More TikTok recipe attempts can be found on this playlist ua-cam.com/video/tgzxe7jJ6oA/v-deo.html Recipe methods for the egg boil, natures cereal and pancake sheet are here barrylewis.net/recipe/3-more-viral-tiktok-recipes-tested/
Barry, coconut milk doesn't come from old coconut. 🤣 It's actually squeezed from shredded coconut + water. The more you put water, the lighter the texture. If you want to have a thick cream, just put a bit of water. Coconut doesn't produce milk by its own 😜 and this recipe looks like an Indonesian recipe called Telur Balado (but we don't use butter). You should check it out 😊
Bay imparts a resinous, piney flavor, slightly minty and tea-like that helps round out flavors. If your food feels like it's "missing" something, and you've covered everything else, add bay. You can also add a tiny bit of mint and thyme (in addition to the oregano), but it isn't quite the same.
I use it in anything using red meat as it just tastes wrong without it to me now. I do, however, buy it powdered rather than as leaves. Much less faffing around and gives a stronger flavour.
The reason you need to mix the bicarb and baking powder into the dry is because they react with the moisture of the wet ingredients and start to rise before the dry is mixed in. This makes the final dish flatter and not as light.
Bay leaves are excellent for soups, stews and casseroles. Dried they are great for long slow-cooked dishes (put one or two in your slow cooker when you do your casserole). The long cooking really draws out the flavour and once you know about it your stews feel somehow lacking without it.
Doing an oven pannukakku pancake is a viral thing now? Every thursday in army. Pea soup and and oven pancake for dessert. Lots of nordic recipe variations on the thing. You just stick it in the oven makes it easy. You don't need to use raising agents though or mix in butter and you can do it a lot runnier. Edit: you just usually eat it with jam, so normal version doesn't have fillings
The oil was above the boiling point of water, so when you added the water in, it rapidly came to a boil, which is where the bubbling came from. This underscores just how dangerous hot oil can be, since it can lead to very hot splattering that's a burn hazard, and if the oil is on fire, adding water makes the flame splatter everywhere and sets everything else on fire too.
They all look great, but the "cereal" one isn't much of a recipe. I agree with Mrs B, it's just a bowl of fruit in water. Lol. I'm definitely going to try the other 2 though. My hubby loves pancakes, but I hate standing over a griddle, so baked ones sound ideal! I wonder how the eggs would be chopped up, and used as a sandwich filling, like an egg salad? Mmmmmm
Oven pancakes (the baked pancake) is a Swedish staple. Nice easy occasional dinner. Though the recipe most use includes diced ham and is served with raspberry or lingonberry jam.
When catering and doing parties sheet bakes are a lifesaver sometimes. Pancakes, one with eggs, one with potatoes, you can do bacon and sausage and then everybody just goes and cuts little pieces or whatever they want. Put out milk or juice add some fruit and you have an entire meal for a large group.
@@entirelybonkers8832 I go to a Therapy Group and because we're there for 5 hours we have lunch but it's between the clients and the staff that we run the clubhouse is what it's called, I typically end up doing lunch as my chore cuz I can't do any of the physical stuff. We never know who's going to come in it could be two people anywhere to there's been 17 of us on a normal day, it's supposed to be getting a lot bigger if we can move to a location of Our Own. I tried explaining to them the other day that the pan they were using was definitely not going to fit all the fried rice if the eggs, the chicken Etc by themselves fill the pan. There's some cognitive issues but some of them live in assisted living and have never cooked anything
In Kentucky, USA, we put some water in our pan of cooking sausages to steam them a little to make sure they are done in the middle. So, your sister is spot on with her cooking method. Please tell her all of us Southern Kentuckians have her back!
I've always started the sausages with a bit of water in the pan, then let the water evaporate and all you have left is oil to crisp the sausages up. Adding water to hot oil sounds like a recipe for a really bad burn.
Here in Finland generally that pan baked way of making pancakes are what we'd call/consider pancakes(pannukakku). Though with the recipes I've used the result is not maybe as cake-y(if that makes sense) and usually bit more glossy looking, might be down to using more butter. While the "normal" pancakes are called lätty/lettu or ohukainen/räiskäle(thinner so more like a crêpe).
