuffed with walnuts zest raisins and rum that is served in chocolate sauce and is often flambeed Hungarian pancakes are served as a main dish or as a dessert Iceland Rolled ponnukaka Icelandic crepe like pancakes are called ponnukaka pl ponnukokur whereas smaller thicker and denser pancakes resembling North American pancakes are called lumma or skonsa The pancakes are usually a bit browner than traditional Swedish ones Ponnukokur are usually cooked on a special Icelandic pancake pan which is made to get the pancake as thin as possible which is traditionally never washed or rinsed not even with water Ponnukokur are traditionally served rolled up with sugar or folded with jam and whipped cream but if eaten at a cafe they might contain ice cream instead Ponnukokur are also a popular dessert in North America among people of Icelandic descent In Iceland North American style pancakes are cut in half and used as sandwich bread similar to Icelandic flatbread Netherlands Pannenkoek with bacon and Gouda cheese In the Netherlands pancakes are known as pannenkoeken and are mostly eaten at lunch and dinner time Pancake restaurants are popular with families and serve many sweet savoury and stuffed varieties Pannenkoeken are slightly thicker than crepes and usually quite large 30 cm 12 inches or so in diameter The batter is egg based and fillings include such items as sliced apples cheese ham bacon and candied ginger alone or in combination Stroop a thick molasses like sugar beet based syrup is also popular particularly in a classic filling of bacon and stroop Poffertjes are another Dutch quick bread similar to American pancakes but sweeter and much smaller Made in a specially dimpled copper or cast iron pan they are flipped once with a fork Unlike Dutch pancakes the batter for poffertjes contains baking powder and therefore they have a softer interior than pancakes A spekdik is a pancake like food which is traditionally eaten in the provinces Groningen and Drenthe in the Netherlands around New Year Unlike pancakes a spekdik is cooked with a waffle iron The main ingredients of a spekdik are syrup eggs and rye flour and some varieties include bacon Poland Home made Polish nalesniki filled with sweet white cheese In Poland thin crepe style pancakes are called nalesniki pronounced naˈlɛɕɲikʲi They are usually rolled and served with a variety of savoury or sweet fillings as a main dish or a dessert Sweet fillings include fresh fruits e g bilberries jams often apple jam and soft white cheese with sugar Savoury fillings include fried vegetables fried chicken minced meat spinach and a variety of added ingredients such as potatoes mushrooms cabbage or ham Another Polish dish reassembling pancakes are racuchy They are smaller and thicker than nalesniki and can be stuffed with apple slices Spain and Portugal Frixuelos Iberian pancakes are called frixuelos or filloas and are very popular in Portugal and the north west of Spain They are made from flour milk and eggs They are thin and are usually served with a large amount of sugar or honey They are a typical Carnival sweet dessert in Portugal Galicia Asturias and Leon Sweden and Norway Nordic pancakes Nordic pancakes are similar to French style crepes In some Nordic countries they are served with jam or fruit often lingonberry or strawberry jam as a dessert with a variety of savoury fillings Traditional Swedish variations can be exotic Besides the usual thin pancakes called pannkakor which resemble the French crepes and often served with whipped cream and jam are traditionally eaten for lunch on Thursdays with pea soup the Swedish cuisine also has plattar very small pancakes which resemble tiny English pancakes and are usually fried in a special pan called a plattlagg a sort of frying pan with indentations to allow for several normally seven to be made at once Another type of pancake is the ugnspannkaka oven pancake which is very thick and resembles German pancakes and is baked in the oven There is also a variant that includes fried pork in the batter flaskpannkaka pork pancake Potato pancakes called raggmunk contain shredded raw potato and may contain other vegetables sometimes the pancake batter is omitted producing rarakor Raggmunk and rarakor are traditionally eaten with pork rinds and lingonberry jam A special Swedish pancake is saffron pancake from Gotland made with saffron and rice baked in the oven It is common to add lemon juice to the sugar for extra taste The pancakes are often served after a soup Another special Swedish pancake is the aggakaka eggcake also called skansk aggakaka Scanian eggcake which is almost like an ordinary Swedish pancake but it is a lot thicker and also much more difficult to make due to the risk of burning it It