SIMPLE YET SURPRISING AMSTERDAM PANCAKE

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24 responses to “SIMPLE YET SURPRISING AMSTERDAM PANCAKE”

  1. Your Amsterdam pancake experience reminds me of the Moroccan breakfast pancakes my husband and I discovered in Marrakesh served with amalou and honey. I still dream about it. Now I want to go to Amsterdam!

  2. And I just happen to have potato starch in my cupboard (from a lazy attempt to make chichi dango mochi!) so I’m going to try this recipe!

  3. “Amsterdam pancakes” aren’t a thing, Dutch pancakes are but these are not them. Flour, eggs, milk and a pinch of salt is all you need. Thin pancakes, served with cheese or bacon and syrup or with apples fried in them, or just syrup or confectioners sugar.

    • Please read the text thoroughly bevore leaving comments that prooves you didn’t.
      Maybe the pancake she had in Amsterdam was exactly like this and not the classic simple one. She never claimed this to be THE recipe but her interpretation of what she had on that special day in that special cafe in Amsterdam, so why not let her call it “Amsterdam-Pancake”?

  4. Love you so much. Love your style of writing, photography, your content. Honestly, I don’t make any of your recipes but enjoy reading about the process and history of each concoction that you conjure up. How you manage to make this boring pancake look exciting is pure genius. Enjoying all your posts. Aloha.

  5. I love how unadorned and simple this looks. Like Tracey above, i don’t make any of your recipes but it’s such a pleasure reading how you come up with them. Love learning about the process, as i have often wondered how to make many of the dishes you share. Thank you!

  6. @Tracey and Emilye: Pick a recipe from the archives and make it! They all work and are amazing. I am vegan but was still able to find recipes I can use (even omitting fish sauce or whatever else, they are crazy good!).

  7. just made this for sunday breakfast (after having had the vampire slayer ramen for dinner last night) . At the beginning everyone (husband and two teenage kids and myself) were like “man this is soooo weird” “not sure i will be making this again” “so strange, her recipes are usually so great” “what was she thinking” etc.. Five minutes later, and two pancakes each later, we were all like, “when are we making this again ?” “i can imagine this with ham and the cheese” “this is quite good actually” and “i loooove the chewiness of it” ! So there ! interesting recipe ! will definitely make again ! xxx

  8. Oh pannekoeken.. sundays are reserved for them :) There’s no exact recipe when my husband makes them, just mix flour, eggs, milk, pinch of salt until consistency is thicker than crepe and still spreadable when you twirl the pan. How the Dutchies love them – sprinkle with powdered sugar, rolled them up and eat with the hand! Well anything with Dutch cheese will also gets his approval :D

  9. The pancake you’ve described is definitely the standard European pancake that I know (I’m Belgian but this style is eaten in numerous countries, including in the UK where I now live!). I’ve eaten them rolled up with sugar and butter or jam all my life, and Belgian children often have them rolled up with Nutella after school, although I was never allowed this ;). Our ‘family recipe’ is just a pile of flour, an egg and milk and a pinch of sugar, whisked up and adding a bit of this and that until it reaches the correct consistency. I’ve sometimes seen them served with ham and cheese at fairs but only ever sweet when served in the home. Once I have a bit of space in my pantry for potato starch I’ll try your version!

  10. I used to be married to a Dutch fella and his mother (Mu) would make us pannekoeken with strips of already fried bacon in them. Jeez, my mouth is watering just thinking about them. No to the bacon these days but sounds like a good weekday night easy peasy dinner. Thanks for the reminder!

  11. Also, I simply happen to have potato starch in my cabinet (from a languid endeavor to make chichi dango mochi!) so I will attempt this formula!

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