Bay leaf fan/advocate here! "What is the point of them?" Where to start?! First of all, they keep their fantastic flavour locked up, until you fold or snap the leaf in half. Then the smell should hit you! (I always use fresh leaves, not sure if dried leaves are as strong.) It's a really lovely savoury taste, rich and earthy, that is the main flavour in british sausages. Also very important in stews and great when boiling or roasting a gammon ham. It's a main part of bouquet garni (used in casseroles, stews and stocks), and used in so many other dishes. I find when you fold or snap the leaves, it releases it's flavour much more. Challenge: try some more recipes with bay leaf, and maybe try some recipes without it to see the difference. Please give this cornerstone of winter dishes a fair trial!
this has been a curent (2024) online debate. I suspect that people are not using bay properly. Using dry bay but not enough or if they have fresh bay (I have a huge 10 foot tree or bush) then not crumbling the leaves before you add them. They truly do impart a deep savory note to soups and stews etc. Herbs are wonderful and mostly easy to use - thyme rosemary sage parsley chives etc.- but bay needs a little more work - longer slower cooking - but it will deliver if you take time.
I recently tried bayleaf licorice from the Netherlands. Made me really understand the use of bayleaf, unique herbal taste that even won against the licorice.
In South Africa we use grids almost like the one you had for the s'mores when we braai (BBQ), except each side of the grid is flat. Almost every house has one and they come in sizes from small for doing toasted cheese sandwiches to extra large for doing all your chops and sausage. Testing gadgets is paying off, as you hit the nail on the head when used is to cook the sausages.
My greatgrandmom from Italy the family for generations used bay leafs when packing/storeing things would break 1 up and scatter the peices around the inside of box it helped keep bugs away we still do it today works great then theres of course putting one in tomato sauce😊
The pancakes are also awesome if you need to make a lot because it takes less time than cooking an equal amount of fruit pancakes on the griddle, and its awesome if you just want to meal prep breakfast for the week
For most South Asian curries bay leaves need to be put first in the oil to release its flavor or boiling water when cooking biriyani rice 🤭 but i guess British/American ppl don't get that 🤭
I would quarter the eggs and drizzle the butter on them. Seems bit dry just rolling them in it. You can bake potatoes in the skin and put some of that spiced butter on it. It would taste great.
6:25 You either have a very bad source of leaves or... Because bay leaf presence is unmistakable in savory dishes. It gives them an earthen, peppery bitter taste which becomes very pronounced if you leave those leaves in the dish instead of fishing them out after cooking. To allay your incredulity you should visit a place where the leaves are dried. They are very aromatic when freshly dried.
Next time try to first poke the eggs with a fork and rub some turmeric+chili powder+salt and fry them in the butter and let some crust form and remove from the pan, then when ur gravy is done put those eggs back in the pan and let them absorb the gravy 🤗
My Mom would add bay leaves to her homemade stew. Not sure if it really added any flavor though. Could you use pancake mix for the sheet pancakes? If so, I may try it one day here.
The eggs with the butter concoction looks good. I think I would use one of the egg slicers and drizzle the butter concoction on top. At least that way you would have more surface area for the seasoned butter. The pancake on a sheet pan would be great for when relatives stop by and end up spending the night.
The pancake thing is great my family is huge and we usually do that instead of having someone at the stove for hours just make a few trays cut it and serve it that way easy peasy
I always wondered the same thing about bay leaf, until my mum got a bay tree and I tried using the fresh leaves from it instead of the dry supermarket version.
The best part of a pancake is the crispy brown bit when it hits the hot buttery pan which the sheetpan ones seem to be missing, but I love the idea for a brunch or something with a lot of people!
Barry, about bay leaves: Make two identical batches of plain white rice, but put a bay leaf in one before you put it over the heat, then taste both, and maybe get your wife and girls to do blind taste tests. Bay doesn't really have a strong smell or flavor of its own, especially before its been heated up, but it does release something into the food that makes it tastier, and you'll notice it right away with the plain rice test.. or if you don't notice it, the blind participants probably will. It amps up the flavor of the dish.
I was also taught to do that to make sure the sausages are cooked through all the way. But I was taught to do it in the reverse order. You put the sausages in the pan, a little water, then once the water is boiled away you add some oil to give the outside a sear.
i first saw the sheet pan pancakes on a tasty video in 2019 i think, i make them a lot. cut them into squares and put them into sandwich bags keep them in the freezer so i don't have to do breakfast every morning and my husband can have a quick meal before work. So much fun to customize.