is made in a frying pan is about four to five centimetres 1 1 2 to 2 inches thick and is served with lingonberries and bacon The Norwegian variety is commonly eaten for dinner traditionally with bacon jam typically bilberry or sugar North America Costa Rica Costa Rican chorreadas are similar to cachapas Guatemala Guatemalan pancakes are called panqueques They are made with the same ingredients as American pancakes The toppings are usually fruits and honey They are a very popular breakfast meal in Guatemala Depending on the region the panqueque can be thin as a crepe or as fluffy as a North American pancake Mexico Mexican hotcakes are similar to American pancakes Crepes became popular toward the end of the 19th century after their introduction by the French sometime between the First French Intervention 1838 and the Second French Intervention in Mexico 1861 67 48 49 Hotcakes are often made with cornmeal as well as or instead of wheat flour Hotcakes are popular breakfast items at restaurants throughout the country and are often sold by street vendors in cities and during the local celebrations of towns throughout the day They are also sold during fairs the vendors sell a single hotcake topped with different sauces such as condensed milk fruit jam or a sweet goat milk spread called cajeta United States and Canada American and Canadian pancakes sometimes called hotcakes griddlecakes or flapjacks are usually served at breakfast in a stack of two or three topped with maple syrup or table syrup and butter They are often served with other items such as bacon toast eggs or sausage Other popular topping alternatives include jam peanut butter nuts fruit honey powdered sugar whipped cream cane syrup cinnamon and sugar and molasses In addition when a pancake is occasionally served as a dessert toppings such as ice cream chocolate syrup and various fruits are often used The thick batter contains eggs flour milk and a leavening agent such as baking powder The batter can have ingredients such as buttermilk blueberries strawberries bananas apples chocolate chips cheese or sugar added Spices such as cinnamon vanilla and nutmeg can also be used Yogurt may be used to give the pancakes a relatively moist consistency Pancakes may be 1 cm 1 2 inch thick and are typically between 10 and 25 cm 4 and 10 inches in diameter Bannock The European version Scotland was traditionally made of oatmeal The bannock of native North Americans was made of corn nut meal and plant bulb meal Each region had its own variation of flour and fruit Today bannock is most often deep fried pan fried and oven baked 50 Johnnycake also jonnycake johnny cake journey cake or Johnny Bread is a cornmeal flatbread that was an early American staple food and is still eaten in the West Indies and Bermuda 51 The modern johnnycake is stereotypically identified with today s Rhode Island foods though they are a cultural staple in all of the northern US 52 A modern johnnycake is fried cornmeal gruel which is made from yellow or white cornmeal mixed with salt and hot water or milk and frequently lightly sweetened Yaniqueques or yanikeke are a Dominican Republic version of the johnnycake They are a fried bread rather than a pancake and are a popular beach food 53 54 Sourdough was used by prospectors and pioneers to make pancakes without having to buy yeast Prospectors would carry a pot of sourdough to make pancakes and bread as it could last indefinitely needing only flour and water to replenish it 55 Sourdough pancakes are now a particular speciality in Alaska 56 They are also found in many American pancake houses and restaurants elsewhere in America A silver dollar pancake refers to a pancake about 5 7 cm 2 3 inches in diameter or just a bit bigger than the pre 1979 silver dollar coins in the United States This is usually made by frying a small spoonful of the same batter as any other pancake One serving usually consists of five to ten silver dollar pancakes German pancakes or Dutch baby pancakes served in American pancake houses are bowl shaped They are eaten with lemons and powdered sugar jam or caramelized apples as well as fritters 57 A David Eyre s pancake is a variation on the German pancake named for the American writer and editor David W Eyre 1912 2008 Toutons are small tall pancakes traditional in Newfoundland They are usually served with dark molasses Oceania Australia and New Zealand In Australia and New Zealand small pancakes about 75 mm or 3 inches in diameter known as pikelets or drop scones are also eaten They are traditionally served with jam or jam and whipped cream or solely with butter at afternoon tea but can also be served at morning tea They are made with milk self raising flour eggs and sometimes a small amount