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So is this a lifting type thing?This amount makes a stack of 4-5 large, slightly fluffy European-style pancakes.
If by lifting you mean rising then yeah, what's what the baking powder is there for. If you want them even fluffier you can up the amound to maybe 6g at most, but I don't guarantee proper pancake integrity at that point.So is this a lifting type thing?
Also I wonder if this could make a Dutch baby type pancake.
No, I meant pumping iron and building muscle mass.If by lifting you mean rising then yeah, what's what the baking powder is there for.
Could be, but since there's no gluten or starch in there I doubt the batter would crisp up the same. This lack of crunch is the biggest issue when substituting flour with protein powder, the same is true in, say, pizza crust. Even high protein pizza requires a substantial amount of flour to be used for this reason.No, I meant pumping iron and building muscle mass.
The Dutch baby is this kind of pancake, generally baked:
View attachment 5241021
The usual batter recipe:
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 cup whole or 2% milk
2 large eggs
2 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
Powdered sugar, maple syrup, and jam, for serving
Obviously your recipe omits the carbs in this, but I suspect if you put it in a skillet in an oven and baked it at an appropriate temperature, it might do the same thing, that is, puffing up at the edges, then collapsing after you take it out of the oven into a crepe-like thing.
I need these in my life. You have a recipe?
In my experienceNo, I meant pumping iron and building muscle mass.
The Dutch baby is this kind of pancake, generally baked:
View attachment 5241021
The usual batter recipe:
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 cup whole or 2% milk
2 large eggs
2 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
Powdered sugar, maple syrup, and jam, for serving
Obviously your recipe omits the carbs in this, but I suspect if you put it in a skillet in an oven and baked it at an appropriate temperature, it might do the same thing, that is, puffing up at the edges, then collapsing after you take it out of the oven into a crepe-like thing.
Did you fry onions, sautée garlic, and then toast the Paprika? I usually add fresh diced tomato and then add chicken (more just for a crust) then add broth. You add sour cream?Made chicken paprikash for the first time this week. The sauce came out really one-dimensional for what's basically a combination of paprika and crushed tomatoes. It should have the 4 basics in it -- salt (both on its own and from the chicken broth), acid from the tomatoes, fat from the cooking oil, heat from the paprika -- but something's missing. It's really thin flavor-wise and drags the rest of the dish down. Is there something obvious I'm missing?
I sautee'd the onions until translucent, the garlic until fragrant, and then toasted the paprika. I wonder if going for canned tomatoes over fresh is costing me acidity. I added a bit of lemon juice to some of the leftovers and that totally fixed it.Did you fry onions, sautée garlic, and then toast the Paprika? I usually add fresh diced tomato and then add chicken (more just for a crust) then add broth. You add sour cream?
Hungarian cooking is fucking good. People really forget how good it is.
Yeah, it might be the acid. I would honestly just add tomato paste rather than just canned tomatos. You can use a white wine vinegar too.I sautee'd the onions until translucent, the garlic until fragrant, and then toasted the paprika. I wonder if going for canned tomatoes over fresh is costing me acidity. I added a bit of lemon juice to some of the leftovers and that totally fixed it.