I literally just watched that woman bakes the pancakes in the pan like 10 minutes ago. I know I get to come here and see if it actually works out well love you
Love watching your videos. Your content is always fun, family friendly, and funny. Please keep up the amazing work! I actually also taught myself to cook and I found your channel back when I was ten or eleven, and now I'm an adult. I recently started showing your videos to some of my friends and their younger siblings. They really are excited to see you cook and to try cooking themselves. If you could, I think its be awesome if you tested and posted some Instant Pot Recipes, they are really easy and save a lot of time. Thank you!
Bayleaf is one of those things you're never sure if it does anything, but you'd miss it if you omitted it. I think Adam Ragusea did a video on it. His stuff's worth checking out :D Oh and Barry, if you like chilli, get yourself some Lee Kum Kee chilli oil. You can get it from a few shops, also Amazon. It's incredible :O
Bayleaf or laurel is a staple in the Portuguese cuisine. We put it basically everywhere, from rice (usually done with an onion, garlic, laurel and olive oil sofrito), any meat dishes, steaks, dishes with sauces, casseroles, stews, etc etc. Also, the bayleafs we usually use here are dried, not fresh. It has a very distinct flavour and adds some depth to saucy dishes. It's the kind of thing that if you forget to add in, it seems like something's missing but you can't place your finger on it. We actually like the intense bayleaf flavour so much we even use actual bay branches on a particular type of meat skewers. The bay branches are used as the skewers and carry a similar flavour that almost overpowers the taste of the meat.
The other thing you can do with a sheet pancake is freeze the portions and then microwave for 20-30 seconds or so and voila! Instant weekday breakfast!
Hey Barry. For a video idea you should cook some meals that include bay leafs and then do the exact same meals but without the bay leaves and then see if they taste the same or different to see is bay leaves actually do something
I like to take frozen fruit (blueberries or cherries are my favorite) and put into sweetened vanilla almond milk. Makes the milk slushy. Nice treat after being out in the desert heat.
That Hershey's Smore's rack is just a bbq burger rack, I have a couple of them, they are pretty handy but have to be careful with burgers because if they're too thick, the wire esh embeds into them and they get stuck
I’m stuck in bed unable to move because my back has gone and I wish I had a tray of pancakes right now! Bet you could make those and freeze them and get a slice out each night for the following morning!?
Tell your sis to put a half cup of water or so in when she starts instead of the end, then boil it off. That gets the heat into them early, and no oil splatter worries. That's actually the "proper" way to make longanisa, and works well for bangers too.
According to the directions when cooking Jimmy Dean package sausages (I think it's Jimmy Dean) put 2 tablespoon of water in the pan with the sausages, cover, and when water is gone lift cover and cook until golden brown. Regardless of the brand I always add a little water. I don't live in Kentucky I live in Arizona.
We normally cook hotdogs/sausages in water first then add oil to fry once the water evaporates 😁 it makes sure the inside is cooked and the outside crispy 😁
Barry the pre mixing for the dry ingredients usually is because yeast and salt dont go together salt kills yeast so you put salt on one side of the bowl and yeast on the other even if its dry yeast then first mix 1 side slightly and then the other then mix together this is to prevent the salt from killing the yeast
Hi Barry and all the Lewises wherever they may be. I make a wonderful fish dish with one of those 'Hershey's smore makers" I marinate the fish in a nice sauce for an hour or so or overnight and then roast it over the open fire delicious and very easy (you can also use a grill of course or the oven) love the vids Jim Mexico
I have never heard of putting water into a pan to "cook sausages through"? That also seems incredibly dangerous due to hot oil, a heat source, and water? My mum is a nightmare for over cooking meat to make sure it is "safe", she also genuinely hates seasoning so she never uses it, drives me crazy
I think she's got her wires crossed. I went to a food festival once and there was a BBQ cooking demonstration. It was suggested that if you're worried about burnt outsides and raw middles then boil the sausages first, you don't lose much flavour and they'll be cooked through. You then bbq (or fry) them for colour, being boiled also means they'll be more juicy. I think that makes more sense than lobbing a jug of water into a pan of hot oil!!
I've actually heard of the technique quite a bit. You "boil" (essentially braise) the sausages in a small quantity of water, then fry off the skins once the water has boiled off. If you don't use any additional oil it works "okay" -- but honestly I've taken to oven roasting my sausages and they do SO MUCH BETTER.
If your oil is that hot that food’s gotta be burned to hell anyway… I regularly add water to a frying pan to e.g. soften carrots after giving them a nice toasted outside.
