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My favorite kind of pancakes are buckwheat pancakes; my dad used to make them for us when I was little and I've loved their haunting, stoney flavor ever since. I introduced Max to them several years ago. He fell instantly and madly in love, and of course Hugo likes them, too, but my suspicion is that Hugo would eat most anything in pancake form as long as it held the promise of a drizzle of maple syrup. ("May-ah, mama, may-ah?")

But last weekend we were out of buckwheat flour, so I got to wondering if rye pancakes would be any good seeing as I had just a little bit of rye flour leftover from some long-ago experiments in German bread (no, the experiments did not go well, sigh, gnash, etc.). I used equal amounts of rye and white flour in a pretty standard pancake batter and lo, it was a huge success! The pancakes were fat and puffy, glorious to behold, and the rye flavor was delicious – wholesome and nutty and very, very nice paired with the maple syrup. I don't usually put butter on top of my pancakes when I serve them, but in this case I did, because the pancakes were so thick and fluffy that they needed some moistening. Now I think the butter is essential. It melts and combines with the maple syrup and soaks the pancakes just right.

So, the recipe is as follows: Whisk together 3/4 cup white flour, 3/4 cup rye flour, 1 tablespoon baking powder, 1-2 tablespoons sugar and 1/4 teaspoon of salt in a large bowl. In a separate bowl, whisk together an egg and 3/4 cup of milk. Pour the liquid ingredients into the dry ones and mix until combined; try not to overmix. The batter will be relatively stiff. Fry as usual in a buttered pan and serve with a pat of butter on top and maple syrup.

Eggplant meatballs

Amelia recently raved about meatless eggplant-porcini meatballs that sounded (and looked!) so delicious that I had to try them. And, woah, yes, they are pretty glorious – richly flavored, with a wonderfully springy, chewy texture. They are more than a bit of work (you have to roast eggplant, soak porcini, make breadcrumbs, fry the polpette (I can't call them meatballs!) and make tomato sauce to cook them in), but I still managed to get all of this done on a weeknight, so go figure. As Amelia says, it's pretty much all enjoyable kitchen work and I sort of squeezed it in and around Hugo's dinner, bathtime and then that quiet, wonderful stretch just after he fell asleep, when the evening still felt new and full of promise.

The recipe is here. It's a keeper.

Creamed spinach on toast

On book-testing days, I'm always in a bit of a scramble to think of something light and vegetable-based for our lunch. We just need a little something savory in our bellies to be able to evaluate the cakes without feeling ill and it needs to be quick and easy to put together since we need to be mostly focused on measuring and converting and baking and cleaning. I've been loving the challenge; it's made me more creative than I'd usually be on my own. (Oh helloooo, cheese sandwich, you again?) Liana Krissoff's dead-simple, nearly instantaneous tomato soup was a recent hit, but the other day I made a sort of ersatz creamed spinach on toast and ooh, that was very nice, too.

I fried a diced onion in some olive oil (or was it butter?) until it was fragrant and translucent, then dumped in a whole bunch (3/4 pound?) of chopped fresh spinach and let it wilt down. I added salt and hot pepper and then cooked the spinach until it was silky and most of the liquid had boiled off. At that point, I added just a few spoonfuls of crème fraîche and let them melt and mix in with the spinach. You could hardly tell that there was anything creamy in the spinach, but it added some welcome body and richness. I toasted two slices of white bread (peasant would have been even nicer), then piled a fat amount of spinach on each piece of toast. A few microplanes of Parmesan cheese on top and that was that.

Nothing more than a silly little fridge-cleaner, but it hit the spot.

Millionaire's shortbread

Finally, dessert. I apologize for the photo, which looks a bit picked-over, right? I have a good excuse: namely, those very squares. So irresistible, I couldn't even get out my camera in time before a bunch of marauding dinner guests fell on the pan and made quick work of it. What you're looking at is a batch of Jane Hornby's salted caramel shortbread bites (also known as millionaire's shortbread, but doctored with flaky sea salt on top). The recipe comes from Hornby's latest book, What to Bake and How to Bake It. Millionaire's shortbread is insanely good, sort of like a very fancy Twix bar, but even better? (Way better, says Max.) Imagine: a vanilla-flavored shortbread base, baked until crisp, a thick, salted butter caramel poured on top and finally a dark chocolate layer sprinkled wth a few flakes of salt to offset all the sugar and butter. In the immortal words of Osgood Fielding III, zowie!

