Tower of Pancakes
I hadn't realized that it was P-P-P-P-P-P-P-P-Pancake Day (or if you're American, the decidedly less appetizing-sounding Fat Tuesday) until mid-afternoon yesterday, so I brought out the griddle again and demonstrated that there are some things that I can make in the kitchen without an actual adult's help.

I think my mobile phone can make even a picture of pancakes unappetizing. Nevertheless, this is the same recipe as last time, with more milk added so that the batter just distributed itself over a wider area.
Here's a question - do you spread your jam/butter/whatever you like on the first-cooked smooth side of the pancake, or on the underside so that it soaks into all the little holes?

I think my mobile phone can make even a picture of pancakes unappetizing. Nevertheless, this is the same recipe as last time, with more milk added so that the batter just distributed itself over a wider area.
Here's a question - do you spread your jam/butter/whatever you like on the first-cooked smooth side of the pancake, or on the underside so that it soaks into all the little holes?
no subject
I always put my butter on the flat side -- there are more holes on the underside, but the flat side seems more 'porous'. I might just be imagining that, though...
no subject
no subject
no subject
I typically put too much syrup, having it run-off, and mop it up with the other side of the pancake anyhow ^^
Cellphone cameras seem to be horrible for reproducing anything decent. They do look yummy even if their colour is a bit off :D
Oh, here's a question for you - do you have the problem of "the first pancake always burns" and then the rest work out fine?
no subject
Oddly I don't have that problem (as explained in a comic retexting series by
no subject
I think that my issue with the FPP may be the exact opposite of yours - I warm up the pan beforehand and don't use oil, so the pan may be too hot, and so the First Pancake absorbs too much heat too quickly, but it absorbs enough heat so that the following pancakes cook slower.