@@andykey78 See, that makes sense and i totally get it, but chucking in a cup of water to already over cooked sausages, sitting in a vat of oil, over an open heat source? Do not get that at all and think it is a major safety risky while factually doing nothing haha
@@lauradi308 No but that's backwards to what his sister is doing, it's also not the reason she states she does it. The way she does it is needlessly dangerous and does nothing. But yeah i usually like to oven roast sausages too, crispier skin and just taste nicer haha
I put pancake batter into cupcake tins for homemade pancake bites. As for “nature’s cereal” I’d throw all of the ingredients into my blender and make a smoothie-seems easier than eating it like cereal.
I mean if you eat beef stew, and make it with just pepper, rosemary, thyme and bayleaf with your stock, onions and beef. You can definitely taste the bayleaf. Also rosemary is the main ingredient in beef stew, in case you were confused.
Mythical Kitchen did a test with the bay leaf, it just adds some good flavor. Try making 2 pots of rice that are identical but one has a bay leaf in it. The rice with the bay leaf just tastes.... better?
Since when is fruit salad nature's cereal? Lmao these gen z kids are something else. Also I've been making pancakes in the oven since I was a child lol
Quick hack for you shelling hard boiled eggs in quantity 6 boiled eggs in a tupperware dish about half inch of water, put lid on shake and the shells come off
Frying the egg like that is common in Indian cooking. My wife had made it many times. Much better if you slice in half, put the flat side down, and let it get a little crisp from frying in the sauce.
More TikTok recipe attempts can be found on this playlist ua-cam.com/video/tgzxe7jJ6oA/v-deo.html
Recipe methods for the egg boil, natures cereal and pancake sheet are here barrylewis.net/recipe/3-more-viral-tiktok-recipes-tested/
4:48 it's trying to egg - scape
Barry, coconut milk doesn't come from old coconut. 🤣 It's actually squeezed from shredded coconut + water. The more you put water, the lighter the texture. If you want to have a thick cream, just put a bit of water. Coconut doesn't produce milk by its own 😜 and this recipe looks like an Indonesian recipe called Telur Balado (but we don't use butter). You should check it out 😊
Nature's cereal looks like you've gotten partway through making a smoothie and then realised you don't actually own a blender 😂
LOL. True.
😂 Indeed.
Bay imparts a resinous, piney flavor, slightly minty and tea-like that helps round out flavors. If your food feels like it's "missing" something, and you've covered everything else, add bay. You can also add a tiny bit of mint and thyme (in addition to the oregano), but it isn't quite the same.
@tangential nothingness I did to, I was very impressed with such a detailed description, until I read flavor…
Definitely the secret ingredient in bean soup.
@@epowell4211 and lentils when you want them as good as the Spanish do it.
I use it in anything using red meat as it just tastes wrong without it to me now. I do, however, buy it powdered rather than as leaves. Much less faffing around and gives a stronger flavour.
My bay leaves don’t leave any such flavor. They almost taste stale to me.
The reason you need to mix the bicarb and baking powder into the dry is because they react with the moisture of the wet ingredients and start to rise before the dry is mixed in. This makes the final dish flatter and not as light.
Thanks
I am going to try the pancake tray, but maybe try banana, toffee pieces and Raspberries.
@@ziggarillo indeed, as this isn't cereal in any shape or form. No grain at all.
@@norabrown5584 That sounds good to me.
Those eggs diced with some of that spiced butter looks like a very tasty topping for a baked potato! 😋
Great call, they were so good! Very creamy!
@@mrbarrylewis Thank you!
the egg one reminded me of a indian dish its basically a scotch egg stewed in a spicy onion sauce... but served with plain boiled rice.
That sounds delicious and I'm not a bit egg eater
Reminded me of egg biryani!
@@limalicious yes very similar
What is this sorcery?!
@@mrbarrylewis its cheddar or red Leicester saucary lol
Bay leaves are excellent for soups, stews and casseroles. Dried they are great for long slow-cooked dishes (put one or two in your slow cooker when you do your casserole). The long cooking really draws out the flavour and once you know about it your stews feel somehow lacking without it.
Doing an oven pannukakku pancake is a viral thing now?
Every thursday in army. Pea soup and and oven pancake for dessert.
Lots of nordic recipe variations on the thing. You just stick it in the oven makes it easy. You don't need to use raising agents though or mix in butter and you can do it a lot runnier.
