The Hamilton Spectator

Crispy homemade waffles start day off right

- JEANMARIE BROWNSON

What’s the best breakfast?

Waffles, we agree. Crispy, hot and slathered with fruity goodness. A kitchen filled with sweet aromas.

Oh, and some mimosas — we are drinking more these days. We love a mimosa with fresh grapefruit juice and sparkling rose wine, but orange juice works, too. Plenty of strong, black coffee for me.

We have one electric waffle iron. (Does anyone have more?) I hover over it as the waffle bakes into crispy, brown, cranny-filled sweet treats. We divvy up the squares as the next waffle cooks. For a larger gathering, the wait can feel excruciati­ng. Perhaps there are advantages to cooking for two.

Waffle irons vary in size and shape. The classic waffle iron produces a crispy waffle about Half-inch thick with 1/8-inch deep crannies. A Belgian waffle maker has larger, deeper crannies that hold more syrup. Check your manufactur­er’s directions for heating the iron, amount of batter to add and cooking times. My classic Black & Decker electric waffle iron bakes a generous cup of batter into four squares in about 10 minutes.

Cooking during a pandemic should be a judgment-free zone. Using a boxed waffle mix is fine — just read labels to avoid artificial ingredient­s.

If you have the ingredient­s, know that homemade batter is easy to pull together, and nearly always tastes better. The recipe that follows uses a minimum of leavening for a less metallicta­sting waffle; yogurt adds tang and lightness. I combine the dry ingredient­s ahead of time, then add the wet ingredient­s to them while the waffle iron heats.

Cornmeal adds a sweet corn flavour and nice crunch to waffle batter. A fine or medium grind cornmeal works best. (Coarse ground is too crunchy here.) Stone-ground blue cornmeal offers a delicious, earthy sweetness and subtle blue hue to the waffles. Whole-wheat flour or coarse semolina are other options for yummy flavour and nutty texture.

You can use skim, one per cent, two per cent or whole milk in the waffle batter. Same for the Greek yogurt — zero per cent or whole milk yogurt work well here. No plain Greek yogurt? Substitute sour cream or buttermilk.

I recommend using vegetable oil suited for high-heat cooking, such as safflower oil, sunflower oil or expeller-pressed canola oil, in the waffle batter and for coating the waffle iron. These oils can take the heat of the waffle iron without smoking, resulting in better-tasting waffles.

Serve the waffles as soon as they are baked; don’t stack them on top of each other for any length of time (unless you’re pouring on the syrup to eat), or they’ll get soggy. If not eating right away, pop them directly onto the rack of a 200 degree oven to stay crisp while you bake more.

To make waffles in advance, cool them completely on a wire rack before stacking into a container for refrigerat­ion or freezing. Reheat them to great crispness in a toaster.

Pure maple syrup and salted butter taste delicious on these crunchy waffles, so does a mixture of crushed fresh berries with a fruit syrup. Our family is partial to blueberry syrup from our favourite Michigan blueberry farms. For this holiday, I’m simmering oranges in sugar to soften them before adding diced fresh pineapple and marmalade for a refreshing topping.

Serve the waffles with an interestin­g flavour of chicken sausage, browned in a skillet until hot, then thinly sliced.

Banana malted milk makes a fine start to any day. I blend in a bit of peanut butter when it’s our sustenance before a morning walk in the woods. If it’s an afternoon treat, I never object to the addition of a scoop of vanilla ice cream, specifical­ly on special occasions.

CRISPY CORNMEAL WAFFLES WITH PINEAPPLE-ORANGE COMPOTE

Prep: 30 minutes

Cook: 15 to 20 minutes Makes: 4 servings (four 4-square waffles)

This recipe doubles nicely. Bob’s Red Mill Gluten Free 1-to-1 Baking Flour makes a fine substitute for all-purpose flour. Cooled, leftover waffles freeze well. Reheat in the toaster to recrisp.

11/4 cups flour

1/4 cup blue, yellow or white cornmeal (or semolina flour or whole wheat flour)

3 to 4 tablespoon­s sugar 2 teaspoons baking powder 3/4 teaspoon baking soda 1/2 teaspoon salt Safflower or expeller-pressed canola oil or non-stick cooking spray for high heat

3 large eggs

1 cup plain Greek yogurt, sour cream or buttermilk

1/2 cup milk

1/3 cup sunflower, safflower oil or high-heat expeller-pressed canola oil

1/3 cup melted butter

For serving:

Plain or vanilla Greek yogurt or mascarpone cheese or cottage cheese Pineapple-orange compote, see recipe, reheated if necessary

1. Whisk together flour, cornmeal, sugar, baking powder, baking soda and salt in a large bowl. (This can be done several days in advance and stored, covered.)

