Our weekly “À Table”dinner series gets its name from the mealtime call to the dining table. Since 2018, we have invited friends new and old to share a meal focusing on food, music and traditions from various places in the Francophone world. It has proved to be a fun way to connect with friends and practice our spoken French. Here on our site, we share portraits of some of our favorite meals so that you can easily do a version of the same chez vous Bon Appétit!
One of our favorite À Table meals to host, this is a meandering tale that began on a visit to Kenya, took on a new meaning once we returned to New York, and is something we now delight in sharing with others, whether or not we speak French while eating it.
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Kenyan Pancakes?
Ultimately, the joke is on me here. I didn’t want to have “Kenyan Pancakes” at all!
When Omari (the Kenyan private chef that came highly recommended at our Diani Beach Airbnb rental) offered to make “pancakes” for breakfast, I ignorantly assumed he just thought we were Americans who didn’t want to eat local Kenyan food.
But just as I opened my mouth to say as much, I decided to let it go. This was partly because I hadn’t done my homework enough to know what a typical Kenyan breakfast might look like anyway, and partly because I reasoned that the kids could do with a solid pancake breakfast the next morning after a day of travel without much food. “And we’ll eat Kenyan the remainder of the meals, I reasoned.
The next morning, I learned that Kenyan pancakes are, in fact, a dream. They are more akin to soft crepes but flavored with citrus zest and spice. So surprising, and so incredible.
They are so good in fact, that I’d recommend you go prepare the ingredients right now, and then while you wait for the batter, skip down to how this recipe became part of our favorite French-speaking À Table meals to host.
recipe
Omari’s Pancakes
The type of Kenyan pancake that the book centers on is a savory version, which they eat, for dinner with fish and other things neighbors and friends brought for a communal feast. The recipe is noted in the book, and also talks about how to make the savory variety.
The recipe included here is Omari’s recipe, doubled. We may have to start doubling even this recipe, because our two kids could polish off the doubled version all by themselves, even with sides! They are that delicious!
Omari’s Kenyan Pancakes
Equipment
- crepe pan or chapati pan
Ingredients
Pancake Batter
- 4 eggs
- 1 1/4 cups milk
- 2 tbsp sunflower oil
- 3 tbsp lime or orange zest, very loosely packed about 1 lime worth
- 1 1/4 cups flour
- 2 tsp ground cinnamon
- 2 tbsp sugar
- 1/4 tsp salt
- 3 tbsp butter for pan
Garnish
- granulated sugar to sprinkle on top
- wedges of lime, optional
Instructions
Prepare Batter
- Crack eggs into a medium bowl and whisk. Whisk in oil and milk and set aside.
- Zest lime into a large bowl. Add flour, sugar, cinnamon, salt, and stir to combine. Add egg mixture and whisk to combine until a smooth batter is formed.
- Put aside until ready to cook. If you can leave it 30-60 minutes to allow flour to absorb liquid, even better.
Cook the Pancakes
- Heat non-stick pan on medium heat. Crepe/chapati pans work best. When hot, add a bit of butter and let it melt, then put the pancakes on as you might make a crepe. It takes a while to do them one by one but they are so deliciously worth the wait! As you continue to cook, stack completed pancakes on a warmed dish and cover, or in an oven-safe dish in a 200 degree F oven, covered with a damp, clean kitchen towel.
Enjoy
- We like to enjoy along with fruit and eggs or bacon. Omari recommended sprinkling with a bit of sugar and rolling it up, and that is how we always eat it now.
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Les Pancakes de Maman Panya
Soon after we returned from Kenya in September 2018, our friends Keli and Chloe asked us if we had read the book “Les Pancakes de Maman Panya,” and when we told here we hadn’t, Chloe gushed about why she liked it. We couldn’t wait to read it, doubling down on our own fun memorable story about Kenyan pancakes, and practicing our French at the same time.
We hosted an À Table brunch to eat Omari’s pancakes and read the book together. One of our guests that day was Julie (Brooklyn, by way of Belgium), and she read it to us, and we talked about it afterwards. It turned out to be not just one more special way to share food, stories and sounds while practicing our spoken French, but one of our favorite ways to do so.
And now, a year after hosting that brunch and 18 months after the trip, we have young Chloe reading us the story, from her new home back in France. You are in for a treat when you listen to her recording below.
Bonus
Audio: Les Pancakes de Maman Panya
When someone reads to you, it can definitely sound like music to your ears, especially when it’s French! And doubly so when it’s the lovely voice of nearly-8-year-old Chloe.
Links to buy the book are above, and we highly recommend that you do! We love this sweet book, and the memories it evokes.