Egg Crepes

Egg Crepes

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I think that more than lunch, or dinner, or snacks and what-nots, people tend to have a more fixated idea on what a breakfast ought to be.  Even though I may have my Asian background to thank for (if I may) a broader window on other-than-American foods, I’m still sometimes a bit… pleasantly awed by what other parts of the world eat for breakfast during my travels (that’s IF I ever wake up for it… but let’s just pretend I do).

Huh?  Macaroni with SPAM swimming in a watered down tomato soup?  Really?  Coconut rice topped with chili sauce, dried shrimps and marinated squids in banana leaf?  You’re kidding.  Slimy and stringy fermented beans vigorously stirred and eaten with steamed rice?  Uhum, let me wrap my head around that.  How about a big, hot bowl of beef soup with rice vermicelli?  Tell me that could also be for dinner right?  And Americans, don’t feel too good yet.  Stacked pancakes with bacon, sausages, eggs AND a pouring of syrup??  NOW, THAT’S absurd!  But then JUST a croissant?  I feel strangely lonely.

Of course I’m not saying where I come from, people don’t have their fair share of strange breakfast.  A fistful of sticky rice stuffed with pork floss and a piece of stale fried dough!?  …Touche.  And that’s not the only thing because breakfast is… kind of a big thing in Taiwan.  An entire market of franchised restaurants would elbow one another, scratch each other’s eye out and bloodbath their way to the top of “The Best Breakfast Joint” in the neighborhood because like I said, breakfast is big here.  And any one of them certainly wouldn’t get away without egg crepes on its menu which is Taiwanese chive crepe on one side and scrambled eggs on the other.

I totally have a nostalgic thing for egg crepes since childhood.  It makes me wanna pick up a satchel overweighting with textbooks and go to… OK not school.  Anyways, I have been making it at home for a long time.  Even though recently this tore us apart, I still revisit sometimes.  And by which  I mean when my husband who is equally egg-crepes-fanatic is devouring it right in front of me, that I could have a lick.  But during all these years of a happy relationship with frozen, store-bought Taiwanese crepes (oh… I didn’t mention that?), the freak in me had always wanted to develop my own recipe (there, phew…).  For one, store-bought tends to… run out sometimes.  It’s in its nature.  Girls need a relationship she can rely on, you know.  So the other day I did exactly that, and it pretty much kicked store-bought out of the house.  It’s exactly what I look for in an egg crepe with a chewy texture and crispy edges.  I don’t think I could ever go back to store-bought after this.

Servings: 4~10 crepes depending on size

* UPDATES 03/14/2018: I have removed the oil from the batter to achieve a chewier texture.  If you like a softer texture in your crepe, add 1/4 cup of vegetable oil to the batter. 

  • 1 1/2 cup of all purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup of tapioca starch/flour
  • 5 tbsp of finely diced chives or scallions
  • 1 1/2 tsp of sugar
  • 3/4 tsp of salt
  • 1 3/4  cups of water
  • 1/4 cup of unsalted butter, melted
  • 8 large eggs
  • 3 tbsp of milk
  • 1/2 tsp of salt
  • White pepper for dusting

Mix together flour, tapioca starch, finely diced chives (or scallions), sugar, salt, and water in a pourable cup or bowl.  Whisk vigorously until the mixture is smoothly combined without any lumps.  Set aside.

Prepare a flat, shallow and round non-stick skillet.  A large crepe pan would be perfect.  Starting with a cold skillet, brush lightly with melted butter.  Pour enough batter into the skillet and swirl to spread it out into a thin crepe.  Cook over medium-high heat until the batter has solidified, then brush the top surface evenly with melted butter.  Flip the crepe back and forth a few times until both sides are lightly browned.  Transfer the crepe onto a cooling rack, then rinse the hot skillet with cold water to cool it down before cooking the next crepe.  Repeat this process until all the batter is used up.

PS, These crepes can be frozen for whenever they are needed.  Just insert a piece of parchment paper in between each crepe, slide into an air-tight bag and freeze.

