In my few other similar pancake recipes, I found the pancake crumb a bit dry. This round I decided to take out egg and replace by cooked barley and milk. The result was a satisfactory moist crumb and crispy edge. To make the nut filling more nutritious, I substituted 1/2 of the peanut by almond, cashew nuts and walnuts. This is a delicious pancake with crunchy, sweet and nutty filling :)
Yield: 4 servings
Equipment:
Blender or food processor
Flat base non-stick pan
Mixed Nut Butter
Ingredients
20g almond
20g cashew nuts
10g walnuts
50g ground roasted peanut
25g raw sugar
1 tbsp honey
Directions
1. Roast almonds, cashew nuts and walnuts in a preheated oven toaster at 120 degreeC for about 15 minutes, or till golden.
2. Pour all the roasted nuts, ground roasted peanut and sugar to a blender and fix with a flat blade knife. Blitz the ingredients to your desired consistency.
If you prefer a paste form of filling, continue to blitz till the ingredients become "wet" and stick to blender's wall.
3. Stir in honey using a chopstick and set aside.
Barley Pancake
Ingredients
100g warm water
35g raw sugar
1/2 tsp instant dry yeast
90g fresh or low fat milk
20g cooked barley pearls^
12cm pandan leaf*, optional
1/8 tsp salt
1/2 tsp vegetable oil
130g plain flour
1/4 tsp baking soda
^ barley pearls can be replaced by 20g beaten egg or milk
* pandan leaf can be replaced by 1/2 tsp vanilla extract. It can be omitted too.
Directions
1. Collect 20g of cooked barley pearls after boiling the barley drink.
2. Pour 90g of milk and pandan leaf to the barley pearls. Blitz till the barley and pandan leaf becomes fine bits.
3. Add warm water, less than 40 degree Celsius, to raw sugar. Then sprinkle instant dry yeast over the surface of the water without stirring it. Set aside for 5 minutes till the mixture form a foamy layer at the surface.
2. Pour in the barley mixture and salt.
3. Mix baking soda with all purpose flour, then add to the batter in (2). Stir to mix.
4. Add in 1 tsp of rice bran oil or any low flavour vegetable oil. Stir to mix.
5. Cover with a lid and let it proof for about 60 minutes.
3. The batter will double in size at the end of the proofing.
4. Give the batter a few stirs before pouring into a preheated flat base non-stick pan. You can apply a thin coat of oil over the pan, including the edge, beforehand. Heat over low heat for about 10 to 12 minutes, or till the edge of the pancake starts to shrink away from the wall of the pan.
While the batter is still liquid, lift up the pan and swirl a few rounds so the batter will coat a upright skirting along the edge.
5. Shift the pan every 1 to 2 minutes to ensure even heating.
6. When the pancake is ready, the edge will pull away from the wall of the pan. Run a spatula round the edge to loosen the pancake from the pan.
Fold the pancake into half and transfer to the cutting board.
8. When the pancake has cooled down slightly, slice it with a long bread knife.
9. Enjoy :)
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