Possibly the worst food name ever, but otherwise a somewhat straightforward Swedish baked pancake:
Recipe
2 eggs
2 1/2 c milk
1/2 tsp salt
2 tsp sugar
1 1/2 c flour
Beat eggs with 1 c of the milk, then whisk in the salt, sugar, and flour. Stir in the rest of the milk until you have a smooth batter. Let it sit a few minutes (10 if you have the patience of a 50's housewife), then pour into a buttered baking dish. Bake at 400 degrees for 30 minutes, or until golden brown and puffy. Serve with jam or fruit puree.
Here's mine, with Ikea-classic lingonberry jam!
Saturday, February 18, 2017
Sausage and Cabbage
The title sums it up pretty well, actually... An unsurprisingly British dish courtesy of The New York Times...
Recipe
1 large cabbage (about 4 lbs, green or Savoy), cored and shredded
2 lbs Italian sausage
butter, salt & pepper
Boil the cabbage in salted water for about 3 minutes; drain and run under cold water. Butter a baking dish (they recommend 9x13x2) and layer a third of the cabbage, then half the sausage. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, and dot with butter. Repeat with another layer, then top with the rest of the cabbage (and more butter dots). Cover the dish with parchment paper and tin foil and cook at 300 degrees for 2 hours. If there's still a lot of liquid, uncover. Cook another 30 minutes.
Notes
Easy enough! The cabbage step got a little messy - that's a lot of ruffage to cut and boil (even at about half size)! Could use a bigger baking dish too, but the old reliable one did the trick:
They recommend serving with crusty bread and mustard, but I found it goes really well over mashed potatoes!
Recipe
1 large cabbage (about 4 lbs, green or Savoy), cored and shredded
2 lbs Italian sausage
butter, salt & pepper
Boil the cabbage in salted water for about 3 minutes; drain and run under cold water. Butter a baking dish (they recommend 9x13x2) and layer a third of the cabbage, then half the sausage. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, and dot with butter. Repeat with another layer, then top with the rest of the cabbage (and more butter dots). Cover the dish with parchment paper and tin foil and cook at 300 degrees for 2 hours. If there's still a lot of liquid, uncover. Cook another 30 minutes.
Notes
Easy enough! The cabbage step got a little messy - that's a lot of ruffage to cut and boil (even at about half size)! Could use a bigger baking dish too, but the old reliable one did the trick:
They recommend serving with crusty bread and mustard, but I found it goes really well over mashed potatoes!
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