With no further ado, the recipe (I didn't have time to convert it to US measurements, apologies to those without a scale. You should be able to do all of the conversions using Google):

Jane Hornby's Salted Caramel Shortbread Bites
Makes one 8-inch pan

For the shortbread:
110 grams unsalted butter
50 grams sugar
Pinch of flaky salt
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
140 grams all-purpose flour

For the caramel:
110 grams unsalted butter
200 grams dark brown sugar
4 tablespoons golden syrup (or corn syrup)
1/2 teaspoon flaky salt
400 gram can of evaporated (condensed) milk

For the topping:
200 grams dark (70%) chocolate
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1/2 teaspoon flaky salt

1. Line an 8-inch square pan with parchment paper; set aside. Beat the butter until creamy and very pale. Add the sugar, salt and vanilla and beat until very well-combined. Sift the flour over the butter mixture and gently work into the butter until you have an even dough that clumps together.

2. Press the dough into the prepared pan (you may have to flour your hands for this part) until it's level. Prick it all over with a fork, then chill for 10 minutes. Heat the oven to 160 C. Bake for 25-30 minutes, until the shortbread is golden all over. Let cool completely.

3. Melt the butter, sugar, syrup and salt together in a saucepan, then stir in the condensed milk. Bring the mixture to a simmer and let cook, stirring constantly, until it thickens. This will take about 20 minutes, give or take a bit. Don't let the caramel burn. At the end, it should be thick enough for the spoon to leave a trail in the caramel for a few seconds. Pour the caramel over the shortbread and let cool completely.

4. Melt the chocolate in a microwave or double boiler, then stir in the oil and pour the chocolate evenly over the caramel. Use a spatula to smooth out the chocolate. Sprinkle with the salt and let cool completely, either at room temperature or in the fridge. When the chocolate has just set, mark it into squares, then chill until completely firm. Cut into squares to serve. For a very clean finish, wipe your knife blade with a damp towel between each slice. The squares keep for three days in an airtight container.

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47 responses to “Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner and Dessert”

  1. Olga Shenkerman Avatar

    Hi Luisa! I am back in Berlin. Have written you an email the other day. Hope we can find time to meet!

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  2. dani @theloveofvanilla Avatar

    Ooo that Millionaires shortbread sounds like what we have here in Australia and call Caramel slice but salted. YUM! Have you made many of her other recipes from this book? I know your probably busy doing your own baking and recipe testing. Hope everything is going well x
    ps. Your photo’s are so lovely. Any tips or tricks?… mine I feel are getting worse and worse… or any tips on how not too get too impatient and just take a crappy snap because your sooo hungry? I have huge issues with light too 😦

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  3. Catherine Avatar

    Yum, yum, yum, and yum.

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  4. Gerlinde Avatar

    What great collection of recipes. I’m going to try the spinach today. I’ m going to visit Stockholm for 5 days next week, do you know of a blog covers that city. Thank you

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  5. Rachel Avatar
    Rachel

    These are all fabulous things! I have the ingredients for the polpette, and want to make the shortbread tonight as well, but I’ve never seen unsweetened condensed milk here in the US? Only sweetened. Maybe they mean what we call evaporated milk? Definitely don’t think the sweetened would work -adding that much extra sugar…

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  6. Luisa Avatar

    Yes! Thank you! The state of my brain…

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  7. Sues Avatar

    Looks like an AWESOME day of food!

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  8. Shauna Avatar

    “…that quiet, wonderful stretch just after he fell asleep, when the evening still felt new and full of promise.” YES. I always wish I could bottle that feeling. I love this post!

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  9. Deanna Avatar
    Deanna

    I love that you quoted Some Like it Hot aka one of my very favorite movies of all time. The second I have some time, I’m making the polpette. They sound delicious.

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  10. Comeconella Avatar

    the pancakes sound delicious. these days, we love sourdough pancakes at home courtesy of eliot, my starter. the spinach is delicious. i often make it the same way, adding a pinch of nutmeg. x

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  11. Ellie Avatar
    Ellie

    The pancakes sound delicious. I have buckwheat flour on hand though and would love to try making the pancakes your Dad used to make — is that recipe the same as rye pancakes only substitute buckwheat?
    Thanks!
    Ellie

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  12. amelia Avatar

    Ahh so glad you tried the meatballs, errr polpette(s?)! Had never heard that word before but now I will use it as much as possible. I wanted to make them again but we’ve had endless 90-degree days. (I’m on the verge of tears looking at the 10-day forecast.) ALSO, I love that evening time right after we’ve put him to bed (and right before we start watching Call the Midwife). sighhhhhhh

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  13. Luisa Avatar

    I made one other cake that I didn’t love but there are a few more recipes in the book I plan to try. My only real tip for photos is to shoot in natural light (never use the flash, never ever). But beyond that, just try to think about what looks nice through the viewfinder or screen or whatever you’re shooting with.

