

Tomorrow morning I am cooking the family crepes using your recipe.
Moderators: AArdvark, Ice Cream Jonsey
From viewing some other videos I discovered that one of the things you can do to get really thin crepes is to use a frying pan rather than a grill. Pour the batter in, moving the pan around and just barely coat the pan. You'll get very thin crepes as opposed to pancake-style.Flack wrote:Tomorrow morning I am cooking the family crepes using your recipe.
Great minds think alike, Flack. That is the exact same recipe from the same website that I used to make the crepes in the video!Flack wrote:I ended up using this recipe:
http://allrecipes.com//Recipe/basic-crepes/Detail.aspx
What I have found out about crepes is that nobody really likes crepes. People just like crepe toppings. I tried to get a video of my kids eating crepes this morning but all I got was footage of them putting cherry pie filling and pancake syrup all over overthing and then eating that.
Flack, you've had kids and I haven't, but you seem to be totally clueless about an important part of a child's diet. A kid will eat anything if you put enough sugar - or sugar equivalent like syrup - over it.Flack wrote:I tried to get a video of my kids eating crepes this morning but all I got was footage of them putting cherry pie filling and pancake syrup all over overthing and then eating that.
For finiky eaters, you have to try to encourage them to try new things. Bribery may be useful. You give very small portions, enough to taste, you tell them to try it, if they don't like it they don't have to eat it.Flack wrote:My son (9) will only eat a few foods, and on some days, he won't even eat those. He's one of those kids that wants a corn dog when we go to a Mexican restaurant. My daughter (5) will eat just about anything (she recently tried sushi with wasabi).