Edit: you just usually eat it with jam, so normal version doesn't have fillings
Cool info cheers
The oil was above the boiling point of water, so when you added the water in, it rapidly came to a boil, which is where the bubbling came from. This underscores just how dangerous hot oil can be, since it can lead to very hot splattering that's a burn hazard, and if the oil is on fire, adding water makes the flame splatter everywhere and sets everything else on fire too.
Mrs B calling it as it is, "it's just fruit in water". Love it!
They all look great, but the "cereal" one isn't much of a recipe. I agree with Mrs B, it's just a bowl of fruit in water. Lol. I'm definitely going to try the other 2 though. My hubby loves pancakes, but I hate standing over a griddle, so baked ones sound ideal! I wonder how the eggs would be chopped up, and used as a sandwich filling, like an egg salad? Mmmmmm
I agree glorified fruit salad lol
Also it's pretty silly when you consider that the word "cereal" for the breakfast category literally refers to grains.
Really i also say as always great vid Barry
Most of the “natures cereals” I’ve seen are fruit and almond milk with granola and honey on it
Oven pancakes (the baked pancake) is a Swedish staple. Nice easy occasional dinner. Though the recipe most use includes diced ham and is served with raspberry or lingonberry jam.
Jäklar, blir sugen på det nu! 😁 👍
When catering and doing parties sheet bakes are a lifesaver sometimes. Pancakes, one with eggs, one with potatoes, you can do bacon and sausage and then everybody just goes and cuts little pieces or whatever they want. Put out milk or juice add some fruit and you have an entire meal for a large group.
I have a big family and we usually do this!! Easier than having someone at the stove for hours
@@entirelybonkers8832 I go to a Therapy Group and because we're there for 5 hours we have lunch but it's between the clients and the staff that we run the clubhouse is what it's called, I typically end up doing lunch as my chore cuz I can't do any of the physical stuff. We never know who's going to come in it could be two people anywhere to there's been 17 of us on a normal day, it's supposed to be getting a lot bigger if we can move to a location of Our Own. I tried explaining to them the other day that the pan they were using was definitely not going to fit all the fried rice if the eggs, the chicken Etc by themselves fill the pan. There's some cognitive issues but some of them live in assisted living and have never cooked anything
I loved Chloes decisive way of saying how good the pancake was! Loved her T shirt too!
In Kentucky, USA, we put some water in our pan of cooking sausages to steam them a little to make sure they are done in the middle. So, your sister is spot on with her cooking method. Please tell her all of us Southern Kentuckians have her back!
Nope, absolutely insane.
I've always started the sausages with a bit of water in the pan, then let the water evaporate and all you have left is oil to crisp the sausages up. Adding water to hot oil sounds like a recipe for a really bad burn.
I start off with a bit of water, lid on a couple minutes then brown and crisp them up. Central Kentuckyian here.
Here in Finland generally that pan baked way of making pancakes are what we'd call/consider pancakes(pannukakku). Though with the recipes I've used the result is not maybe as cake-y(if that makes sense) and usually bit more glossy looking, might be down to using more butter. While the "normal" pancakes are called lätty/lettu or ohukainen/räiskäle(thinner so more like a crêpe).
Yeah American/British pancakes are a bit more cakey than most countries
Bay leaf fan/advocate here! "What is the point of them?" Where to start?! First of all, they keep their fantastic flavour locked up, until you fold or snap the leaf in half. Then the smell should hit you! (I always use fresh leaves, not sure if dried leaves are as strong.) It's a really lovely savoury taste, rich and earthy, that is the main flavour in british sausages. Also very important in stews and great when boiling or roasting a gammon ham. It's a main part of bouquet garni (used in casseroles, stews and stocks), and used in so many other dishes. I find when you fold or snap the leaves, it releases it's flavour much more.
Challenge: try some more recipes with bay leaf, and maybe try some recipes without it to see the difference.
Please give this cornerstone of winter dishes a fair trial!
this has been a curent (2024) online debate. I suspect that people are not using bay properly. Using dry bay but not enough or if they have fresh bay (I have a huge 10 foot tree or bush) then not crumbling the leaves before you add them. They truly do impart a deep savory note to soups and stews etc. Herbs are wonderful and mostly easy to use - thyme rosemary sage parsley chives etc.- but bay needs a little more work - longer slower cooking - but it will deliver if you take time.
I once saw someone refer to water as "nature's fruit juice". Definitely got the same vibes from nature's cereal.
I do the water and sausage thing too.. BUT I put the water first. Cook it off and then they brown. Delish!