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  14. Luisa Avatar

    I don’t! Have fun!

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  15. Luisa Avatar

    Hmm! Possibly? Hang on, going to check. Yes, you’re right! Evaporated in the US.

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  16. Luisa Avatar

    Ha, these dishes were all sort of spread out over a week, actually! 🙂

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  17. Luisa Avatar

    Thank you! x

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  18. Luisa Avatar

    Mine, too! It makes me laugh every single time.

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  19. Luisa Avatar

    Eliot! Love it.

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  20. Luisa Avatar

    Yes! I usually add a couple tablespoons of melted butter to the batter, too.

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  21. Melissa Avatar

    Oh! I’m so glad you reminded me of those eggplant ‘meatballs.’ I made them when that issue first came out, and LOVED them, but haven’t made them since. Maybe for the weekend…and I’m thinking that shortbread would be just fine as a dessert…

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  22. Amy Avatar

    Hi Luisa just wanted to say that I really enjoyed this breakfast, lunch, dinner & dessert post. Especially that spinach on toast that “is just a silly little fridge cleaner” — these are things that are inspiring and really get me to go the simple extra creative measure that makes meals so much more worthwhile. (I am a victim of cheese sandwiches or really anything on toast as a meal.)
    Also I loved this — “when the evening still felt new and full of promise.” I feel like that is the feeling I live for, whether it’s a quiet or big night or morning or whatever. It also reminds me of the opening chapter of Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates. So good.

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  23. Katybelle Avatar
    Katybelle

    I can’t even! That spinach and those shortbread look AMAZING! Adding them to my rotation 🙂

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  24. Elizabeth Mars Avatar

    I’m from Australia and the caramel slice is an old fashioned favorite here. My absolute favorite recipe has some rolled oats in the shortbread layer, this reminds me I must make it again soon!

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  25. Luisa Avatar

    Thank you and thank you.

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  26. Kelleyn Avatar

    You can’t sell me on the rye pancakes as I am not a fan of rye unless it is paired with mustard and pastrami; however, those meatless meatballs look amazing! The pan of shortbread is a testament to how good they must be! Yesterday, I made some pumpkin waffles that were pretty amazing. I know you can get pumpkins in Germany, but do they sell it in a can like they do in the states.

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  27. Agnes Avatar

    I’d love to have your recipe for buckwheat pancakes!

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  28. Lev Avatar
    Lev

    We made the pancakes this morning and they tasted good, but I think the ratio of liquid to dry makes them a little too dry. They are more “bready” than I am used to. Other recipes I’ve seen call for a 1:1 ratio. Has anybody else tried making them?

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  29. Honeybee Avatar
    Honeybee

    “As Amelia says, it’s pretty much all enjoyable kitchen work and I sort of squeezed it in and around Hugo’s dinner, bathtime and then that quiet, wonderful stretch just after he fell asleep, when the evening still felt new and full of promise.”
    Oooh, I know exactly what you mean. A little bit like happy hour. 😀 Just wondering: do you normally eat with Hugo or does he eat first? We (family of four, kids are 2 and 4) usually eat together. I think it’s great but somewhat stressful, too, with spilled glasses, rice grains sticking everywhere, spoons with tomato sauce falling on the floor etc. There are times where I’m tempted to just feed the kids before my husband and I eat. But then it feels a bit “asozial”. I’d love to hear your thoughts on this.

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  30. Erin Avatar
    Erin

    I made the rye pancakes and they were really good, nice and thick but not dense or dry! I made them with buttermilk, and poured in a little extra buttermilk to loosen the batter since buttermilk is so thick. An excellent, easy recipe that I will make again and again! Thanks Luisa!

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  31. Leigh Avatar
    Leigh

    Hi. Thanks for the recipe. I made these and once everything was set I had a hard time cutting them without all of the shortbread breaking up. Any thoughts?

