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French Restaurant London Shrove Tuesday
Ever wondered why – for one day a year – the tradition is to eat pancakes?
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French Restaurant London Shrove Tuesday
Ever wondered why – for one day a year – the tradition is to eat pancakes?
-
French Restaurant London Shrove Tuesday
Ever wondered why – for one day a year – the tradition is to eat pancakes?
-
French Restaurant London Shrove Tuesday
Ever wondered why – for one day a year – the tradition is to eat pancakes?
Restaurant Essex Shrove Tuesday
Pancake Day Pub Restaurant Essex
25th February
Ever wondered why – for one day a year – the tradition is to eat pancakes?
Pancake Day is always the day before Ash Wednesday, which is the day Lent starts.
At Galvin we’ve prepared two wonderful pancake desserts available all day on 25th February:
- Buttermilk pancakes with Champagne poached rhubarb & cream Chantilly
- Blood orange crêpes suzettes with cream Chantilly
Pancake Day at Galvin Green Man
25th February
At Galvin Green Man, we have also prepared a Blood orange crêpes suzettes with cream Chantilly.
Available all day on our desserts menu.
Recipe
Blood orange crêpes suzettes with cream Chantilly
Serves 4
For the crêpes
55g unsalted butter
2 free-range eggs
25g caster sugar
100g plain flour
a pinch of sea salt
350ml milk
4 teaspoons vegetable oil
For the sauce
2 blood oranges
225g caster sugar
80ml water
175g unsalted butter
3 tablespoons orange liqueur, such as Grand Marnier
1 blood orange, segmented, all peel and pith removed
The batter
To make the crêpe batter, heat a small frying pan, then add the butter and melt over a high heat until it foams.
Pour the melted butter into a mixing bowl, add the eggs, sugar, flour and salt and whisk together to combine.
Slowly add the milk, whisking constantly to make a smooth batter the consistency of pouring cream. Pass the batter through a medium sieve, then leave to stand for at least 1 hour. Whisk again just before using.
The crêpes
To cook the crêpes, heat a small cast-iron frying pan over a medium heat. Add the vegetable oil and tilt the pan so it leaves a thin film over the base, then pour off the excess oil into a cup. Pour in just enough batter to coat the base of the pan thinly. Cook for 30–40 seconds, until golden brown underneath, then turn or toss and cook the second side for a further 30 seconds, until golden.
Transfer the crêpe to a warm plate and keep hot. Repeat with the remaining batter (greasing the pan with the excess oil, if necessary), stacking the cooked crêpes on top of each other with greaseproof paper in between. You should aim for 3–4 crêpes per person.
The sauce
For the sauce, pare the zest off the blood oranges in strips with a zester, then juice the oranges. Place the zest in a small pan of cold water and bring to the boil, then drain. Repeat this twice. Place the blanched zest back in the pan, add 80g of the sugar and the water and cook gently over a medium heat for 10–15 minutes or until the zest looks translucent and candied.
Heat a wide, shallow, heavy-based pan over a medium heat, then add the butter and allow it to foam. Add the remaining sugar and stir until it has dissolved and starts to caramelise to a straw-blond colour – this will take a minute or two.
Reduce the heat and carefully add the orange juice and orange liqueur to the pan. Increase the heat to medium and allow the mixture to bubble for about 2 minutes to form a sauce, whisking occasionally. Lay a crêpe in the gently bubbling sauce in the pan, fold in half, then fold in half again to make a triangular shape. Repeat for all the crêpes, arranging them neatly to fit in the pan.
The serve
Divide the crêpes between 4 serving plates, overlapping them on each plate. Add the orange segments to the remaining sauce in the pan and quickly warm through. Divide the segments between the plates, then spoon some sauce over each portion. To finish, scatter some strips of candied orange zest over the crêpes. Serve with vanilla ice cream if you like.