of icing sugar In some circles in New Zealand very thin crepe like or English pancake like pancakes around 20 cm or 8 inches in diameter are served with butter or butter and lemon sugar and then rolled up and eaten American style pancakes are also popular They are eaten for breakfast or as a dessert with lemon juice and sugar butter and maple syrup fruits sometimes stewed such as strawberries and cream ice cream or mascarpone South America Brazil Tapioca Portuguese pronunciation tɐpiˈɔkɐ beiju bejˈʒu or biju biˈʒu are cassava manioc starch flour unleavened pancakes They are slightly thicker than crepes and can be eaten plain or with sweet or savoury toppings Tapioca flour must be moistened and strained through a sieve to become a coarse flour The heat of an ungreased hot griddle or pan makes the starchy grains fuse into a flatbread which resembles a grainy pancake Popular tapioca toppings include molten butter and dried shredded coconut Panquecas pɐ ˈkɛkɐs are generally made from cow s milk and refined wheat flour and generally eaten with savoury fillings as rolls although dessert panquecas also exist For those with celiac disease corn starch might substitute for the wheat flour 58 Common fillings include shredded seasoned chicken breast with tomato paste sauce and ground beef seasoned with fried onion cubes or fried salted smashed garlic refogado and often bell pepper cubes and tomato paste sauce Both kinds are generally topped with Parmesan cheese Vegan recipes also exist with texturized soy protein carne de soja ˈkaʁni dʒi ˈsɔʒɐ being particularly popular Savoury panqueca is generally eaten for lunch or dinner accompanied of white rice and salad and less often pulses prominently the beans Brazilian cuisine is famous for The exotic Brazilian pancake blinis bliˈnis is made from a mixture of coconut milk leite de coco ˈlejtʃi dʒi ˈkoku and puba ˈpubɐ a paste extracted from fermented cassava most prominent in the cuisines of the Northern and Northeastern regions and relatively unknown elsewhere The resulting product is significantly more watery filling and strongly flavored than the unfermented tapioca and care should be taken in rolling the pancakes if desired because it breaks very easily Common toppings include molten butter and common sorts of savoury panqueca filling but creative recipes might arise such as fake lasagne 59 Colombia and Venezuela Cachapas are corn pancakes popular in Venezuelan cuisine In Colombia a similar preparation to cachapas is arepa de choclo sweetcorn arepa Argentina and Uruguay In Argentina and Uruguay pancakes are called panqueques and are usually sweet preparations filled with dulce de leche or whipped cream and strawberries In savory preparations pancakes are used to make cannelloni Restaurant chains An IHOP restaurant in Poughkeepsie New York In the US Mexico and Canada the franchised restaurant chain International House of Pancakes IHOP serves pancakes all day The Original Pancake House is another chain of pancake restaurants across the US and Walker Brothers is a series of pancake houses in the Chicago area that developed as a franchised spin off of The Original Pancake House A man eating pancakes from a popular restaurant chain The popularity of pancakes in Australia has spawned the Pancake Parlour and Pancakes on the Rocks franchised restaurants In British Columbia and Alberta Canada the restaurant chain De Dutch serves Dutch and Flemish style pannenkoeken SyndromePancake syndrome is an allergic reaction which some people have after eating pancakes in tropical regions where certain mites can contaminate the flour in pancakes 60 DayMain article Shrove Tuesday Pancakes are traditionally eaten on Shrove Tuesday which is known as Pancake Day in Canada 61 the United Kingdom 62 Ireland 63 New Zealand and Australia 64 and Pancake Tuesday in Ireland and Scotland Shrove Tuesday is better known in the United States France and other countries as Mardi Gras or Fat Tuesday Historically pancakes were made on Shrove Tuesday so that the last of the fat or lard was used up before Lent No meat products should be eaten during Lent A pancake race in Olney England Charity and school events are organized on Pancake Day in a pancake race each participant carries a pancake in a frying pan All runners must toss their pancakes as they run and catch them in the frying pan This event is said to have originated in Olney England in 1445 when a housewife was still busy frying pancakes to eat before the Lenten fast when she heard the bells of St Peter and St Paul s Church calling her to the Shriving Service Eager to get to church she ran out of her house still holding the frying pan complete with pancake tossing it to prevent it from burning and still wearing her