This recipe has been in my family for years. I remember my mother making them for my sisters and I when we were little. They are a little bit tricky (easy to overcook!), but they are a yummy change from plain old pancakes! Finnish pancakes are thin and buttery. I've never had a proper crepe, but I feel as though these pancakes are similar to crepes. My kids call them roll-up pancakes because we forgo silverware to roll them up and eat them with our hands.
My great-grandmother was a first generation American. Her parents immigrated here from Finland. This recipe came over with them and has been passed down through the ladies of the family as we make them for our own families.
FINNISH PANCAKES.
INGREDIENTS.
3/4 cup flour
3/4 cup milk
4 eggs
Put all of the ingredients into a blender and mix well. The sides of the blender will probably need to be scraped to ensure that there are no lumps left in the batter.
You really want to catch the pancakes before they brown at all. Once they brown they lose some of their uniqueness and become difficult to roll up. I've been making these for years, and I still get distracted by the kids and let them cook too long! They cook extremely quickly.
This recipe makes about 30 palm-sized pancakes. Serve warm with syrup and jam! These are extra-special fun because, as I mentioned, they don't require any silverware. Just roll them up and dip! Or alternately, put jam in the center and then roll them up. Of course, if manners are required, forks are welcome to the party. Depending on how thin and buttery yours turn out, it may be difficult to coax them onto the fork. Finnish pancakes are wonderfully kid friendly due to their mild taste and the whole eating-with-the-hands experience!
From my family to yours, Happy Eating!
4 comments:
They have been passed to the boys as well. They love to make them. We don't ususally use a blender though. If you mix the ingredients in the right order and proportion they come out lump free. It's a little tricky. Just add a little of the egg and milk to the flour at a time with a wisk. Plus we add a spoon of sugar then you can eat them plain too.
Oh my yum... I'll forward this to my hubs. :)
I am from Finland and we fry our Finnish pancakes (lettu, lätty, räiskäle) brown. They are best if edges become crispy and lacey. And they still roll up nicely. Yummy!
Thanks so much for your insight! They are definitely more like crepes the way we have done it in our family. I will have to try them brown next time!
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