

Here's another view. The first time we went there were children flying kites with their parents; I felt like I was in the English countryside. Anyway, for Christmas last year Ami (Eric's mom) gave me a popover pan that she had bought at the Pond House's gift shop, along with the restaurant's cookbook that included their famous popover recipe. I was so excited and I couldn't wait to try making popovers of my own!
For those of you who have never had a popover, they're like an eggy biscuit, almost like a dutch baby in a muffin form. They're pretty much hollow on the inside, and oh so yummy with jam. This is the popover pan. After Christmas I tried several times to make them (using the cookbook's recipe), but was unsuccessful. I couldn't get them to pop over the tins like they're supposed to. I looked up several recipes online, and everyone had their own versions of the recipe, but I couldn't find anything that worked.

Popovers
2 large eggs, room temperature
1 C whole milk, room temperature
1 C flour
1 T unsalted butter, melted
1 1/2 t salt
Preheat oven to 400 degrees, and butter or oil popover pan. Make sure the oven is heated and the pan is buttered before mixing popover ingredients. Put all ingredients in a blender and blend for 30 seconds. Immediately pour into prepared pan, filling each cup only halfway. Cook for 40 minutes. Do NOT open the oven door until 40 minutes is up. Then remove popovers and slice each one at the top with a knife so they don't deflate. Enjoy!
3 comments:
Alright - I'm headed to Boise RIGHT NOW so you can make me some of those! Yum!
I'm glad you found a recipe that worked. I'm excited to try them. They look, oh, so yummy!
I love popovers! I found an easy recipe similar to yours in one of my cookbooks and went through a phase of making them a lot :) I never really knew what to eat them with, though... maybe I'll try them with jam and hot chocolate this winter.
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