By Kara Elder
Serbian Croatian Pancakes (Palacinke)
Active: 45 mins | Total: 45 mins, plus resting time | Servings: 4
Photos by Birch Thomas |
Sometimes a recipe is more than a set of instructions for a certain dish. It’s a gateway to something
else — a person or place that existed once, but is now gone. It doesn’t matter if infinite iterations
exist, or even if the method has changed over time.
For Robbie Tutlewski, the chef and owner behind Little Donna’s catering in Washington, D.C. (who
is also working on opening a restaurant by the same name), The Recipe happens to be one of the
first things he learned to cook: palacinke, a thin style of pancake that belongs in the large canon of
such griddled goods as blini and crepes. “Palacinke are the Serbian Croatian version,” Tutlewski
says. “This and pierogi were the first things I made with my grandmother.”
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is also working on opening a restaurant by the same name), The Recipe happens to be one of the
first things he learned to cook: palacinke, a thin style of pancake that belongs in the large canon of
such griddled goods as blini and crepes. “Palacinke are the Serbian Croatian version,” Tutlewski
says. “This and pierogi were the first things I made with my grandmother.”
-
Photos by Birch Thomas |
Both of his grandparents moved to the United States around World War II — his grandfather from
Warsaw, after the war, and his grandmother, Donna, from Zagreb, the capital of what is now
Croatia, before. Though Donna Tutlewski was just 4 1/2 feet tall (hence the designation “Little
Donna,” by Tutlewski’s sister, Jill), she was a force, always making enough food to feed her family
in Gary, Ind., and then some; visitors took home enough for their families, too. Donna let her
grandson cook with her from a young age because, Tutlewski says, she considered his small hands
perfect for making pierogi, pastries and palacinke. Learning to cook from her was like learning
from a chef, he explains; she never sat down and told him how to make palacinke. It was more a
trial by grandmotherly fire: “When I was adding the milk the wrong way, that’s when I got, ‘No, no
don’t add it like that, add it like this.’ We worked the process out together.”
Before arriving in the District in 2017, Tutlewski worked with acclaimed chef Chris Bianco in
Phoenix for six years. “We needed a pasta on our menu in Phoenix, to bake in a wood oven,”
remembers Tutlewski. “Chris is Italian. … His mom makes crespelle, so in my head I’m like, ‘Oh
yeah, we can do that,’ but I’m going to use my palacinke recipe.” His palacinke use a higher ratio of
eggs to flour than the crespelle (the Italian version of the thin pancakes). “The eggs give it more
texture,” Tutlewski says. The Serbian Italian mash-up, with a ricotta-based filling and a simple
tomato sauce, stayed on the Bianco menu for years, and a similar recipe is even in the Pizzeria
Bianco cookbook.
Once in the District, Tutlewski worked at Tail Up Goat before leaving to work on his own concept;
he’s at Big Bear Cafe, where he hopes to start a pop-up version of Little Donna’s, along with a
wood-fired pizza stand on Sundays during the farmers market season.
Phoenix for six years. “We needed a pasta on our menu in Phoenix, to bake in a wood oven,”
remembers Tutlewski. “Chris is Italian. … His mom makes crespelle, so in my head I’m like, ‘Oh
yeah, we can do that,’ but I’m going to use my palacinke recipe.” His palacinke use a higher ratio of
eggs to flour than the crespelle (the Italian version of the thin pancakes). “The eggs give it more
texture,” Tutlewski says. The Serbian Italian mash-up, with a ricotta-based filling and a simple
tomato sauce, stayed on the Bianco menu for years, and a similar recipe is even in the Pizzeria
Bianco cookbook.
Photos by Birch Thomas |
he’s at Big Bear Cafe, where he hopes to start a pop-up version of Little Donna’s, along with a
wood-fired pizza stand on Sundays during the farmers market season.
“I’ve worked in a lot of kitchens where I’m passing this recipe on to someone, and they think it’s
crazy: They’re like, why aren’t you using a fork, why aren’t you using a blender, why is the milk still
warm?” He prefers to mix with fingers swirling directly in the batter — which also makes it easy to
break up large flour clumps — though you can use a fork if you are gentle. A blender would
introduce too much air and make the texture too smooth, too one-note. The milk is added warm so
that the eggs start to cook and thicken — just a little bit — without curdling. A small pinch of
freshly grated nutmeg means the pancakes can lean savory or sweet.
crazy: They’re like, why aren’t you using a fork, why aren’t you using a blender, why is the milk still
warm?” He prefers to mix with fingers swirling directly in the batter — which also makes it easy to
break up large flour clumps — though you can use a fork if you are gentle. A blender would
introduce too much air and make the texture too smooth, too one-note. The milk is added warm so
that the eggs start to cook and thicken — just a little bit — without curdling. A small pinch of
freshly grated nutmeg means the pancakes can lean savory or sweet.