apron and headscarf 65 66 Every Shrove Tuesday since 1950 the towns of Olney 67 and Liberal Kansas have competed in the International Pancake Race Only local women may compete they race and their times are compared to determine the international winner In Olney the main women s race is augmented by races for local schoolchildren and for men The Rehab UK Parliamentary Pancake Race takes place every Shrove Tuesday with teams from the British lower house the House of Commons the upper house the House of Lords and the Fourth Estate contending for the title of Parliamentary Pancake Race Champions The fun relay race is to raise awareness of the work of the national brain injury charity Rehab UK and the needs of people with acquired brain injury 68 69 Gallery American pancakes with blueberry sauce Japanese okonomiyaki a savoury pancake containing a variety of ingredients Danish aebleskiver being prepared French socca just coming out of the oven in the old town of Nice on the French Riviera An automatic pancake machine Inuit bannock A Dutch baby pancake Johnnycakes Stacks of silver dollar pancakes A touton upper right with other breakfast foods Dosa Swedish aggakaka with slices of pork belly apples and a bowl of lingonberries Pancakes made in the shape of a heart on a frying pan Pancakes and syrup at a pancake feed eventSee also Food portalList of breakfast foods List of quick breads Pancake art an artform where batter is applied to make an image Pancake breakfast Qistibi Roti jala Sarva Pindi WaffleReferences Jones Martin 2007 Feast why humans share food Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199209019 OCLC 75713258 Nelson Libby 29 November 2015 British desserts explained for Americans confused by the Great British Baking Show Vox Retrieved 3 December 2015 taghniths Archived 29 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus taghnias Archived 30 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus taghnon Archived 7 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus Cratinus 125 Comicorum Atticorum Fragmenta Magnes 1 Eugenia Salza Prina Ricotti Meals and recipes from ancient Greece J Paul Getty Museum 2007 p 111 Dalby Andrew 1996 Siren feasts a history of food and gastronomy in Greece Routledge p 91 Spiller Gene A 1991 The Mediterranean diets in health and disease AVI Van Nostrand Reinhold 1991 p 34 staitinos Archived 7 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus staῖs Archived 7 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus Atheneaus 2003 The Deipnosophists 646b Archived 18 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine on Perseus Andrew Dalby Food in the ancient world from A to Z Routledge p 71 Athenaeus and Olson S Douglas 2011 The Learned Banqueters Volume VII Books 13 594b 14 Loeb Classical Library pp 277 278 Pancake Archived 7 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine Definition and More from the Free Merriam Webster Dictionary Pancake Archived 21 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Online Etymology Dictionary The Food Timeline history notes muffins to yogurt foodtimeline org Retrieved 4 August 2015 Abdullahi Mohamed Diriye 2001 Culture and Customs of Somalia Greenwood Press p 113 Hassan Elham Little Business Women Small enterprises supporting Yemen s poorest families News Varieties 16 October 2004 Boer op ons werf at landbou com via archive org Liu Junru 2011 Chinese Food 3rd ed Cambridge University Press p 12 ISBN 978 0521186742 a b Pan Fried Chinese Pancakes Recipe These Japanese fluffy pancakes are the ultimate new food trend Vogue English 4 May 2018 Retrieved 7 January 2019 Quek Eunice 8 July 2018 Get your fill of fluffy wobbly Japanese souffle pancakes at these new eateries The Straits Times The Straits Times Retrieved 7 January 2019 Peters Diane 24 May 2018 Fuwa Fuwa Japanese pancakes find their happy place The Star thestar com Toronto Star Retrieved 7 January 2019 Morley Katie 12 February 2018 Forget flipping wobbly pancakes are the latest food trend The Telegraph The Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 7 January 2019 Korean pancake recipes from Cooking Korean food with Maangchi www maangchi com Chatamari thegundruk com 15 March 2014 Denis D Gray 27 March 2008 Mass tourism swamps Asia s once unique remote places USA TODAY USA TODAY Retrieved 27 May 2012 Serabi Indonesian Pancakes recipe aussietaste recipes Archived from the original on 6 August 2020 Retrieved 3 November 2016 Malay Pancake Lempeng Kelapa Recipe Food com Retrieved 17 January 2022 ဘ န မ န Food Magazine Myanmar Retrieved 13 November 2019 Uy Amy A 1 September 2013 Rice cakes roscas and more eats at the Samar Food Fest GMA News Online Retrieved 17 October 2018 Edgie Polistico 2017 Philippine