Baby Led Weaning

Growing healthy babies with healthy appetites

Hub2dee's Porridge Pancakes

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Hub2dee is a chap, although I didn’t immediately twig that. He posts on Mumsnet (and he’s not even a mum… they are very lax about these sort of things.)

Ingredients
Porridge oats
Milk (cow, soya, formula, breast, whatever!)
Optional extras: raisins, dried apricots, dried prunes, grated cheese

Anyway, there had been some discussion on Mumsnet of the Glaswegian tradition of lining a kitchen drawer with baking parchment and pouring leftover porridge into it to be eaten later when it had set. Much of the discussion had centred, most irritatingly, around the ‘grossness’ of such a practice, to which I should have replied that if you were devastatingly poor, oppressed by slum landlords and working a hard day in a shipyard you maybe weren’t so precious about these sorts of things but I didn’t cos I was too chicken.

Anyway, Hub2dee went away and thought about this recipe in the context of Baby Led Weaning, bless him, and came up with this fantastic ‘recipe’ for porridge pancakes. There aren’t any measurements, it’s a bit trial and error-tastic but the babies love them. I’ve posted a photo of Babybear enjoying some in the Photos folder.

Basically, put a thin layer (oh I don’t know, 4mm deep) of porridge oats into a round flat bowl (I have a tupperware which fits the bill and has a lid for keeping in the fridge, hurrah.)

Then add enough expressed breast milk or water to cover. If you are formula feeding then you can do as I do and add a scoop of formula powder to the mix before adding the water. Give it a wee stir, smooth over and stick it in the microwave for about a minute, sometimes more, sometimes less. Depends on your bowl, your microwave and your baby’s personal taste.

You should be left with a solid pancake that looks a bit dried-out and flap-jacky on the top. DO NOT touch it or fanny about with it, leave it alone, it needs to cool and set.

I tend to make one up at night before I go to bed then stick it in the fridge, so that when we get up I can peel it (well, it really is just the skin of the porridge which I appreciate is un petit peu gross) and cut it into segments and feed it to the baby.

Apparently you can add things to the porridge, cheese, fruit etc, but I think I like the simplicity of the original recipe. We made it with cheese once and the baby ate it but I thought it was a bit stinky and it fell apart more easily. Oh, and if I’m making some to go out I don’t bother with the milk.

As you know I don’t yet have much of a clue about allergies (phew) but I believe that although oats do contain gluten it’s not the freaky-deaky coeliac disease kind so I use these as a bread substitute. You can spread Philly or hummus on them to your heart’s desire.

Post Script

We have recently discovered that the desirability of the porridge pancake is entirely dependant on the quality and nature of the porridge. We had been using some fancy-schmantzy organic oats from Sainsbury’s to make them and they turned out brilliantly, all light and porridgey but still held together well. Cut to the horror of the Scott’s Porage Oat… a Jock classic and I’m ashamed to admit absolutely keech for making these pancakes. The oats seem to be five times as large as the ones from Sainsbury’s and so they fall apart immediately. They don’t even seem to absorb the milk that well, and as for the mess… one porridge pancake can wreak absolute devastation and havoc… they’re going back in the cupboard for Anzac biscuits and I’m going back to Sainsbury’s as soon as I get a minute.

Post Post Script.

Where does it say on the recipe that you should cover the dish with clingfilm? Nowhere, that’s where. Yet one of the mothers who most complained that she could not get this recipe to work has just sent me this image as evidence. Can you spot the mistake, pancake fans?

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Hub2dee’s Porridge Pancakes

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Hub2dee is a chap, although I didn’t immediately twig that. He posts on Mumsnet (and he’s not even a mum… they are very lax about these sort of things.)

Ingredients
Porridge oats
Milk (cow, soya, formula, breast, whatever!)
Optional extras: raisins, dried apricots, dried prunes, grated cheese

Anyway, there had been some discussion on Mumsnet of the Glaswegian tradition of lining a kitchen drawer with baking parchment and pouring leftover porridge into it to be eaten later when it had set. Much of the discussion had centred, most irritatingly, around the ‘grossness’ of such a practice, to which I should have replied that if you were devastatingly poor, oppressed by slum landlords and working a hard day in a shipyard you maybe weren’t so precious about these sorts of things but I didn’t cos I was too chicken.