Do you have a sourdough starter? If so, add a spoonful (ripe or not) to
the batter, too. “It’ll caramelize a bit more without having to add
sugar to it,” the chef says. He recommends you let the mixture rest for
at least a few hours, but you can make them right away, or, better yet,
keep the batter for up to five days in your refrigerator, then let it
come to room temperature for an hour.
This recipe
feels tailor-made for our reality, when some staple ingredients are hard
to come by and you need to stretch everything to somehow make more
meals. It uses just two eggs and a quarter cup of any type of flour.
“Work with what you have and see how the dough reacts,” he suggests.
“This is a recipe that’s very giving.”
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As
for fillings, any number of leftovers or odds and ends would do,
including roasted vegetables, sliced roast beef, mashed beans or saucy
shredded chicken. “I like eating them wrapped around ricotta. It’s like a
little gift,” says Tutlewski. “Every time I make these, it starts a
conversation.”
For
something celebratory, mix together chopped kale or spinach, a few
eggs, ricotta, some nutmeg, chopped basil, a little Parm, salt and
pepper, and use that mixture to fill each pancake. Spoon tomato sauce
into the bottom of a baking dish, add the filled palacinke, then top the
bundles with more sauce and bake for about 20 minutes at 425 degrees,
until the whole dish is bubbling and crisp around the edges. Serve it
with a simple salad; you’ll hardly need anything else.
RECIPE
Serbian Croatian Pancakes (Palacinke)
2/3 cup (180 milliliters) whole milk
2 tablespoons (30 grams) unsalted butter
2 large eggs
1/4 cup (37 grams) all-purpose flour, or other type of flour
1 pinch kosher salt
1 small pinch freshly cracked black pepper
1 pinch freshly ground nutmeg
1 to 2 teaspoons clarified butter or neutral oil, for cooking
1 to 2 tablespoons water, if needed
Step 1
In
a small saucepan over medium heat, warm the milk and butter, stirring a
few times, just until the butter melts. (Do not let the milk bubble.)
Remove from the heat and set aside for 2 minutes. (Alternately, you can
warm the milk and melt the butter in the microwave in 15-second bursts.)
In
a small bowl, using a fork, very lightly stir the eggs just to break
them up; do not whip too much air into them. Gradually, add the warm
milk and butter, stirring to combine. The eggs might start to cook a
little, but they shouldn’t curdle. (If they do, you can strain the
batter later.)
Step 2
Put
the flour in a medium bowl, then slowly pour in the milk-egg mixture,
stirring gently with a fork. Stir in the salt, pepper and nutmeg. The
batter should have the consistency of heavy cream. If needed, strain the
batter through a fine-mesh sieve to remove any large clumps.
Cover
the bowl with a clean kitchen towel and set aside for at least 30
minutes and up to 6 hours at room temperature, or refrigerate overnight
in an airtight container. If you’ve refrigerated the batter, let it set
at room temperature for about 1 hour before proceeding.
Step 3
When
ready to cook, lightly stir the batter and have a clean, damp kitchen
towel at the ready. In a 7- or 8-inch nonstick skillet over medium heat,
melt 1 teaspoon of the clarified butter (or heat 1 teaspoon of the oil
until shimmering). Pour about 3 tablespoons of the batter into the pan
as you tilt the pan in a circular motion, coating the surface evenly and
going up the sides about 1/2 inch. Your first pancake may turn out
lumpy.
Step 4
Cook
the pancake for about 1 to 2 minutes; as the pancake cooks, its surface
should be shiny, taut and slightly rippled. (If tiny bubbles appear on
the surface of your pancake, the pan is a little too hot.) When the
pancake is ready to be flipped, its edges will be lacy and the bottom
light brown. Loosen the edges with a spatula, then flip to cook the
other side for 30 seconds to 1 minute. (If you want to fill and bake the
palacinke, cook them to a pale golden color. If you want to eat them
without baking, you can let them go until they’re a patchy bronze.)
Step 5
Transfer
to a flat surface to cool. If you’d like a thinner pancake, stir 1 to 2
tablespoons water into the batter. If your pan was too hot, set it on
the damp towel for a few seconds to quickly cool it down before
proceeding. (Add more butter or oil to the skillet only if the palacinke
begin to stick.)
Repeat
with the remaining batter; if tiny bubbles keep appearing, keep
adjusting the heat. As you turn out finished pancakes, lay them out
separately on a flat surface for about 5 minutes before stacking them on
a plate (otherwise they may stick together).
From food writer Kara Elder.
Tested by Kara Elder and Olga Massov; email questions to voraciously@washpost.com.
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