I've always done sheet pancakes I love them, I work in a school and it's ideal for that
I recently tried bayleaf licorice from the Netherlands. Made me really understand the use of bayleaf, unique herbal taste that even won against the licorice.
I use bay leaf in all my soups and stews. Love it.
In South Africa we use grids almost like the one you had for the s'mores when we braai (BBQ), except each side of the grid is flat. Almost every house has one and they come in sizes from small for doing toasted cheese sandwiches to extra large for doing all your chops and sausage. Testing gadgets is paying off, as you hit the nail on the head when used is to cook the sausages.
In Finland it´s called halsteri and we traditionally cook fish in it.
My greatgrandmom from Italy the family for generations used bay leafs when packing/storeing things would break 1 up and scatter the peices around the inside of box it helped keep bugs away we still do it today works great then theres of course putting one in tomato sauce😊
The pancakes are also awesome if you need to make a lot because it takes less time than cooking an equal amount of fruit pancakes on the griddle, and its awesome if you just want to meal prep breakfast for the week
Bay leaves are fab. They give so much flavour to dishes. Don’t know why yours didn’t smell of anything as the have their own herby smell.
For most South Asian curries bay leaves need to be put first in the oil to release its flavor or boiling water when cooking biriyani rice 🤭 but i guess British/American ppl don't get that 🤭
I would quarter the eggs and drizzle the butter on them. Seems bit dry just rolling them in it.
You can bake potatoes in the skin and put some of that spiced butter on it. It would taste great.
6:25 You either have a very bad source of leaves or... Because bay leaf presence is unmistakable in savory dishes. It gives them an earthen, peppery bitter taste which becomes very pronounced if you leave those leaves in the dish instead of fishing them out after cooking.
To allay your incredulity you should visit a place where the leaves are dried. They are very aromatic when freshly dried.
Fun video!!!! Trying to decide what else the mixture for the eggs can be used for. Hope you guys had fun camping.
Great time thanks
Next time try to first poke the eggs with a fork and rub some turmeric+chili powder+salt and fry them in the butter and let some crust form and remove from the pan, then when ur gravy is done put those eggs back in the pan and let them absorb the gravy 🤗
My Mom would add bay leaves to her homemade stew. Not sure if it really added any flavor though.
Could you use pancake mix for the sheet pancakes? If so, I may try it one day here.
The eggs with the butter concoction looks good. I think I would use one of the egg slicers and drizzle the butter concoction on top. At least that way you would have more surface area for the seasoned butter. The pancake on a sheet pan would be great for when relatives stop by and end up spending the night.
the shade for the bayleaf throughout is my favorite thing haha
Everything looked so awesome.
The pancake thing is great my family is huge and we usually do that instead of having someone at the stove for hours just make a few trays cut it and serve it that way easy peasy
I always wondered the same thing about bay leaf, until my mum got a bay tree and I tried using the fresh leaves from it instead of the dry supermarket version.
The best part of a pancake is the crispy brown bit when it hits the hot buttery pan which the sheetpan ones seem to be missing, but I love the idea for a brunch or something with a lot of people!
Barry, about bay leaves: Make two identical batches of plain white rice, but put a bay leaf in one before you put it over the heat, then taste both, and maybe get your wife and girls to do blind taste tests. Bay doesn't really have a strong smell or flavor of its own, especially before its been heated up, but it does release something into the food that makes it tastier, and you'll notice it right away with the plain rice test.. or if you don't notice it, the blind participants probably will. It amps up the flavor of the dish.
I was also taught to do that to make sure the sausages are cooked through all the way. But I was taught to do it in the reverse order. You put the sausages in the pan, a little water, then once the water is boiled away you add some oil to give the outside a sear.
You make oven pancake in Sweden all the time, with some strawberry jam and whipped cream
i first saw the sheet pan pancakes on a tasty video in 2019 i think, i make them a lot. cut them into squares and put them into sandwich bags keep them in the freezer so i don't have to do breakfast every morning and my husband can have a quick meal before work. So much fun to customize.
What size pan did you use for the sheet pan pancake? I'm assuming a half sheet...
I literally just watched that woman bakes the pancakes in the pan like 10 minutes ago. I know I get to come here and see if it actually works out well love you
I use a muffin top pan for oven pancakes. Makes it really easy.
