Dorayaki with Chestnut Filling
- 100 grams Cake flour
- 1 tsp Black pepper
- 2 Eggs
- 1 dash A. Salt
- 65 grams A. Sugar
- 10 grams A. Honey
- 2 tbsp Milk
- 1 Chestnut cream made with chestnuts simmered in their inner skins
- 1 Chestnuts simmered in their inner skins
- Sift the cake flour and baking powder together.
- Add the "A" ingredients to the eggs, and beat with a hand mixer until it's pale and thick.
- Add sifted flour and baking powder, and fold it in with a rubber spatula.
- Add milk, and mix until the batter is smooth and creamy.
- Adjust the amount of milk added depending on how thick the batter is.
- (If the batter is too thick, it will be hard to handle when you're cooking.)
- Thinly spread a frying pan with oil and heat over low heat.
- Put in the batter in 1 heaping tablespoon portions to form 6 cm diameter pancakes.
- Cook the pancakes over low heat until they are beautifully browned, then turn over and cook the other side.
- (They are basically cooked just like pancakes.)
- They are very nicely browned.
- I could get 20 pancakes out of the amount of batter made with the ingredients listed.
- These are the paste fillings I used this time.
- From the upper left going clockwise: Chestnut paste made out of chestnuts cooked in their inner skins, tsubu-an, kabocha squash-an , sweet potato-an, gyuuhi (sweet mochi dough), and chestnuts cooked in their inner skins (cut up).
- Here I mixed the chestnut paste with the cut up chestnuts cooked in their inner skins as filling.
- I copied the sweet potato dorayaki made by another COOKPAD member, "sweet," and used sweet potato-an, gyuuhi and tsubu-an on this dorayaki.
- This one has kabocha squash-an and tsubu-an.
- I made a fancy array of 10 dorayaki, all with different fillings.
- Wrap the assembled dorayaki in plastic wrap to prevent them from drying out.
- (The photo here shows a chestnut filled dorayaki cut in half.)
flour, black pepper, eggs, salt, sugar, honey, milk, cream made, chestnuts
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/168083-dorayaki-with-chestnut-filling (may not work)