The week before Christmas in 2022, we were in full-entertaining mode, trying to see all of our friends before we started travelling again. We have been doing more and more brunches, particularly in the winter months when driving at night can be more treacherous. I was hoping to do a simple brunch dish so I could spend more time with friends but then I saw this interesting pancake called Dutch Baby and I had to try it. It’s actually a German invention (think Deutsch) that was translated to Dutch in the states, this simple popover-like batter makes a grand entrance with its golden puffy sides and a lovely custardy-base that is perfect for brunchy-style meals. You can make them either savoury or sweet. I chose to make individual Dutch Babies to hold eggs bennies for a bunch we had just before Christmas. There is a bit of strategy so that everything remains hot and ready for serving but fear not, I have documented my process for you, easy peasy.
Individual Dutch Baby Bennies for Brunch (logistics and all)
A KitchenInspirations Original Recipe
This recipe makes 1 serving, please multiply by the number of people you are serving for your ingredients.
Ingredients:
- 1 large egg
- 63 mL milk
- 31 g flour
- 7 g sugar
- salt
- A smidge of butter for the cast iron pan
Also required per person:
- Hollandaise sauce
- Poached egg
- about 50 g Ham, shaved, room temperature
- Half an Avocado
Directions:
- Preheat the oven to 425° F convection, with the cast iron pan in the oven (place cast onto a rimmed baking sheet). You need to put the pan on the centre rack in the oven.
- In a blender, combine the eggs, milk, flour, sugar and salt and blend until smooth. Set aside while the oven and cast iron preheat. When the pan and oven are heated to temperature, add a smidge of butter to the pan and melt coating the insides.
- Pour the egg mixture into the pan and bake for 15 minutes (keep checking from 12-15 so it doesn’t burn).
- While baking, make the hollandaise sauce (see notes for my recipe or use your own). Cover the finished sauce and set aside.
- During the last 6 minutes of baking the Dutch baby, poach the egg for a minute less than your normal poaching time, turn the heat off and remove the pan from heat source, keep the egg warm in the water they poached in. When you are ready to serve, remove the poached egg and drain it on a paper towel. Gently reheat the hollandaise over the warm poaching water whisking so it doesn’t separate.
- Assembly:
When the Dutch baby is golden (~200° F on an instant read thermometer), remove it from the pan and place it onto a warm plate. Top with a few spoonfuls of mashed avocado, ham and finally the poached eggs. Drizzle the warmed hollandaise sauce over the eggs and serve immediately.
Notes:
- My oven takes a good 15 minutes to pre-heat to 425° F so plan ahead.
- I used Betty Crocker mini oval cast iron pans 16 cm x 11.5 cm that were perfect for each serving.
- My hollandaise is very simple: 30 mL lemon juice, pinch of salt, 80 g butter, 1 egg. In a double boiler (I love Ikea’s KLOCKREN Double–boiler insert), melt the butter and add the lemon juice and salt and mix well, heat until warm to the touch without boiling the water below. Whisk the egg and slowly temper with the warm butter mixture, whisking well. Return the tempered egg to the double boiler and whisk until thickened. Remove the hollandaise immediately from the heat and set aside. If your sauce has separated, you’ve heated it too fast and too hot; although not kosher, you can blitz the separated hollandaise with an emersion blender to achieve a smooth sauce and avoid having to start over.
- To get the most professional-looking poached eggs, strain the raw egg through a fine sieve before poaching. Straining removes the excess white which usually just clouds the water and creates a messy, loosely-poached egg. I usually poach for 4 minutes, so for this recipe, poach for 3 minutes and allow the eggs to sit in the hot water, off the heat while you prepare the remainder of the meal.
- If you are making this for a crowd, poach the eggs in advance for 1-2 minutes and immediately plunge them gently into an ice bath and hold them there until ready to serve. When ready to serve, bring a large enough pot of water to hold all the eggs to a light boil and reheat the eggs and finish poaching them! Serve immediately.
I do love savoury pancakes, crepes, and waffles, but somehow I’ve only had a sweet Dutch Baby before. This is such a great idea to serve it with eggs Bennie. I’d be happy to have this for breakfast, brunch, lunch, dinner, and perhaps instead of dessert, too 🙂
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Happy New Year Eva!! What a great idea for a brunch, such cute individual serves. It has been years since I had Dutch Baby but I really want one now! 😀
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Happy New Year! I discovered the Dutch Baby in a diner in upstate New York. Love your Savory version! And thanks for all those tips about getting it all on the plate. It can be so stressful when you’re timing it all.
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Happy New Year Eva!
I am a fan of Dutch babies-enjoyed while in the Netherlands. Your combination is delightful and perfect for brunch. Nice!
Velva
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I have’t gotten around to trying a Dutch baby but it’s on my (rather long) to do list. This looks like a really nice way to enjoy one.
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I would much prefer this over the traditional version! I’ve done the sieve thing for poached eggs once and it definitely made a difference. Great recipe!
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That looks mega delicious! I love individual serving.
angiesrecipes
http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
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My mom discovered Dutch baby pancakes when we were in high school. I love your savory version—I definitely need a protein heavier dish for my brunch entree! YUM.
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