
Ingredients:
3/4 cup flour
3/4 cup milk
2/3 cup halved cranberries
1 1/2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon butter, melted
1 teaspoon lemon juice
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon lemon zest
1 egg
Directions:
Whisk together the egg and milk in a small bowl or measuring cup. Set aside. Pour the lemon juice and zest over the cranberries. In the medium bowl, whisk together the sugar, flour, and baking powder. Slowly whisk in the egg/milk mixture. Add the cranberries and whisk to combine. There should be no pockets of unmixed flour or large lumps. Spray a frying pan or griddle with nonstick spray or melt 1 tablespoon of butter. Heat the pan so that it feels warm when you hover your hand over it. Add about 1/2 cup of the batter into the middle. Cook until bubbles begin to appear and pop. Flip. Cook for about 2 minutes. Both sides should be golden brown. If not, return it to the stove and continue to cook for 1 minute. Yields about 5-6 mid-sized pancakes.

3/4 cup flour
3/4 cup milk
2/3 cup halved cranberries
1 1/2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon butter, melted
1 teaspoon lemon juice
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon lemon zest
1 egg
Directions:
Whisk together the egg and milk in a small bowl or measuring cup. Set aside. Pour the lemon juice and zest over the cranberries. In the medium bowl, whisk together the sugar, flour, and baking powder. Slowly whisk in the egg/milk mixture. Add the cranberries and whisk to combine. There should be no pockets of unmixed flour or large lumps. Spray a frying pan or griddle with nonstick spray or melt 1 tablespoon of butter. Heat the pan so that it feels warm when you hover your hand over it. Add about 1/2 cup of the batter into the middle. Cook until bubbles begin to appear and pop. Flip. Cook for about 2 minutes. Both sides should be golden brown. If not, return it to the stove and continue to cook for 1 minute. Yields about 5-6 mid-sized pancakes.

Aren't you just in the cranberry mood. They look good. I love how cranberries look in food...like little jewels peaking through.
ReplyDeleteI've never seen cranberry pancakes and they look fabulous!
ReplyDeleteYour cranberry pancakes are so PRETTY!!! Costco now has cranberries in stock quite reasonable..i've been stocking up my freezer and plan on making these. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThese are such a great variation to the normal blueberry pancakes that people usually make. Just beautiful!
ReplyDeleteNIce work!
ReplyDeleteThey look great - fluffy and yummy!
ReplyDeleteI love the colour of the cranberries on the pancakes.
I wanna cut many at the same time!!
ReplyDeleteFor my money it's got to be maple syrup!
ReplyDeleteGorgioso. I just wish cranberries were cheaper in California...
ReplyDeleteSorry, I couldn't find your biography anywhere, and I'm wondering--what do you do for a living? I'm starting up a blog and thinking about my future, and wow...cooking as a profession...what could be better?
Maybe cooking and crafting.
I wish I cooked for a living! I was a teacher, now I am looking for something new, selling my crafts/food zines and freelancing.
ReplyDeleteI made something similar years ago when I discovered I was out of milk in the middle of pancake making. I used orange juice for my liquid and added some chopped cranberries I had on hand. Yum. Wish I had some cranberries now.
ReplyDeleteThese pancakes are awesome.
ReplyDeleteI'm making these for dinner tonight...they look so yummy. I posted about them on my blog but linked it to you so you get the credit. Thanks so much for sharing!
ReplyDeleteI think your recipe got copied at
ReplyDeletehttp://www.fischerfoods.net/recipes/recipe_cran_pancake.htm
See also
http://www.fischerfoods.net/recipes/recipe_blue_buckle.htm
These are the only two copied recipes I found on their site, just by looking at the names of recipes and then checked to see if the wording was exactly the same.
You may wish to contact this site, as it's a commercial one that should be more responsible. I was reading your policy about how your recipes are original and that you wished to be credited for them, and because I'm a cynic about intellectual property, I immediately thought, "I bet her recipes have been copied without credit."
And of course there's plenty more out there. If you want to depress yourself over how much of your work is being passed off as someone else's, just start googling the more distinctive phrases in your recipes (especially ones with typos). For example,
"arrange the desired about of meatballs in the bottom of each bowl"
turned up
http://mydailyrecipe.com/component/option,com_rapidrecipe/page,viewrecipe/recipe_id,4881/Itemid,535/
"spinach and basil" "Stir through and serve"
turned up
http://wegottaeat.com/discover/recipe/6009
These probably aren't worth pursuing. Unfortunately even if you put a statement on your site saying that this is your IP, most people think whatever is on the internet is theirs to take.
-- a grouchy law student who will cheer herself up by making cranberry pancakes