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Left toppings- Peaches & blueberries + yogurt + flax seeds + powdered sugar + honey...Right toppings- Blueberries + ricotta cheese + powdered sugar + maple syrup...

Left toppings- Peaches & blueberries + yogurt + flax seeds + powdered sugar + honey...

Right toppings- Blueberries + ricotta cheese + powdered sugar + maple syrup...

How to Dutch Baby

August 26, 2018 by Ashley Look in Recipes

Without delay, let's just get into this shall we?  The beauty of the Dutch Baby is its simplicity.  It's the kind of dish that looks impressive without the headache and is easily adapted to whatever you have on-hand.  It really comes down to four things.  Ready?

1. Pan

Personally, I suggest a cast iron skillet but any oven safe pan will work.  I like Lodge Cast Iron for both function and affordability but again, as long as it’s oven friendly you should be good. The reason for this is because you are going to melt the butter on the stove top before poring the batter in and then transferring it to cook in the oven.  

Lodge 10.25 Inch Cast Iron Skillet. Pre-Seasoned Cast Iron Skillet Pan for Stovetop of Oven Use
Lodge Logic

2. Basic Batter 

I'm talking three ingredients basic...

2 eggs + 1/2 cup milk + 1/2 cup flour = batter

3. Butter

Butter you could say is an additional ingredient however, it's really more about the butter's role in the cooking process and its relationship to your pan.  The goal is a "pool" of butter.  Contrary to everything you think you know about butter being some evil fat, trust me when I tell you that the butter is your workhorse.  Do yourself a favor and buy quality and use it generously.  You want enough butter to melt and swirl around the pan, coating all sides with plenty to pool in the pan when completely melted. I typically use about a 1/2 stick.  You can certainly get by with less but I find that doing so influences the puff factor and that puff is what it's all about!  The butter helps the batter develop a terrain of sorts, and the nooks and crannies take-on almost a croissant type characteristic.  Butter makes the pastry... end of story.

4. Toppings

Ok, this is where your creativity gets its license.  The most basic of Dutch Baby presentations might consist of a sprinkle of powdered sugar and a squeeze of lemon juice.   Tasty?  Yes.  Nutritionally sound? Not so much...  I personally prefer to enhance the nutritional density of my Dutch Babies by including the following formula:

creamy + fresh + drizzle + sprinkle = topping

Doing so adds more nutritional value thereby helping to reduce a carb heavy spike in blood sugar.  I try to add things to help boost protein and fiber like nuts and seeds, dairy products, and fresh fruit.  As for assembly, below is a list of some things I commonly use in each category.

Creamy items: Yogurt, ricotta cheese, cream cheese, whip cream, etc... These item tend to soften when met with the hot Dutch Baby and help mix the other toppings into a delicious mixture of yum! I'm not sure how else to describe it, but it's for this very reason I prefer to add my cream item first.  It also serves as a landing pad for the other toppings.

Fresh stuff: I typically use fruit but veggies could work too.  I like berries or things sliced kinda small to scatter around whatever creamy base I used.

Drizzles: Honey and syrups are my go-to drizzles but occasionally I'll stew some fruit (especially if I'm using frozen fruit) for a hybrid of the fresh and the drizzle.

Sprinkles: Nuts, seeds, herbs, powdered sugar, or any specialty sugar or spices...  This is the final zing!  It's the small touch of detail to garnish the Dutch Baby before serving.

A naked Dutch Baby showcasing the ideal topography/terrain. Lots of buttery nooks and crannies to help catch all the toppings you want to pile on!

A naked Dutch Baby showcasing the ideal topography/terrain. Lots of buttery nooks and crannies to help catch all the toppings you want to pile on!

And, since we are on the subject, I'll just say that the serving is "important".  This is the point where the wow factor is at its all time high.  From watching the Dutch Baby rise while its in the oven, to getting it all gussied up with its toppings, it just doesn't get much better than that moment so be sure to parade it around before serving.  For real though!  Cause as soon as you cut into your creation, it takes on a life of its own.   The baby deflates much like a souffle, and the toppings all run together which remember, is the great part of applying the creamy product first, but what you gain in taste you start to lose in appearance. The toppings pretty much spill out into the pan as you remove the pastry slice by slice but just scoop it up and throw it on your plate.  This isn't a post about how you eat a Dutch Baby.  This is merely telling you how you can go about creating your own.  I'll quickly share that I eat mine with my hands, taco style wrapping the pastry around the fruity-creamy mess and I dredge whatever's in hand right on through any remaining butter!  It's not pretty but its sure tastes good so, no shame here!