Love watching your videos. Your content is always fun, family friendly, and funny. Please keep up the amazing work! I actually also taught myself to cook and I found your channel back when I was ten or eleven, and now I'm an adult. I recently started showing your videos to some of my friends and their younger siblings. They really are excited to see you cook and to try cooking themselves. If you could, I think its be awesome if you tested and posted some Instant Pot Recipes, they are really easy and save a lot of time. Thank you!
Thanks so much for that, love hearing about stories like this, it's so cool, thanks for spreading the word
Bayleaf is one of those things you're never sure if it does anything, but you'd miss it if you omitted it. I think Adam Ragusea did a video on it. His stuff's worth checking out :D
Oh and Barry, if you like chilli, get yourself some Lee Kum Kee chilli oil. You can get it from a few shops, also Amazon. It's incredible :O
Alright cheers :)
'It's not exactly a bowl of Coco Pops'........classic! xx Jean from Scotland.
Bayleaf or laurel is a staple in the Portuguese cuisine. We put it basically everywhere, from rice (usually done with an onion, garlic, laurel and olive oil sofrito), any meat dishes, steaks, dishes with sauces, casseroles, stews, etc etc. Also, the bayleafs we usually use here are dried, not fresh.
It has a very distinct flavour and adds some depth to saucy dishes. It's the kind of thing that if you forget to add in, it seems like something's missing but you can't place your finger on it.
We actually like the intense bayleaf flavour so much we even use actual bay branches on a particular type of meat skewers. The bay branches are used as the skewers and carry a similar flavour that almost overpowers the taste of the meat.
Love the sheet pan pancakes ides
Great video, always supprised by the new recipes.
The other thing you can do with a sheet pancake is freeze the portions and then microwave for 20-30 seconds or so and voila! Instant weekday breakfast!
I cook sausages with water too. But I add the water first, then simmer till it evaporates
Hey Barry.
For a video idea you should cook some meals that include bay leafs and then do the exact same meals but without the bay leaves and then see if they taste the same or different to see is bay leaves actually do something
Haha yep, deffo!
Sheet pancake looked amazing and the eggs sounded interesting!
I like to take frozen fruit (blueberries or cherries are my favorite) and put into sweetened vanilla almond milk. Makes the milk slushy. Nice treat after being out in the desert heat.
Yesss, that’s one of my favourite breakfasts/snacks too! Especially in the summer. 🤤
Baked pancakes is a common recepie in Sweden called thick pancake
I have eaten it sins i was a kid and my parents ate it when they were young as well
Feel sorry for Mrs B regards camping after Barry potentially eating all those boiled eggs 💨😆
That Hershey's Smore's rack is just a bbq burger rack, I have a couple of them, they are pretty handy but have to be careful with burgers because if they're too thick, the wire esh embeds into them and they get stuck
Everything looks so yummy. I might have to try them
I’m stuck in bed unable to move because my back has gone and I wish I had a tray of pancakes right now! Bet you could make those and freeze them and get a slice out each night for the following morning!?
Sorry to hear that and yep you deffo could freeze!
Tell your sis to put a half cup of water or so in when she starts instead of the end, then boil it off. That gets the heat into them early, and no oil splatter worries. That's actually the "proper" way to make longanisa, and works well for bangers too.
Recently saw a bay leaf taste test...make stock both with and without it an then see if you (and the crew) can notice any difference.
Another really interesting and engaging vlog.
'That is good quality' you just have to love Chloe
According to the directions when cooking Jimmy Dean package sausages (I think it's Jimmy Dean) put 2 tablespoon of water in the pan with the sausages, cover, and when water is gone lift cover and cook until golden brown. Regardless of the brand I always add a little water. I don't live in Kentucky I live in Arizona.
When he bit into the egg I hoped he would say, “I really taste that bay leaf” lol
Long time subscriber and viewer; I love your reactions and honesty.
We normally cook hotdogs/sausages in water first then add oil to fry once the water evaporates 😁 it makes sure the inside is cooked and the outside crispy 😁
Blend that serial up I bet it would taste amazing aswell
Love that idea
I made the sheet pan pancakes a few months ago, lovely fresh out the oven then pour some warmed maple syrup on them.
Great idea!
Another great vid. Love this channel
How could you use self rising flour instead of the plain? Just only add soda, no powder or salt??
For the pancake things
Wonder if you can roll up the pancake with strawberry jam and make a swiss roll pancake!
Boiled /cooked potatoes mixed with those spicy /masala boiled eggs are epic 🔥🔥🎊🥰🥰💯
Chewing on bay leaves works like a valium
Cool, I did tag you in a Tiktok video last week with some more. How is Boston in the heat?
