Ominous title, eh?
Yesterday morning, I was lying in bed after enjoying my extra hour of sleep ā YEAH āfall backā⦠boooo no more sunlight going to-from work (wait who am I kidding, most of the fall/winter we donāt have sun so what does it matter? Strange, it does matter that I know there is sun behind all that grey and clouds⦠driving to-from work in the dark sucks! But thatās what I get for living north of the 45° parallel!
Wow⦠I seriously took a wrong turn in that opening paragraph! Please forgive my A.D.D! Now, letās get back on taskā¦
Yesterday morning I was lying in bed, after enjoying my extra hour of sleep, I was looking at email on my iPad and then when I closed it I saw an icon in one of my āCookingā folder that I didnāt recognize.
OK, that may sound strange, I mean it is MY iPad⦠shouldnāt I recognize the app icons? So I opened the folder and took a closer lookā¦
Still canāt read it? Let me zoom in for youā¦
I didnāt realize that Pioneer Woman app icon had been updated. I felt really silly! Since I really hadnāt looked at the app for quite a while and nothing really pressing to do, so I clicked on it. (clicked⦠sounds kind of funny given there is no āclickā with an iPad ā oh⦠I digressed AGAIN! Sorry!)
Anyway, I had not used her app in quite a while because the last time (months ago) I used it I was disappointed. Keep in mind that the app is an āunofficialā PW app. I got the app when it was first introduced. It was written by, I believe, a 15-year-old. It was āOKā, but I had too many issues with it.
I havenāt taken a good look around the app yet, but I will and I think this time I will write a review on it. Thatās not what this post is about so I donāt want to get diverted (again). š
When I opened the app, her blog posts were displayed. I had seen almost all the ones first displayed (which was a nice surprise for me).
It used to be that I felt that āmy life wasnāt complete unless I had read Pioneer Womanās blog postsā. Actually, hers as well as my other favorites. Life has just been insane for oh soooo very long that I just havenāt been myself for quite some time. (Iām sure youāve noticed.)
What I did find as I was flicking through her posts was that I really miss taking the time our of my day to read hers and my other favorite blogs. It was my āme timeā. Had I actually been doing that I wouldnāt have missed her post entitled, āSilver Dollar Pumpkin Pancakesā.
There is a restaurant near us that serves my favorite pancakes ā sweet potato pancakes. Pumpkin is my second favorite. Finding a good sweet potato or pumpkin pancake recipe is something I have been in search of for YEARS.
I talked with Hubby and instead of breakfast we decided to have breakfast for dinner. I made PWās Silver Dollar Pumpkin Pancakes for dinner last night. It took FOREVER. Her recipe reads ā10 minutesā cooking time⦠nope⦠it took me nearly 2 hours to make all of them!!! Silver Dollar ones take FOREVER because there are so many! I had 10 CUPS of batter to cook! UGH! š
Mine looked awful. Thin and flat. I felt I had failed until Hubby said they were good and that heād like them again. š
OK, so they may not look like the nice beautiful stack Pioneer Woman had, but they DID taste good. Although not āpumpkinyā. I expected more flavor. Maybe I should have put in more pumpkin pie spice than she called for in the printed recipe. Her blog post says to āsprinkle some inā. I donāt know⦠maybe itās just me.
Also, I was disappointed because for years I have struggled with flat non-fluffy pancakes. Hubby suggested I āGoogle itā and I planned on doing just that. But since I was done washing dishes and still had several more pancakes to make, I grabbed my Joy of Cooking cookbook and looked up pancakes and on page 643 found my problem:
āThere are three equally important things to control in producing pancakes and waffles: the consistency of your batter, the surface of your griddle, and the evenness of its heat. Mix the liquid ingredients quickly into the dry ingredients. -> Donāt overbeat. Give just enough quick strokes with a whisk to barley moisten the dry ingredients. -> Ignore lumps. Superior results are gained with most pancake batters if they are mixed and -> rested, covered and refrigerated, for 3 to 6 hours or longer before cooking. The resting period does not apply to recipes that include separately beaten egg whites or to yeast-raised griddle cakes that have the word āraisedā in the name.ā1
It goes on to explain testing and batter thickness. (Note: the arrows ā->ā were shown as arrows and are noted as āPointers to successā.)
Well⦠after YEARS UPON YEARS of doing it WRONG I have now learned⦠donāt overbeat OR work batter until there are no lumps!!! I always thought that the lumps would make it so you would be biting into dry ingredients. So, I will let you know how it goes next time!
So what does all this have to do this postās title āIs a change comingā?
If you havenāt noticed, I have been trying really hard to post regular posts. After several months of not posting (or reading othersā blogs) I am striving to be better. I have posted many more posts in the last month than I had in the previous four months,
So the āchangeā is that I have had several posts in my head and partially started for some time. I am bound and determined to get them posted. I still have to complete the posts about our trip to Seattle ā from September!
As for reading my favorite blogs⦠I need to accept the fact that I am ābehindā and start fresh. Then work my way backward as I can. I have so many months to get caught up on reading and getting them all done is likely not going to happen anytime soon. I will also do my best at writing comments. I do know we all love comments. Some blogs are really hard for me to comment on using my iPad or iPhone which is what I have with me during my lunch break. Sorry!
So, here is to ānew beginningsā and āchangeā⦠Cheers!
Are you ready to continue on this journey with me?
1Irma S. Rombauer, Marion Rombauer Becker and Ethan Becker,
Joy of Cooking (New York, NY: Scribner, 2006) p. 643.