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  32. Luisa Avatar

    Well, it’s definitely a delicate situation with the three layers (hence the chocolate scoring before the whole thing is entirely set), but it sounds like maybe your shortbread was particularly crumbly, meaning a little too dry? I don’t know what altitude you’re at or maybe the fat content in the butter was slightly lower, but next time I’d make sure that the shortbread is as “moist” as shortbread can be (which, obviously isn’t so much moist as not totally crumbly) and then use something like a sharp bench scraper to cut through the layers, which I found much better than using a knife in this case. Good luck!!

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  33. Luisa Avatar

    So happy to hear it!

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  34. Luisa Avatar

    Hugo usually goes to bed before my husband even gets home from work, so mostly he eats alone (with me next to him) or the two of us eat together, but that’s relatively rare since I prefer to eat later with my husband. Now that Hugo’s starting to go to bed later, we’re trying to eat together as a family more. I actually find it less stressful to eat all together, since Hugo eats more/better that way then when he’s eating alone, but that’s just us 🙂 The truth is that it will be messy either way – you should choose the way that causes you the least amount of stress. Your kids are still so little that there’s plenty of years of family dinner ahead of you.

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  35. Luisa Avatar

    It’s the same as the one above (just replace rye with buckwheat), but with a little melted butter thrown in!

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  36. Luisa Avatar

    I think you’re thinking of caraway seed, which is often the flavoring in American/Jewish rye bread. Rye flour itself tastes a little…fruity, nutty, whole-wheat-y. 🙂

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  37. Luisa Avatar

    They’re definitely on the drier side, which is why I think they need butter/maple syrup on top. If you prefer, you can always add more milk to the batter (start with 1/4 cup) and you can of course add melted butter to the batter too (start with 1-2 melted tablespoons)!

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  38. carolineblair@verizon.net Avatar
    carolineblair@verizon.net

    Luisa,
    I am new to your site and this is the first blog I have commented on! I made the chard and onion panade and it looked great but tasted awful! I was so soupy and the taste was bitter….I followed the directions exactly for the chicken broth. I thought it was going to be more like a quiche. Any suggestions?
    Caroline

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  39. Honeybee Avatar
    Honeybee

    Thank you. When our daughter started eating “real food”, we used eat separately for a while: she first and my husband and I later on. The downside was that it got really late until we were done cleaning up the kitchen. We moved dinner time a little forward and started eating together. It’s what we do now. The kids go to bed at around 8 p.m., so if we cook/eat afterwards, we won’t be done until quite late (in my view at least, my day starts early). Still, the whole family dinner thing is something I have been thinking about quite a bit lately – your latest post on the cooking for others really struck a chord with me! I agree that we have years of family dinner ahead but at the same time I think it’s great that even babies/toddlers are part of the whole lunch/dinner routine as it is generally the case here. Apart from when they ate purees they never had different foods, either. At the moment, I’m a litte torn – stressed out sometimes and too tired to cook, but not willing to let go of something I deem important for the children. So far, the solution was to make dinner really simple (bread, cheese, cold cuts, salad etc.)

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  40. mara Avatar
    mara

    hi, super late to the party, but I’d love to try the shortbread – could you perhaps tell me what kind of condensed milk you use in germany? Is it “gezuckerte Kondensmilch” like the one in a tube from Nestle?
    Thanks so much!

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  41. Luisa Avatar

    You want the unsweetened kind. Just regular Kondensmilch.

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  42. Luisa Avatar

    It’s definitely not like a quiche. More like a savory bread pudding. If it was too soupy for your taste, you could try using less broth or cooking it a little longer. But I can’t explain the bitterness, that’s really odd! Swiss chard, onions, bread, cheese, broth – none of those things should normally turn bitter in the cooking process…

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  43. Manali Avatar

    Hello Louisa,
    Discovered your website while I was searching for recipes to try and this shortbread recipe Looks delicious I am gonna try this recipe and surely going provide a feedback.

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  44. Leslie, now cooking in Hawaii Avatar

    I improvised a panade based on Luisa’s recipe once but I changed way too many things so it came out really weird. However, it was not bitter. Maybe your chard was old and bitter? I think it can taste really different depending on how old it is.

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  45. Leslie, now cooking in Hawaii Avatar

    I would have never though to try rye pancakes! Since we left Berlin for Honolulu we keep rye flour on hand to make German bread. I will look forward to trying your new invention, rye pancakes.
    Here we have been making breadfruit pancakes: http://www.localcolorhawaii.com/blog/how-do-you-eat-breadfruit/

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  46. Josh Wise Avatar

    All those meals look incredible!

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