Banana-stuffed pancakes with coco jam

October 12, 2007 | The breakfast club | Print This Post Print This Post

Coco jam was a term I would never have recognized as a child although I gorged myself with it. I knew coco jam as “latik” back then. My grandmother always had a jar of latik somewhere and I would often get a spoon, scoop the thing from the jar and eat the sweet, sticky jam off the spoon. I bought a jar of coco jam several weeks ago just on a whim. I don’t spread coco jam on bread — it tastes funny. I was inspecting the jars in the fridge yesterday when inspiration hit me.

banana-stuffed pancakes with coco jam

Inspired by the crepes a la mode at Bliss Cafe in Baguio City, I decided to make a very Filipino pancake breakfast — stuffed with slices of sweet bananas that had been tossed in kalamansi juice and sprinkled with ground cinnamon, and drizzled with coco jam.

This recipe makes four large pancakes.

Ingredients:

For the pancakes:

2 eggs
1-1/4 cups of milk
1-1/4 cups of all-purpose flour
1 tsp. of baking powder
4 tbsps. of white sugar
2 tbsps. of melted butter

4 large ripe bananas (I recommend the lakatan variety)
1 tbsp. of kalamansi or lemon juice
1/2 tsp. of ground cinammon
as much coco jam as you like :)

Beat the eggs in a mixing bowl. Pour in the milk and butter, and stir well.

In another bowl, stir together the flour, sugar and baking powder. Add to the egg-milk-butter mixture and mix until smooth.

Pour enough batter into a non-stick pan to cover about three-fourths of the bottom. Twirl the pan to allow the batter to spread. You want the pancakes to be really thin so that you can fold them in half without cracking.

Cook the pancake until lightly browned on the underside. Flip to brown the opposite side. Lift with a spatula, transfer to a plate and fold in half.

Repeat until all the batter has been used.

Keep the pancakes warm.

Peel and slice the bananas into rings. Place the sliced bananas in a bowl, pour the kalamansi or lemon juice over them and toss lightly. You’re adding a sour juice for two reasons: 1) it prevents the bananas from getting discolored (they do darken once exposed to air) and 2) to create a contrast with the sweetness of the coco jam.

Take one pancake and unfold. Arrange banana slices on half of the pancake. Sprinkle with a little ground cinnamon. Fold the pancake. Do the same for the rest of the pancakes.

Dip a spoon into the jar of coco jam. Left then position over the prepared pancake. Let the ribbons of coco jam fall on pancakes and around it. Enjoy with a hot cup of coffee. :)

Bookmark at:
StumbleUpon | Digg | Del.icio.us | Newsvine | Spurl | Furl | Reddit | Yahoo! MyWeb

In the mood for more food? Try these!

Except for personal use, or as legitimate RSS feeds with link back to this page, NO PART OF THIS ENTRY MAY BE REPRODUCED IN ANY MANNER, whether individually or as part of a collection, without the owner's PRIOR written permission. This blog is a FREE service. Help maintain it by respecting the author's copyright.

Some entries have multiple pages. Most recipes are on page 2; others, on page 3 or 4. Click on the pagination links to view them.

Some entries DO NOT contain recipes.

Sorry, I don't e-mail recipes. However, you may opt to receive a weekly summary of recent Pinoy Cook food articles and recipes by using the form below.






Comments

4 Responses to “Banana-stuffed pancakes with coco jam”

  1. Luz on October 13th, 2007 7:07 am

    Hi Connie,Can I use saging na saba the one I use for turon?

  2. Connie on October 13th, 2007 10:30 am

    Oh, I don’t think so. Unless you can eat saba raw.

  3. SusanV on October 14th, 2007 2:24 am

    This looks delicious! It’s nice to see kalamansi juice (calamondin in my part of the world) used.

  4. Jaimie on April 29th, 2008 7:34 am

    love your site tlga!! can’t wait to try this recipe since ito ung isa sa mga pinaglihian ko.PANCAKES!

    i’ve been looking for a recipe for pancakes na traditonal kasi diba ung nsa market, instant ung batter, just-add-water type.

    you really help a lot of cook-wanna-be’s! haha!

Leave a Reply





Readers


House on a hill

Sunset at the beach


Conflikto talking to Magnifiko: an art exhibit by 21 of the finest young Filipino artists today, at Blue Wings Art Space, #10 Xavierville Avenue, Quezon City, above Rafa's Deli-cafe

Rasa Malaysia: Food, cooking, travel, recipes

Pinoy Cook is using Revolution, a premium Wordpress theme by Brian Gardner

Credits

Connie Veneracion reserves all rights over the content of Pinoy Cook. No reproduction without prior written permission. RSS feeds are for reading, not for republication. For budding food bloggers and forum contributors, please document your own cooking and stop copy/pasting my blog entries.