Mixed Berry.JPG Ricotta with fruit.JPG Strwberry shortcake.JPG Peaches and Cream.JPG Blueberry ricotta and flax.jpg

Ingredients

  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 cup milk
  • 1/2 cup flour
  • 1/2 stick butter

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 410 degrees F.
  2. Mix the eggs, milk and flour together in a bowl until thoroughly combined.
  3. In an oven safe skillet, melt the butter on the stove stop.
  4. Carefully swirl the butter in the pan and around the edges to coat all sides.
  5. Pour the batter into the pan and carefully transfer it to the oven.
  6. Bake for 13 minutes at 410 degrees F, then turn the oven down to 350 degrees F and bake for another 10 minutes.
  7. I strongly encourage watching your Dutch Baby change shape through the oven window (cheap thrills!) but whatever you do, don't open the oven door until it is finished cooking or it will begin to deflate.
  8. When it's done baking, remove it from the oven and top it with the topping combo you decide. Chef's choice!
  9. Slice and serve. Or hoard? Just saying...

PS- a fitness related post is coming soon cause... duh!


 How to Feed a Senior is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, which is an affiliate advertising program. If you choose to purchase items after clicking on these links, I will earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

August 26, 2018 /Ashley Look
How to feed a senior, dutch baby, toppings, batter, recipe, terrain, topography, butter, German pancake, formulas, cast iron skillet, creamy, drizzle, fresh, dairy, cream cheese, ricotta, berries, fruit, Lodge Cast Iron
Recipes
6 Comments
Open-face rainbow beet tartine with whipped ricotta cheese, watercress, toasted walnuts and honey.

Open-face rainbow beet tartine with whipped ricotta cheese, watercress, toasted walnuts and honey.

Rainbow Beet Tartine

September 26, 2016 by Ashley Look in Recipes

I am not sure why but lately, all I want is a lush veggie sandwich. This is rare. I'm not much into sandwiches. Unless of-course it's a breakfast version, in which case, I want them all! 

My sandwich aversion comes from a combination of generic fillers and bad bread. They tend to be boring and I want to be dazzled by a sandwich! I want it to feel glamorously indulgent with fun ingredients that go above the call of Subway. Is this too much to ask?!!  And since my generation is becoming the "sandwich generation," a worthy sandwich is a must! According to google, here is the definition:

Sand·wich gen·er·a·tion
noun
  1. a generation of people, typically in their thirties or forties, responsible for bringing up their own children and for the care of their aging parents.

Since I personally don't have children I am going to keep this sandy open-faced but you do what you have to do to make it right for you!  Get yourself some bread and start building a good lunch.  Surely, you're gonna need it to get through the next few years.

Tartines with the crust cut off for my old man. 

Tartines with the crust cut off for my old man. 

Ingredients

•1 slice of artisan bread
•4 beets, a combination of 2 gold and 2 red
•1/4 cup loosely packed watercress
•1 tsp softened butter
•1/4 cup ricotta cheese
•2 tbsp of heavy whipping cream
•1/8 cup toasted walnuts, chopped
•1 tsp honey
•1/4 tsp fresh thyme
•pinch of smoked sea salt (or any salt)

Directions

  1. Preheat the oved to 425 degrees F.
  2. Remove any greens and clean the beets. Place in a baking dish and cover with foil.
  3. Roast beets for 35-40 minutes tossing them occasionally in the pan. (It's this mixing of the juices that bring out the rainbow coloring.)
  4. Prick the beets to test for doneness. Let cool completely then peel to remove the skins.
  5. While the beets cool, whip the ricotta and heaving whipping cream with a hand mixer until stiff peaks form. store in trhe fridge till ready to use.
  6. Butter the bread and griddle both sides in a skillet.
  7. Spread a small dab of the riccota mix on the bread and then lay down the watercress. (A small amount will help keep the greens in place.)
  8. Next you can really add that ricotta. I scooped it out with a spoon and flattened it some.
  9. Slice the golden beets and places the slices on top of the ricotta.
  10. Drizzle with a little honey.
  11. Add the toasted walnuts and a little fresh thyme and sea salt and it's ready to eat!
Toppings: honey, thyme, smoked sea salt, and whipped ricotta

Toppings: honey, thyme, smoked sea salt, and whipped ricotta

PS- I made that spoon! Mahogany. My first since being in FL.

PS- I made that spoon! Mahogany. My first since being in FL.

* The End.

September 26, 2016 /Ashley Look
Sandwich Generation, beets, tartine, ricotta
Recipes
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