Brown Butter Pancakes with No-Churn Chestnut Ice Cream

Brown Butter Pancakes with No-Churn Chestnut Ice Cream

brown butter pancakes

There’s no better way to celebrate Autumn than with hot, crispy-edged brown butter pancakes and chestnuts!  I’m sure you can feel it… The chill in the air, the leaves crunching under your feet and the sense that everything is ready to go to sleep. Autumn is my absolute favourite time of the year. Snuggly jerseys, copious cups of tea, ridiculous amounts of butter and fluffy socks. There’s also the promise of the Newlands forest floor being covered in mushrooms ready to be plucked – which is, to be honest, my only form of winter exercise. But while I was a tad too early for porcini, on my last forage I stumbled upon chestnuts – loads and loads of chestnuts.

brown butter pancakes

They instantly reminded me of my trip of Italy a few years ago, where standing on a street corner in Venice, freezing cold, I scoffed two paper bags of chestnuts that had been toasted right in front of me over a fire made in a tin can. Casual for Italians, a revelation to me – mostly because my first taste of chestnuts as a child, had been a disaster. My dad had come home one day with an entire bag of prickly green balls and announced triumphantly that we would be toasting them! While much excitement ensued, our enthusiasm didn’t make up for the apparent lack of knowledge of just how to cook them – my mom threw them into the oven with the hard brown shell still on and so we all bit into teeth-breakingly hard nuts. If only Google was around then!

Chestnuts

After that trip to Italy, where I realised that the shell had to be scored with a kiss (an X) before going into the oven, so that the chestnuts split open while roasting, releasing the creamy, sweet nut inside – I was hooked! After roasting you can turn them into a puree which is amazing on pavlovas, in between cakes, cookies or in this deliciously creamy ice cream. I’ve paired it with my favourite Autumn dessert, brown butter pancakes. Another revelation of frying ‘plain’ pancakes in brown butter to make the edges go all crispy (the best bit!). If you can’t find fresh chestnuts, use the tinned chestnut puree which you can find at most delis or online here. Otherwise, simply swap it out for any nut butter – think pecan, almond or cashew. And don’t skip the spiced caramelised nuts – they absolutely make the dish!

Brown butter pancakes

BROWN BUTTER PANCAKES WITH CHESTNUT ICE CREAM AND SPICED PECANS

Serves 4

 

BROWN BUTTER PANCAKES

100g salted butter

125g cake flour

pinch of salt

2 large eggs

250ml milk

 

ICE CREAM

3 cups (750ml) cream

1 cup (250ml) milk

1/2 cup (125ml) icing sugar, sifted

100g tinned sweetened chestnut puree

 

SPICED PECANS

100g pecan nuts

1/4 cup (60ml) brown sugar

1 tsp (5ml) ground cinnamon

 

To make the brown butter pancakes, melt the butter in a small saucepan over medium heat, swirling every now and then, until the butter froths and starts turning brown. It is ready when it smells like toasted nuts. Remove from the heat and set aside to cool slightly. Place the flour and salt in a mixing bowl. Whisk the eggs and milk and whisk into the dry ingredients. Add 2 tablespoons of the brown butter. Allow the batter to stand for 30 minutes. Heat a non-stick frying pan and brush with the brown butter, pour a 1/4 cup of batter into the hot pan and swirl to coat.  When the edges begin to lift, flip over and cook the other side until brown. Repeat with the remaining batter and brown butter.

To make the ice cream, whisk the cream, milk, sugar and chestnut puree together in a large jug. Divide the mixture into two large ziplock bags and seal well. Lay the bags flat and freeze until firm. Break the frozen cream mixture into junks and place it in a blender of food processor – process until the mixture forms a soft serve consistency. Quickly pour into a freezer proof container and freeze until firm.

To make the nuts, place the sugar in a small saucepan or frying pan with 1 tbsp water and heat until golden and caramelised. Add the pecan nuts and stir to coat. Add the cinnamon and keep stirring until the sugar starts crystallizing (you can speed the process up by adding a teaspoonful of brown sugar), once the nuts are coated well, spread onto a lined baking sheet to cool.

Serve the pancakes with a scoop of chestnut ice cream and a sprinkling of the spiced nuts.

 

 

 

TIP Make your own sweetened chestnut puree by roasting 200g shell-on chestnuts; to do this, score an ‘X’ into the flat side of the chestnut and place them on a baking sheet in an oven preheated to 240C for 10 minutes. Allow to cool then peel off the hard shell. Place the chestnuts into a saucepan with 2 cups milk, 1 tsp vanilla (if desired) and simmer until the chestnuts are soft. Add 1/2 cup more milk, 1/4 cup sugar and stir to dissolve. Place the mixture into a food processor and blend until smooth. Strain through a sieve and bottle in sterilized jars to store.

Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

The only thing better than butter is brown butter and it takes this already incredible chocolate chip cookie recipe to a whole different level! I like my choc chip cookies crispy on the outside and gooey on the middle and these are the best of both worlds. Don’t even think about using chocolate chips in this recipe – they’re stabilized to avoid them melting while baking which is exactly what we DON’T want. The chopped chocolate gives you pockets of melty gooey chocolatey bliss. And obviousy the best way to eat them is straight out the oven while they’re warm so time it right and invite some friends over for the occasion(or don’t and just eat them all yourself). Whatever suits you best.

BROWN BUTTER CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES

Makes 24

 

200g salted butter

175g soft brown sugar

165g white sugar

1 tsp vanilla extract

2 tbsp milk

1 large egg

300g cake flour

¼ tsp baking powder

¼ tsp bicarbonate of soda

250g The Kate Tin Dark Baking Chocolate, chopped

 

Preheat oven to 180°C (or 160°C fan-forced). Line two cookie sheets with non-stick baking paper. Melt the butter over a low heat and simmer until it reaches a golden brown colour and starts to smell nutty – about 5 minutes. Quickly remove the brown butter from the heat and pour into a bowl. Refrigerate until the butter has set but is still soft. Place the soft brown butter and both the sugars in the bowl of an electric mixer and cream for 8-10 minutes until pale, creamy and light. Add the vanilla, milk and egg. Add the flour, baking powder, bicarbonate of soda and chopped chocolate and mix to combine. Drop tablespoonfuls of the cookie batter onto the prepared baking trays, leaving enough room for spreading. Bake for 14 minutes or until the edges of the cookies are golden brown but the centre should still be moist.

 

 

 

TIP Never skimp on creaming butter and sugar – it takes a good 8 minutes in a stand mixer to reach a light and fluffy consistency that makes all the difference in baking!