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CORN AND BEER BREAD
Corn and beer bread
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How to:

Make the basic crepe

The “textbook” perfect crêpe is the one you make when you are in full stride, frying, flipping and rolling without missing a beat. If your batter is thin enough and you have a good pan, this won’t take long. But the consistency of the batter is crucial. Too thin and your crêpes will have no substance. Too thick and, well, they’re just not crêpes.

Cook's tip: No matter what the recipe says, adjust the consistency of the batter to resemble thick cream. Lightness is crucial, too, and, to achieve it, cook them quickly so that moisture is retained. Crêpes tend to dry out if they’re cooked too slowly

For the text version of this recipe (which you can add to your online recipe book), click the link: The basic crêpe.

SERVING SUGGESTIONS

Orange and lemon: Preheat the oven to 200°C. Mix 325 g lemon curd, 100 g plain yoghurt, ¾ cup crème fraîche and 1 t lemon zest. Chill, then spread onto pancakes and fold into quarters. Place in a baking dish, pour over marmalade and bake for 15 minutes.

Salted caramel pancakes: Mix 1 cup Caramel Treat with ½ cup fresh cream until smooth. Add a pinch crushed sea salt and serve on pancakes, topped with crushed nuts.

  • For more serving suggestions, see our crêpe recipe page here: The basic crêpe.



Can't find the product?

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Recipe by: David Grier
Serves: 8
Category: Vegetarian / Easy / Great value
Prep time: 10 minutes
Cooking time: 1 hour
Ingredients:
500 g self-raising flour
1 x 400 g sweetcorn in water can, drained
1 t sea salt
1 x 375 ml beerl bottle
Cooking instructions:

In a mixing bowl, combine all the ingredients, adding the beer at the end, to form a smooth batter. Set aside in a warm place for 20 minutes, or until doubled in size.

Transfer the mixture to a greased cast-iron pot and place on top of hot coals, placing extra hot coals on the lid. Bake for 1 hour, or until golden. Tip out of the pot and serve warm.

Wine: Villiera Chenin Blanc 2011


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Useful Tools

conversion table

½ t = 2 ml
1 t = 5 ml
1 T = 15 ml
½ cup = 125 ml
1 cup = 250 ml

Fahrenheit - Celsius

Subtract 32, then multiply by 0.56

Celsius - Fahrenheit

Multiply by 1.8, then add 32




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