4/4/10

Crêpes

I have very fond memories of walking the cold, damp streets of Paris with a warm crepe enveloped in my hands.

I explored with all types of fancy toppings until I settled on my personal favorite--"beurre et sucre" (butter and sugar).  A "crepe Suzette" (butter, sugar and lemon juice) is a close second.  And I can't leave out nutella!  My favorite crepe stand in Paris was across the street from the Centre Pompidou Museum and Library.  The guy making the crepe would paint my nutella on, as if it were a work of art..    

There is a restaurant in Los Angeles that makes wonderfully authentic crepes--Creme de la Crepe.  My favorite location is their Hermosa Beach one.  The owner is a young French guy who has been so successful because the food is so good and the service is so French.  I often go to brush up on my French, as all of the waiters are native French speakers.  My favorite is the "crepe splendide"--a crepe with strawberries, honey, whipped cream, and vanilla ice cream.

All of this leads me to my recent endeavor--to make crepes at home. I found a wonderfully simple recipe, and the crepes came out rather good.  

Recipe: Crepes
1 and 3/4 cups all purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 cups milk, room temp.
3 large eggs, room temp.
5 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

1. Sift flour and salt into a large bowl.  Whisk together milk and eggs in a medium bowl. Pour milk mixture into flour mixture, whisking to combine.  Whisk in butter.  Strain mixture into a medium bowl, and refrigerate for at least two hours (or up to one day).
2. Heat an 8" or 12" nonstick skillet over medium heat.  Brush with butter.  Ladle 3 tablespoons batter (for smaller crepes)  or 1/3 cup batter (for large crepes) onto the skillet, turning and tilting the skillet to coat the bottom evenly with the batter.  Cook until the tops of the crepes appear set, about 1 minute.
3. Run a spatula along the edge of the crepe to loosen.  Slip the spatula under the crepe and gently flip in one swift gesture.  Cook until the bottom is firm, about 45 seconds.  Transfer to a plate.  Repeat with remaining batter. Serve immediately.


4 comments:

  1. Hi! Your crepes look yummy. Just stumbled upon your blog because of the crepe posting. Would you consider posting your opinion on your favorite crepe filling on my page for the best crepe recipe in the world? We've got some friendly dialogue on the subject! Thanks for sharing!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yum! When's our next Creme De La Crepe date? Or perhaps we should attempt making the Splendide in one of our own kitchens next ;)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Mmm, crêpes Suzette (don't forget the essential orange zest & Grand Marnier for those, although I do love a simple crêpe citron-sucre perhaps best of all)-- I will have to try to make these one day. What do you use to strain the batter with? Is this step really even necessary?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Alison, you are absolutely right about the crepe suzettes! I guess my host family just called the sugar/lemon juice ones crepe suzettes..

    I strained the batter with a simple strainer. I paid like, 5 dollars for it, from Target. I also use it to sift flour and powdered sugar. I caught quite a few lumps when I strained it. It really is a very simple step, so I recommend doing it.

    Good luck in your attempt to make these! It really was quite easy.

    ReplyDelete