2. Heat oven to 200 degrees. Heat waffle iron according to manufactur­er’s directions. When iron is heated, use a pastry brush to coat waffle iron with oil or spray with non-stick cooking spray. (Oil or spray waffle iron as needed between waffles.)

3. Whisk together eggs in a bowl. Whisk in yogurt, 1/2 cup milk, oil and melted butter. Gently whisk egg mixture into the flour mixture just until combined. Do not overmix. Batter should flow from a spoon, not plop; add small dollops of milk if needed to thin batter.

4. For each waffle, spoon a generous cup of the batter into the heated waffle iron, close the iron and bake until waffle is crisped and perfectly golden. Transfer the baked waffle to the oven directly on the oven rack while you bake the remaining waffles.

5. To serve, pile a couple of hot waffle squares on heated plates. Top with a dollop of yogurt. Spoon the warm compote over it all.

Nutrition informatio­n per serving: 631 calories, 41 g fat, 15 g saturated fat, 189 mg cholestero­l, 52 g carbohydra­tes, 14 g sugar, 16 g protein, 861 mg sodium, 1 g fibre

PINEAPPLE-ORANGE COMPOTE

Prep: 20 minutes

Cook: 35 minutes Makes: about 4 cups In addition to serving this compote warm over waffles and pancakes, try it supercold ladled over vanilla ice cream or plain yogurt.

2 navel oranges, scrubbed clean 2/3 cup sugar

1/4 of a fresh pineapple, cut into 1/2-inch dice, about 2 cups (or substitute frozen)

1/2 cup orange marmalade or honey to taste

Pinch salt

1. Use a sharp paring knife to score the rind of the oranges from stem to navel at 1-inch intervals and about 1/8-inch deep. Put oranges into a deep saucepan; add water to cover. Heat to a boil and reduce heat to a low simmer. Cook, stirring often, until rind feels soft, about 15 minutes. Drain. When cool enough to handle, slice off the ends of each orange. Then cut in half. Cut each half into 5 or 6 thin wedges. Cut wedges into 1/2-inch pieces.

2. Put diced oranges, sugar and 1/2 cup water into a saucepan. Heat to a simmer and stir to dissolve sugar. Cook, covered, stirring often, over medium heat until oranges are tender, about 15 minutes. Remove from heat. Stir in pineapple, orange marmalade and salt.

3. Refrigerat­e covered up to several days. Reheat to serve warm over waffles or pancakes.

Nutrition informatio­n per 1/4 cup serving: 75 calories, 0 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholestero­l, 20 g carbohydra­tes, 18 g sugar, 0 g protein, 15 mg sodium, 1 g fibre

Banana malted milk

Prep: 5 minutes

Makes: 2 or 3 servings Creamy peanut butter gives this drink a lovely, rich body even when you’re using skim milk. Malted milk powder by King Arthur Flour or Carnation are both delicious here. In a pinch, you could use malted milk balls; a powerful blender will crush them easily into the drink and add a little chocolate bonus. 1 large or 2 small ripe bananas 1 1/2 cups milk (dairy milk, oat milk, macadamia nut milk, rice milk, etc.)

1/4 cup malted milk powder 1/4 cup smooth peanut butter or 3 tablespoon­s peanut butter powder, optional

4 to 6 ice cubes

Put all ingredient­s into a blender. Process until smooth. Serve cold.

Nutrition informatio­n per serving ( for 3 servings, with peanut butter): 262 calories, 14 g fat, 4 g saturated fat, 10 mg cholestero­l, 26 g carbohydra­tes, 18 g sugar, 11 g protein, 195 mg sodium, 2 g fibre

 ??  ?? Serve the cornmeal waffles with the pineapple orange compote, or use fresh berries and blueberry syrup. Chicken breakfast sausages, a grapefruit and sparkling rose mimosa, and plenty of coffee round out the meal.
Serve the cornmeal waffles with the pineapple orange compote, or use fresh berries and blueberry syrup. Chicken breakfast sausages, a grapefruit and sparkling rose mimosa, and plenty of coffee round out the meal.
 ?? ABEL URIBE CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Orange and pineapple compote is deliciousl­y warm over crispy waffles, but it also makes a fine topping cold over ice cream or yogurt.
ABEL URIBE CHICAGO TRIBUNE Orange and pineapple compote is deliciousl­y warm over crispy waffles, but it also makes a fine topping cold over ice cream or yogurt.

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