I love them. I had to figure out the recipe myself but, by trial and error here is the result.
Cranberry Crepes
BATTER
3/4 cup all-purpose flour
1/4 tsp salt
1 1/4 cup milk
1 x egg
1 x egg yolk
1 tbl vegetable oil
FILLING
3 cup fresh cranberries, rinsed
1 cup granulated sugar, or to taste
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
1 cup fresh orange juice
1/4 cup citrus liqueur
1 1/2 tsp butter, divided
Sour cream
To make the batter:
In a blender or food processor, combine all of the ingredients and blend together for 10 seconds. Let stand for 15 minutes.
Grease and heat a crepe pan and a small skillet to medium-high heat. Spoon 2 tablespoons of the batter in the crepe pan to cover the bottom. When the edges of the crepe begin to brown, about 40 seconds, loosen the crepe around the edges and invert into the heated skillet and cook until the other side is set. Repeat the procedure with the remaining batter. As each crepe is prepared, stack and set aside.
Makes 12 crepes.
To make the filling:
In a medium-sized saucepan, combine the cranberries, sugar, flour, and orange juice and cook, stirring frequently, until the mixture begins to thicken. Stir in the liqueur and cook for 5 minutes more.
Preheat oven to 325 F.
Place 1 to 2 tablespoons of the warm berry mixture on each crepe and fold the sides over. Place the filled crepes in a greased 9 x 13-inch baking pan and dot each crepe with 1/4 teaspoon of the butter. Bake for 10 minutes or until heated through.
Place 2 crepes on each dessert plate and top with any remaining berry mixture and 1 dollop of the sour cream. Serve immediately.
YIELD: 6 SERVINGS
2006-11-04 12:55:52
·
answer #1
·
answered by Smurfetta 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
Making crepes is not hard. If you can make pancakes, you can make crepes. Before we start, I have a few tips:
Don't worry about getting the thinnest possible crepes. I have had people tell me that when they make crepes, they aren't thin enough. Crepes don't need to be perfectly thin, and they often aren't. When I ate crepes from a street vendor in Paris, they were about the same thickness as the ones I make, and they were not thin as paper. Relax, your crepes are not too thick.
You don't need a special crepe pan. You can buy very fancy skillets or electric pans. If you have a small non-stick skillet, you will get perfectly nice crepes, and you'll have one less pan crowding up your kitchen.
You'll probably mess up a couple of the crepes when you make a batch. So what? I've made lots of crepes, and I still mess up at least one per batch. Sprinkle some sugar on it and enjoy it as a snack. Don't let it worry you.
If you're making enough crepes to serve a lot of people, there are three easy ways to handle it. First, you can stick the crepes on a plate in a barely warm (200°F) oven, where they'll stay warm until you are ready to assemble them. Second, you can serve them as you make them. When serving family on a busy night, it's sometimes okay if people eat them as they are served. Third, it's not a big deal if the crepes cool down a little bit before you eat. If the filling is warm, it makes up for it.
To make about 20-24 crepes, you'll need a few ingredients and utensils:
Ingredients:
Utensils:
4 eggs
¼ teaspoon salt
2 cups flour
2 ¼ milk
¼ cup (½ stick) melted butter or margarine
A whisk, wooden spoon, fork, electric mixer, or eggbeater
A bowl to mix the crepe batter
Plastic spatula
8 inch non-stick skillet
A tupperware to store leftover bater
It is no problem to make a half-batch or a double-batch. This recipe is adapted from Crepe Cookery, by Mable Hoffman. I learned it from my mother, who is an excellent crepe maker. I use a whisk, but a mixer or blender would certainly work just fine. I'm still not used to the novelty of mixers after years of not having one.
Note: You can click on any of the pictures to see a larger version.
Making the Crepe Batter
1. Gather your ingredients.
2. Break four eggs into a bowl.
3. Add 1/4 teaspoon of salt to your eggs.
4. Whisk your eggs and salt together until the egg looks uniformly yellow.
5. Measure two cups of flour.
6. Add some of the flour to the egg mixture.
7. Whisk the flour into the eggs. It will be a bit lumpy right now, but that's okay.
8. Whisk some of the milk into the batter. It will get thinner. Keep adding milk and flour alternately until you've added it all.
9. Whisk the batter until it is smooth, like it looks here. It shouldn't take more than a minute or two to whisk it smooth, from the time you started to add the flour.
10. Add the melted butter to the batter, and again whisk it until it's smooth.
11. Cover the batter.
12. Put the batter in the refrigerator
At this point, your batter is ready to go, and you can begin making the crepes whenever you are ready. You can the batter a few hours or even a day in advance of when you make the crepes. If you let it sit for a long time, the butter will separate from the rest of the batter, but you just need to whisk it for ten seconds or so, and it will be ready to use. I've kept my batter for several days, and it has been fine. After a couple of days, the batter gets a bit darker in color, but the crepes still taste fine.
If I'm making the batter right before I make the crepes, I refrigerate the batter while I prepare the filling. You can look at several of the fillings I am fond of.
Cooking the Crepes
1. Select an eight inch non-stick skillet. You don't need a fancy crepe pan. It's okay to make larger crepes if you want to, just use more batter.
2. I use about one-fourth of a cup of batter to make a crepe in this size pan.
3. Pour the batter into the pan
4. As you pour the batter, twirl the pan around.
5. As you twirl the pan, the batter coats it and makes the crepe. If you put in too little batter to begin with, pour in some extra batter to fill in the gaps.
6. As the crepe cooks, it changes in appearance. The batter on the left looks moister and hasn't set. On the right, the batter has set. It is still a bit moist. You can usually see a lace pattern developing on the underside of the crepe.
7. This is what the crepe looks like when it has set. Notice you can see the spatula through the crepe, and this isn't a particularly thin crepe either. The crepe will also usually slide around when it is ready. (It make stick a bit a the edges though.)
8. Slip the spatula under the crepe. Sometimes you need to poke it a bit. If it helps to pick up the edge of the crepe with your fingers, do it.
9. Flip the crepe over. Look at that nice lace pattern on the crepes.
If you're skillful, you can flip the crepe with a quick action of the wrist and no spatula. I'm not that skillful even though I can juggle.
10. After the second side has cooked for maybe twenty seconds, slip it out of the pan onto a plate for serving, or into a baking dish that you can put into a warmed (200°F) oven.
11. Not all crepes come out in pretty circles. Usually my first one looks awful and falls apart because I didn't let the pan get hot enough. That's okay, sprinkle some sugar on it...
12. ...and feed it to someone you love.
2006-11-04 20:54:39
·
answer #2
·
answered by americanmuscle1972 2
·
0⤊
0⤋