…day late and a “silver dollar” short…!
[QUOTE=kkessler, post:16, topic:344910]
I have a similar pan with animal profiles and while it’s cute for my daughter it’s a total pain to flip the pancakes over. I’ve considered cooking the pancakes on one side and dumping the whole pan onto a normal flat griddle to cook the other side, but then that’s 2 dirty pans! So yea, the stencil cooks into the pancake but it’s a pain to flip them over.
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I thought about all that AFTER I bought this. Oh well. I’ll just figure it out as I go and have the griddle handy just in case. Thanks for the heads up
You know it!
Trying to resist but it’s Nordicware. My favorite brand of bakeware (they have some unique bundt and muffin pans). Typically durable and easy to clean.
Is this pan coated with Teflon? I would like to get it but Teflon is poisonous to my parrot.
Can this be used with an IH burner?
Like we could get that right…
Pretty underwhelming deal considering jcpenney has it for $22 and I can walk in and get it tomorrow ord have it shipped to store for free and it could be easily returned there…
JCPenney: Clothing, Bed & Bath, Home Decor, Jewelry & Beauty
They are cute, but it does seem like they’d be a pain to try and flip and get the face on both sides. Think I’ll stick with my Mickey Mouse waffle maker when I’m feeling whimsical for breakfast.
The Scandinavians enjoy little pancakes made in such a pan. If you like the idea and are not interested in the faces, I suggest browsing for a ‘plett pan’. These are not so difficult to make as one may think, and the result is simply delicious, especially with cloudberry jam!
These are tempting, but I don’t know… I can never seem to get the right amount of batter into the pan for each individual pancake. This would just make that so min more difficult.
Using the correct temperature, cooking spray or fat applied with a paper towel, and a chopstick to flip, you oughtn’t have any trouble.
Try using a small ice-cream scoop.
If you want smilies or letters or whatever in your pancakes, just fill a squeeze bottle with batter, draw your image and let it cook for a while. Then pour more batter over your artistic expression. The batter from the squeeze bottle will cook longer and therefore be darker than the rest of the pancake. Ta-daaa!
Now, if you’re a pancake maker of level 40 or higher, you might try Jim’s Pancakes.
I suspect that making them like an omlette prevents teh flipping issue. Bake til half-2/3 done on the stovetop them put under the broiler for a minute or til brown then dump it on a plate.
I’m sorry but the irony of the progression of faces is killing me. It tells a complete story… right down to the O-face.
… again, sorry, but i had to get that out
Arg! I don’t understand why they would put a nonstick coating on cast iron. Properly seasoned cast iron is just as nonstick as the stupid coating, and not as toxic. Boo. I really wanted this.
This pan is cast aluminum not cast iron.
[QUOTE=vladistov, post:31, topic:344910]
The Scandinavians enjoy little pancakes made in such a pan. If you like the idea and are not interested in the faces, I suggest browsing for a ‘plett pan’. These are not so difficult to make as one may think, and the result is simply delicious, especially with cloudberry jam!
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Where does one find cloudberry jam in the US? I have never seen it outside of Finland.