{"id":877,"date":"2010-01-26T06:11:00","date_gmt":"2010-01-26T06:11:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/elitemporaryblog.wordpress.com\/2010\/01\/26\/the-very-definition"},"modified":"2016-02-15T21:44:57","modified_gmt":"2016-02-16T02:44:57","slug":"the-very-definition","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/orangette.net\/2010\/01\/the-very-definition\/","title":{"rendered":"The very definition"},"content":{"rendered":"

I am bad at weekend mornings. I hear that some people, maybe even a lot of people, have weekend mornings that involve a hot breakfast, hot coffee, the Sunday Times<\/span>, and hours that pass slowly, quietly, as though on tiptoe, but I am not familiar with that kind of weekend morning. I like mornings a lot, but I am not good at planned relaxation, and I married someone who is similarly impaired. We went to visit his grandparents in Florida over New Year\u2019s, and we were very tired and verging on sick, but instead of reading books, lying on the beach, or whatever one does on vacation in Florida, we wound up kayaking in the Everglades<\/a>. With alligators. (To be fair, it was my father-in-law\u2019s idea. Relaxation impairment is a genetic trait.)<\/p>\n

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\nAnyway, my weekend mornings are, by and large, identical to my weekday mornings. They involve cold cereal, a glass of water, and hours that pass quickly, unceremoniously, while I am busy doing whatever I happen to be doing. I know that this is just how I am, but I don\u2019t like it. I feel somehow that it is deeply wrong. I want to do better. I want to make more oatmeal pancakes.<\/p>\n

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\nI first ate these particular oatmeal pancakes when I was seven, I want to say, when one of my uncles got married in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. We stayed at the Inn at Fordhook Farm, a hotel on the private property of the Burpee family, of the Burpee Seed Company. I remember little of the wedding, except for the fact that my uncle\u2019s fianc\u00e9e was an incredible woman, beautiful, a Presbyterian minister with poufy blond hair and a great laugh, and that her sister was beautiful too, and that they fascinated me. I thought they were perfect in every way. My uncle\u2019s fianc\u00e9e, the woman who became my aunt, passed away about a dozen years later, and when I think of her, I remember her just like that, like she was at her wedding. I also remember that the Inn at Fordhood Farm served oatmeal pancakes for breakfast, and that my entire family went crazy for them.<\/p>\n

My mother must have asked for the recipe, because somehow we came home with a copy of it, and my mother isn\u2019t the stealing type. She made them a couple of times, but I was unmoved. I liked them at the inn, but at home, I wanted our usual family pancake, by which I mean Bisquick. I was a kid, you know? But a couple of years ago, I thought of them again, and I asked her for the recipe. I made them, and I liked them quite a bit, although, to be dead honest, I found them a little bland. They also had what can only be described as an odd amount of cinnamon: not enough to bring a real flavor, but too much to ignore. Anyway, I was not sold. But<\/span>, a month ago, on a whim and I don\u2019t know why, I decided to try AGAIN. This time, I left out the cinnamon, doubled the salt, and lo and behold, I too am now crazy. (For the pancakes.) (Just to clarify.)<\/p>\n

In the weekends since, I\u2019ve already made these pancakes three times. I also made coffee! We even had a friend over to eat with us, which is the very definition of Fine Weekend Morning, even though that particular friend, our friend Ryan, happened to be staying in our basement at the time, so we didn\u2019t exactly have him over<\/span>, but still. I\u2019m tempted to say that I\u2019m on a weekend morning roll. Though that might be optimistic.<\/p>\n

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\nEither way, these pancakes have won a spot in my repertoire. Not only do I like to eat them, but I love<\/span> the process of making them. It starts the night before, when you measure out some oats, pile them into a bowl, and then pour a decent amount of buttermilk on top. This mixture sits in the fridge overnight, during which time the oats plump and swell and go soft, the perfect base for a winter pancake. (This overnight step means that you do have to plan ahead, which takes spontaneity out of the equation, but if you\u2019re me, it\u2019s nice, because once you\u2019ve got your oats soaking, you\u2019re locked in, and you won\u2019t wake up lazy and eat cereal instead.) To the soaked oats you add melted butter and a couple of beaten eggs, and then you stir in some flour, leavening, a little sugar, and salt, and what you get is a great, great pancake: gently sweet the way oats are, impossibly moist, hearty but not heavy, not light but not leaden, lovely. They fry up to a handsome shade of gold, and fresh out of the pan, their outer edges have a thin, lacy crunch that dissipates in a matter of minutes, so get on it.<\/p>\n\n

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Recipe<\/div>\n

Oatmeal Pancakes<\/h2>\n

Adapted from the Inn at Fordhook Farm<\/h3> \n \n <\/header>\n\n
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