When ready to make the egg crepe, whisk the eggs, milk and salt in a bowl and set aside.  Heat up the same non-stick skillet used for making the crepe over medium-high heat.  Brush with melted butter, then approx 2~4 tbsp of the eggs mixture depending on the size of your skillet.  The pan should be hot enough so the eggs would immediately start to sizzle and bubble.  quickly lay 1 crepe over the eggs before the egg cooks so that the crepe could stick to the eggs.  Sprinkle a bit of white pepper over the crepe and flip the crepe when the bottom of the eggs is browned.  This would happen VERY QUICKLY, like within 30 sec if the temperature of the pan is correctly hot.  Toast the crepe side until it’s nicely browned as well, then fold it in half and take it out of the pan.  Repeat with the rest of the eggs and crepes.

These crepes can be folded, or rolled, or into whatever form you like, but chili sauce is a MUST companion in my kitchen.

 

14 Comments
  • Smejia

    September 27, 2012 at 2:13 AM Reply

    These look delicious. I plan on making these for dinner. One question: can you explain the measurement for the water? Is it 1 cup and 1/8? Thank you!

    • Mandy L.

      September 27, 2012 at 3:11 AM Reply

      Oh I’m terribly sorry. It mean 1.8 cups as in metric system. So that would be converted to 1 and 4/5 cups (that’s why I wrote it that way cuz this sounds even more confusing). You could reduce the vegetable oil to 1/4 cup if you like your creeps chewier than soft. I hope this helps.

  • Smejia

    September 27, 2012 at 11:26 AM Reply

    Thank you for the information. I made these for dinner tonight and they were delicious! Thank you!

    • Mandy L.

      September 27, 2012 at 2:27 PM Reply

      Oh I’m so glad you did! did you have problem making them into a crepe?

  • Maria

    January 22, 2013 at 12:54 PM Reply

    I just got back from a visit to Taiwan, and am craving Dan bing! I am so excited to have found your post , and will try making them tomorrow! How did you get your chopsticks to stick together? Did you glue them?

    • Mandy L.

      January 22, 2013 at 1:44 PM Reply

      Maria, yes I glued them together! hahaaaa but they fell off completely right after the task is done.

  • Juliana Loh (@bilbaobab)

    March 19, 2013 at 10:35 AM Reply

    these are stunning! I miss both 煎饼 and 蛋饼 in Beijing! thanks for sharing the recipe, i even have a crepe iron pan that i should make better use of!

  • KKS

    December 13, 2013 at 10:33 PM Reply

    This looks like one of the best examples I can find online, but I’m curious as to why this recipe calls for so much water in the dough. 1 4/5 cups to 2 cups of flour? this video has more of a 2:1 ratio. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLSrmj0zmRA

    • Mandy L.

      December 13, 2013 at 11:13 PM Reply

      Kks, this dough is really more like a batter that you cook like a French crepe. If you are looking for more of a scallion pancake recipe, check out the recent scallion flat breads post.

  • M

    December 23, 2014 at 2:10 PM Reply

    I can’t even describe how excited I am to see this recipe. I lived in Taiwan 8 years ago, and was OBSESSED with these little packets of deliciousness.
    I had them for breakfast everyday (from the neighborhood vendor who made the crepe right in front of you on a big round griddle, laid it out over the thin layer of egg and gave it to you folded neatly into a little plastic baggie after dousing it with an amazing garlicky sauce. The perfect, portable breakfast to go! I’ve been trying to recreate them on my own & have been searching for a recipe ever since I returned.
    Thanks for posting such detailed directions- I can’t WAIT to make (and eat!) these!!

  • Orchid

    December 13, 2015 at 3:28 AM Reply

    I just made these this morning and the result was a wonderfully light and fluffy dan bing. The ones I’ve had before on the street were a bit greasy so this was awesome. I also used a bit of the Sichuan chili oil in the batter for a little fragrance and the chili broad bean paste instead of chili sauce. You did it again Mandy!

  • minik

    July 6, 2016 at 5:10 PM Reply

    Mandy, we don’t have tapioca flour here. Could I use something else? I’m not trying to be authentic LOL. Cornstarch? Or just do that part with wheat flour? What do you think?

    • mandy@ladyandpups

      July 6, 2016 at 5:39 PM Reply

      Minik, you can try with all wheat flour although I’m not sure how it would turn out… Cornstarch is not the same with tapioca starch so I don’t think it’s interchangeable :(

  • Toro

    March 30, 2018 at 9:30 PM Reply

    Hi hi do you have a recipe for the dipping sauce for this? The 甜酱?

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