Anyway, Hub2dee went away and thought about this recipe in the context of Baby Led Weaning, bless him, and came up with this fantastic ‘recipe’ for porridge pancakes. There aren’t any measurements, it’s a bit trial and error-tastic but the babies love them. I’ve posted a photo of Babybear enjoying some in the Photos folder.

Basically, put a thin layer (oh I don’t know, 4mm deep) of porridge oats into a round flat bowl (I have a tupperware which fits the bill and has a lid for keeping in the fridge, hurrah.)

Then add enough expressed breast milk or water to cover. If you are formula feeding then you can do as I do and add a scoop of formula powder to the mix before adding the water. Give it a wee stir, smooth over and stick it in the microwave for about a minute, sometimes more, sometimes less. Depends on your bowl, your microwave and your baby’s personal taste.

You should be left with a solid pancake that looks a bit dried-out and flap-jacky on the top. DO NOT touch it or fanny about with it, leave it alone, it needs to cool and set.

I tend to make one up at night before I go to bed then stick it in the fridge, so that when we get up I can peel it (well, it really is just the skin of the porridge which I appreciate is un petit peu gross) and cut it into segments and feed it to the baby.

Apparently you can add things to the porridge, cheese, fruit etc, but I think I like the simplicity of the original recipe. We made it with cheese once and the baby ate it but I thought it was a bit stinky and it fell apart more easily. Oh, and if I’m making some to go out I don’t bother with the milk.

As you know I don’t yet have much of a clue about allergies (phew) but I believe that although oats do contain gluten it’s not the freaky-deaky coeliac disease kind so I use these as a bread substitute. You can spread Philly or hummus on them to your heart’s desire.

Post Script

We have recently discovered that the desirability of the porridge pancake is entirely dependant on the quality and nature of the porridge. We had been using some fancy-schmantzy organic oats from Sainsbury’s to make them and they turned out brilliantly, all light and porridgey but still held together well. Cut to the horror of the Scott’s Porage Oat… a Jock classic and I’m ashamed to admit absolutely keech for making these pancakes. The oats seem to be five times as large as the ones from Sainsbury’s and so they fall apart immediately. They don’t even seem to absorb the milk that well, and as for the mess… one porridge pancake can wreak absolute devastation and havoc… they’re going back in the cupboard for Anzac biscuits and I’m going back to Sainsbury’s as soon as I get a minute.

Post Post Script.

Where does it say on the recipe that you should cover the dish with clingfilm? Nowhere, that’s where. Yet one of the mothers who most complained that she could not get this recipe to work has just sent me this image as evidence. Can you spot the mistake, pancake fans?

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French Toast/Eggy Bread

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Right, so at nearly eleven months we have finally dived in on the egg eventually (partly in an effort to ‘bind’ my poor daughter’s poo back to some sort of solidity, I admit). We are big fans of French toast in this household, but only, and I mean only, made with Scottish Plain bread.

If you think you’ve tasted white bread before, think again, for they don’t some any whiter than a plain loaf, in all its doughy, burnt-crusted gorgeousness. Stupid foofy cotton wool bread tastes weird with egg, I think, so try to get the doughiest loaf you can.

Obviously you know how to make it, just crack a couple of eggs into a dish large enough for your bread, fling in the slices and then prick with a fork so that it better absorbs the egg. Once you are satisfied that the bread is suitably eggy, drop it into some warmed olive oil in a frying pan and fry it until golden-ish. Some people eat this with sugar but they are mostly American. I’m strictly savoury myself.

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Mashed Banana on Toast

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

OK, so not really a recipe as such, but she loves this – it is rather messy though, so only for fays when you are feeling really strong!

Ingredients
2 slices of toast
1 mashed banana

Directions
Spread mashed banana over toasted bread , slice into soldiers, hand to baby – stand back …

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