Food Cooking amp Dining Dictionary Anvil Publishing Incorporated ISBN 9786214200870 permanent dead link Thuan 5 April 2019 What Is Vietnamese Pancake beetrip net Retrieved 31 May 2020 Marks Gil 2010 Encyclopedia of Jewish Food Wiley pp 56 58 ISBN 9780470391303 Retrieved 18 April 2012 Nalesniki Archived 11 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine in V V Pokhlebkin s Culinary Dictionary 2002 a b Alandska flaggan i topp sjalvstyrelsedagen firas med pannkaka och konsert Archived 11 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine in Swedish Nokkosletut 19 November 2019 Nokkosletut Martat Martat fi Retrieved 12 August 2022 Martat maistelivat ja arvioivat einespinaattilettuja tuoteselosteita tutkiessa loytyi pieni yllatys 5 April 2019 Gervase Markham Pancakes Hertes of England Archived from the original on 16 February 2016 Retrieved 12 February 2016 a b McNeill F Marian 1929 The Scots Kitchen Paperback 259 pages Edinburgh Mercat Press New Ed edition 25 October 2004 ISBN 1 84183 070 4 p179 a b Maw Broon 2007 Maw Broon s Cookbook Waverley Books 18 October 2007 ISBN 1 902407 45 8 p131 a b S W R I 1977 S W R I Jubilee Cookery Book Edinburgh Scottish Women s Rural Institutes Reprint of 8th Edition 1968 p117 Freeman Bobby 2006 First catch your peacock her classic guide to Welsh food Y Lolfa New edition ISBN 978 0 86243 315 4 pp 195 196 Tibbit Sara Minwell 1991 Baking in Wales National Museums and Galleries of Wales ISBN 978 0 7200 0346 8 p 13 Fernandez del Villar Miguel Angel and Ruiz Naufal Victor M Mesa Mexicana 1993 Fundacion Cultural Bancomer ISBN 9789686084948 The French Influence On Mexican Cooking La Comida Afrancescada mexconnect com Retrieved 4 August 2015 Canadian Ministry of Forests 2000 Bannock Awareness Retrieved 25 December 2013 Darwin Porter Danforth Prince 2010 Frommer s 2010 Bermuda John Wiley amp Sons Smith Peter W 2003 New England Country Store Cookbook iUniverse Uribie Millizen Creole Cravings Hoy Digital 25 February 2010 Archived 1 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine DR1 Daily News Thursday 11 December 2008 dr1 com Retrieved 4 August 2015 Ridgwell Jenny Finding Out About Food Oxford University Press Oxford 30 June 1983 ISBN 978 0 19 832716 5 p 89 DuFresne Jim Aaron Sprizter Alaska Lonely Planet Publications 6th Revised edition 1 April 2006 ISBN 978 1 74059 991 7 p 40 Maas Sebastian 15 February 2023 Kochen ohne Kohle Der deutsche Pfannkuchen den in Deutschland niemand kennt Der Spiegel in German ISSN 2195 1349 Retrieved 1 March 2023 Panqueca Receita basica sem gluten Especial Dia Internacional dos Celiacos Aqui na Cozinha Archived 7 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine 20 May 2012 Retrieved 5 January 2015 Puba pancake lasagna with beef jerky filling Aqui na Cozinha Archived 4 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine 30 November 2011 Retrieved 5 January 2015 Sanchez Borges Mario Suarez Chacon Raul Capriles Hulett Arnaldo Caballero Fonseca Fernan Iraola Victor Fernandez Caldas Enrique 1 May 2009 Pancake syndrome oral mite anaphylaxis The World Allergy Organization Journal 2 5 91 96 doi 10 1097 WOX 0b013e3181a0db50 ISSN 1939 4551 PMC 3651046 PMID 23283016 The Presbyterian Church in Canada Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2011 Pancake Day Shrove Tuesday in the UK British Embassy Washington DC Archived from the original on 23 February 2007 Retrieved 17 November 2006 Shrove Tuesday Pancake Day Irish Culture and Customs Retrieved 17 November 2006 Easter in Australia The Australian Government Culture and Recreation Portal Archived from the original on 18 March 2007 Retrieved 17 November 2006 The origin of pancake racing Bbc co uk Retrieved 28 February 2014 Olney Pancake Race ukstudentlife com Retrieved 4 August 2015 Pancake Race 2007 archive org Archived from the original on 6 February 2010 Retrieved 4 August 2015 Peers batter MPs in pancake race BBC News 24 February 2009 retrieved 18 May 2009 Lords win Westminster parliamentary pancake race BBC News 8 March 2011 retrieved 8 March 2011Further readingAlbala Ken 2008 Pancake A Global History Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1 86189 392 5 At press uchicago edu via archive org Annear Steve 20 January 2016 Olin College students create machine that makes pancakes The Boston Globe Device that automatically prints pancakes onto a griddle based on images designed on a computer screenExternal linksHistory of the pancake at foodtimeline org Pancake at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Resources from Wikiversity Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pancake amp oldid 1148725733, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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