Thomas Jefferson loved pancakes so much that he sent a special recipe from the White House to his hometown! Yep, you heard us correctly.
Pancake Day is real! Shrove Tuesday commonly referred to as Fat Tuesday is the holiday of feasting before Lent. Once upon a time, during Lent, people were not allowed to eat animal products like milk, butter, and eggs. To prevent them from going to waste, people cooked these ingredients into tall stacks of pancakes. They were consumed in such large amounts that this day earned the rightful name of Pancake Day. You may be surprised to find that pancakes exist all over the world. Each culture seems to have a unique take on them.
People eat them for breakfast, lunch, and dinner all over the globe. Some examples of this transcultural food include crepes, potato latkes, Irish boxty, Russian blini, Welsh crampog, Indian poori, Hungarian palacsinta, and Dutch pannenkoeken. However, as it turns out, "pancake syndrome" is an actual medical condition!
It occurs in tropical regions when mites contaminate the flour used to make pancakes, which causes consumers to have an allergic reaction. The recipe was by a Dutch cook.
It was accompanied with numerous illustrations and instructions. Throughout the Medieval Age pancakes evolved into the closest resemblance of pancakes today. People started making them with cornmeal, flour, or even potatoes depending on what they had available to them.
Many would also have an added fruit or other sweet ingredient for flavor. The pancakes of history were cooked using a baking stone. This is where the stone used to cook them is heated by a fire or stove and the batter is then cooked on the hot stone. Pancakes were also associated with the Christian Lent. Pancakes eventually made their way to America.
Pancake options can crop up for all kinds of meals. We can find the different versions in crepes, pooris Indian , pannenkoeken Dutch , latkes German , boxty Irish , crampog Welsh , blini Russian , and palacsinta Hungarian. They can be savory versions served with curry, or sweet ones with cream, chocolate, and fruit fillings or toppings. Today, whenever we think of pancakes, we think of flatness. However, the application was usually done in a disparaging sense, such as to make fun of a flat land or terrain.
In , a group of geographers with a sense of humor decided to compare the flatness of the Kansas terrain with pancakes. They made a profile of a pancake topography using a sample from the International House of Pancakes. This was accomplished by the use of a confocal laser microscope and digital image processing.
The state of Kansas also got a similar profile, after which the two were compared using information given by the United States Geological Survey. The results of this experiment were published within the Annals of Improbable Research and proved that Kansas was actually even flatter than your regular pancake. Tabletop flatness has a 1. On the other hand, the pancake has a 0. Of course, this comparison is not really fair, as blowing up a pancake to the size of a whole state will leave us with a very rough terrain, There would be craters, holes, and several other irregularities to deal with.
Pancakes are certainly a part of many different cultures, so their history is also a rich and complex one.
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