What if you make the ice from the coconut water?
Barry the pre mixing for the dry ingredients usually is because yeast and salt dont go together salt kills yeast so you put salt on one side of the bowl and yeast on the other even if its dry yeast then first mix 1 side slightly and then the other then mix together this is to prevent the salt from killing the yeast
That fruity bit of a cake has a solid name. It is called Bublanina here in Slovakia :))))
Haha I love how the sheet pan pancake "recipe" is literally just baking a sheet cake.
Hi Barry and all the Lewises wherever they may be. I make a wonderful fish dish with one of those 'Hershey's smore makers" I marinate the fish in a nice sauce for an hour or so or overnight and then roast it over the open fire delicious and very easy (you can also use a grill of course or the oven) love the vids Jim Mexico
Way to go ! Three wins 👍👍👍
Yes, not always the case!
I have never heard of putting water into a pan to "cook sausages through"? That also seems incredibly dangerous due to hot oil, a heat source, and water?
My mum is a nightmare for over cooking meat to make sure it is "safe", she also genuinely hates seasoning so she never uses it, drives me crazy
I think she's got her wires crossed. I went to a food festival once and there was a BBQ cooking demonstration. It was suggested that if you're worried about burnt outsides and raw middles then boil the sausages first, you don't lose much flavour and they'll be cooked through. You then bbq (or fry) them for colour, being boiled also means they'll be more juicy. I think that makes more sense than lobbing a jug of water into a pan of hot oil!!
I've actually heard of the technique quite a bit. You "boil" (essentially braise) the sausages in a small quantity of water, then fry off the skins once the water has boiled off. If you don't use any additional oil it works "okay" -- but honestly I've taken to oven roasting my sausages and they do SO MUCH BETTER.
If your oil is that hot that food’s gotta be burned to hell anyway…
I regularly add water to a frying pan to e.g. soften carrots after giving them a nice toasted outside.
@@andykey78 See, that makes sense and i totally get it, but chucking in a cup of water to already over cooked sausages, sitting in a vat of oil, over an open heat source? Do not get that at all and think it is a major safety risky while factually doing nothing haha
@@lauradi308 No but that's backwards to what his sister is doing, it's also not the reason she states she does it. The way she does it is needlessly dangerous and does nothing. But yeah i usually like to oven roast sausages too, crispier skin and just taste nicer haha
These looks glorious and even pretty! I bet you’d really enjoy Taiwanese style soy sauce eggs. Have a look at a recipe
I put pancake batter into cupcake tins for homemade pancake bites.
As for “nature’s cereal” I’d throw all of the ingredients into my blender and make a smoothie-seems easier than eating it like cereal.
Oooh! Would love a camping gadget sesh, I used to go camping a lot as a kid.
I mean if you eat beef stew, and make it with just pepper, rosemary, thyme and bayleaf with your stock, onions and beef. You can definitely taste the bayleaf. Also rosemary is the main ingredient in beef stew, in case you were confused.
Use your s'more maker to cook fish. I use mine on the grill.
Nature's cereal?! Ah yes, the famously non-natural food, cereal.
i like the fruit bowl. looks expensive though
Mythical Kitchen did a test with the bay leaf, it just adds some good flavor. Try making 2 pots of rice that are identical but one has a bay leaf in it. The rice with the bay leaf just tastes.... better?
the sheet pan pancakes are the normal way to make pancakes in Finland at least.
Since when is fruit salad nature's cereal? Lmao these gen z kids are something else. Also I've been making pancakes in the oven since I was a child lol
Hiya Barry! I like the pancake recipe, but is there one that is gluten free? Thank you for the video!!!
Just use a gluten free flour in place of the regular flour. Lots of great one to one replacement for regular flour these days, check out bobs red mill
I have to add a bay leaf to my beef barkey soup...crucial ingredient
ahh natures cereal, or in an alternate universe (well the UK) fruit salad, just needs some evap milk and it would be perfect ;)
Baked pancakes you say, how to make them you say, yes and yes please.
Quick hack for you shelling hard boiled eggs in quantity 6 boiled eggs in a tupperware dish about half inch of water, put lid on shake and the shells come off
I reckon that fruit wb nice blended
The egg dish is actually a rendition to the classic Chinese Dish Tiger Eggs.
Frying the egg like that is common in Indian cooking. My wife had made it many times. Much better if you slice in half, put the flat side down, and let it get a little crisp from frying in the sauce.