Thursday, May 06, 2010

I knew by the aroma that it was my mother's blintz recipe

I knew by the floury, eggy smell when I whisked the crepe batter that this was really my mother's blintz recipe that I was making. The smooth, bland and very thin mixture was made from just water, flour, and an egg -- as called for in the recipe that you can see at left, in my mother's handwriting. (Click on the picture to see a larger image.)

I've had this recipe for many years, but for some reason, I have never tried making blintzes until today; I've watched my sister do it (pictures here: Blintzes), but never have made them on my own.

On Tuesday, a friend invited me to watch as another friend of hers made a large batch of blintzes in anticipation of the Jewish holiday Shevouth, which is in a couple of weeks. (They planned to freeze the blintzes until that date.) The recipe was different in several ways from my mother's recipe, as the friend uses a French crepe recipe with milk in the batter. When I finished watching (and helping a bit to make the crepes), I decided that I finally had to do it.

Today I started at the grocery store, where I was able to buy the only difficult-to-find ingredient: Farmer's Cheese, which is a sort of dry cottage cheese. The other ingredients are mainly pantry/refrigerator staples: flour, eggs, oil, sugar, cream cheese, sour cream.

My mother had no electric appliances such as food processors or blenders, so she beat the batter with an egg beater and blended the filling with a wooden spoon. I preserved this tradition, making the batter with a wire whisk, and making the filling with a wooden spoon.

My ingredients:


My mother used Crisco for greasing the pan, which in her case was a small, well-seasoned cast-iron skillet. I admit that I used a no-stick frying pan greased with a bit of butter to make the crepes. My mother called these very thin skins bletlech, their Yiddish name, which I guess means little leaves. I tried to make thin ones by tilting the pan as I poured in the batter. I think my mother and sister could make them thinner -- I need practice. Usually, you only cook one side, because you fry them again after filling them and folding them "like envelopes" -- says my mother's recipe.

Here are my bletlech, with a blob of filling, ready to fold:

Here are the finished blintzes, after I fried them in more butter:


Look good?

5 comments:

  1. I've never tried making blintzes; my grandmother was the blintz queen in our family, and yours look exactly like hers.

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  2. It turns out that the best place to get Farmer's Cheese is the Russian grocery store. It's called tvorog, and there are different varieties - some more dry and some creamier. I made blintzes (my grandmother's recipe) with the creamy kind and they were superb.

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  3. I'm glad you finally made them! Your way is much more authentic than mine. I finally made some last winter with pot cheese from our Russian store, but decided that I actually prefer Molly Goldberg's recipe that includes half cream cheese, half small curd cottage cheese instead. Your sister, Elaine.

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  4. I've never had a blintz, but they look to die for! Don't you love those family handwritten recipes? I just love having them!

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