Saturday, 26 January 2013

Kaiserschmarrn


I waited until the final day of our Austrian skiing holiday last February to ask Cowie’s dad if he had any objections to me marrying his younger daughter! It was minus twenty three degrees centigrade and we were sharing a rickety old chair lift somewhere about St. Anton. As the lift reached the top of the mountain I plucked up courage and fortunately David said yes – followed by a comment that will stay with me forever: “As Prince Philip once said – you’ve been practicing long enough”.

Having agreed to keep it a secret until I asked Sarah the following week – we shot off down the mountain in search of our final lunch of the holiday. Feeling giddy and a bit extravagant we finished our meal of spaetzles and schnitzels with an enormous serving of Kaiserschmarrn. It’s a classic Austrian pudding made of fluffy chopped pancakes studded with raisins that is often served with a plum compote. Apparently it was invented for Emperor Franz Joseph and his very hard to please wife who wanted a nice light dessert. It translates as Emperor’s Nonsense which all seems quite appropriate.

With Pancake Day almost upon us and almost a year gone by from when I proposed to Sarah, I thought sharing this Kaiserschmarrn recipe would be rather appropriate. If you felt like taking the nonsense to a new level you could use blackberry or quince jam instead and maybe even add some different nuts. 

Adapted from a BBC recipe

Ingredients

50g butter, softened to butter the pans
175g caster sugar, plus 40g for dusting the pans
4 free-range egg yolks
300g crème fraîche
75ml dark rum
75g plain flour
60g raisins, soaked in rum
8 free-range eggs, whites only
½ tsp cream of tartar
60g icing sugar, for dusting

Method

Butter two ovenproof dishes and then dust with sugar. Cream the egg yolks and 25g sugar with a whisk until smooth. Then beat in the crème fraîche and rum, followed by the flour. Add the rum soaked raisins.

Whisk the egg whites along with the cream of tartare and remaining sugar until you’ve got stiff peaks. 

Then fold the egg whites into the batter and pour into the two pans. Bake for 20 minutes – or until lightly browned and set. Remove from the oven and chop.

Kaiserschmarrn

Then dust with icing sugar and serve with plum compote and whipped cream.

Kaiserschmarrn

Kaiserschmarrn

If you've got any suggestions for recipes for pancake day please let me know. We're more determined than ever to win our annual competition this time round.

7 comments:

Unknown said...

Kaiserschmarrn, love it, I had it on my honeymoon in Austria, no better fluffy pancake exists, it absolutely whoops the dropscone. My love forKaiserschmarrn outlived my marriage, but somethings you can have too much of.

Unknown said...

I love it! I just spent a week in Tirol, were kaiserschmarn are well known as well. I ve never tried to make it by myself - have to change it. bests!

Larry Irvine said...

Ohhhhh - you are brutal. I have not had lunch yet and those pictures almost made me eat my screen! Thanks for the recipe!

Leigh said...

Hell. Yeah.

Michael said...

I love Kaisersscharm! My late wife and I also had it on our Austrian honeymoon many years ago and I now occasionally serve it at my Perth Catering Company. Austria can successfully translate to Australia!

@photorecipe said...

Hi, I loved the place and of course, the dishes. I´ll have to go and enjoy it like you did.

Regards,

Photorecipe

Caroline Taylor said...

I've never heard of kaiserschmarrn, it sounds amazing though.

LinkWithin

Blog Widget by LinkWithin