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I have finished the ever-so-laborious conversions on a recipe for gauffrettes fines, which my great-grandmother on my father's side taught me to make when I was... ummm. Six? Only she never used a pan with waffle indentations, or a waffle maker, so essentially they were crumpets.

She was very senile, and all she had left of her memory was this is how you make a Mont Blanc (where the hell can I find a chestnut mill these days?), this is how you make a rouille -- a pan-Francophone cooking class in a cranky, wandering brain. I don't remember anything about her except her collection of rolling pins -- a long very thin marble one, a hugely broad wooden one with a honey-coloured varnish -- and her silver hair in a bun on top of her head, and her black plastic eyeglasses. I don't know anything about her at all, really. I can't feel a particular kinship with her. But the kitchen in my head is very like the one she had.

Gauffrettes

18 ounces flour
7 ounces brown sugar
7 ounces white sugar
8 fluid ounces milk or half-and-half cream
3 eggs
Pinch salt

Butter for frying

Mix to a thick batter and leave overnight, covered, in the fridge. In the morning, heat a flat pan until you can hold your hand over it no longer than a count of 10. Add more butter than you care to contemplate and before it can brown, pour the gauffrette batter about 1/4 cup at a time into the pan. When the surface bubbles, turn the gauffrette. There will always be a 'sacrificial gauffrette' while you get the pan temperature right.

Serve with whipped cream, Devon cream, butter, preserves or sugar.
There are 5 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] ygrane.livejournal.com at 08:42pm on 15/09/2005
This sounds like it would make more of a crumb mixture than an actual batter, but it sounds good and VERY sweet.

^_^
 
posted by [identity profile] strange-selkie.livejournal.com at 09:04pm on 15/09/2005
Hmm, you're right. Perhaps I should have specified 'stiff' instead of 'thick' batter and... OMG I left out the milk. *fixes*
 
posted by [identity profile] ygrane.livejournal.com at 09:08pm on 15/09/2005
AHH! Yes. Milk would help.

^_^

How long can it sit safely in the refrigerator?

I'd like to make it now before class to have something Yummy to make in the morning.
 
posted by [identity profile] strange-selkie.livejournal.com at 09:26pm on 15/09/2005
Oh, you should be fine if you make it now. I was going to mix it up tonight to serve tomorrow evening, for instance.
 
posted by [identity profile] strange-selkie.livejournal.com at 09:28pm on 15/09/2005
P.S. They do come out like very thickly sugary things, like, um, cannoli shells, if you do them thin. They are very yummy and you can roll them up around things, then. And if you want thicker batter, add more flour, if you want thin crispy cookie-shell-things, add less...

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