Aebleskiver Pans Alambic Stills Angel Food Cake Cutters Angel Food Cake Pans Appachatti Pans Appakarai Pans Apple Corer Apple Slicers Asparagus Peelers Asparagus Steamers Asparagus Tongs Avocado Slicers Bacon Press Bags -- Linen Crash Jelly Bags -- Oven Bags -- Pastry Bags -- Sachet Baker's Blade Baker's Peel Baker's Wax Baking Cups Baking Mats Baking Pans Baking Pans by Dimension Baking Pans by Volume Baking Stones Baking Tiles Baller -- Melon Balls -- Tea Bamboo Steamers Previous | Next | Aebleskiver Pans© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced Munk PansAebleskiver Pans are special pans in which to cook Aebleskivers (small Danish pancake balls) on top of the stove. The pans are usually round, but some are shovel-shaped. Round ones will be about 8 inches (20 cm) wide. You can get them made from cast iron, forged aluminum or non-stick coated metal. The handle is often metal, but may be wood or plastic. The pan has in it rounded cavities (also described as indents, cups and more energetically, "half-spherical hollows"), traditionally seven of these, about 2 inches (5 cm) wide and 1 inch (2 1/2 cm) deep. In most, you can see the round indents coming out of the underside of the bottom piece. A few, though, will have undersides that hide the indents at the bottom, with flat sides and a flat bottom (picture a cast-iron flying pan with what looks like a poached-egg insert) -- manufacturers say this distributes the heat more evenly when placed on the heat. Manufacturers who leave the indents forming the hollow-sided bottom exposed counter that this design focusses the heat on the cavities. To use them, you heat the pan until a few drops of water in it will sizzle away immediately. Melt about 1/2 teaspoon of butter in each cavity. Put your Aebleskiver pancake mixture into the indents, filling each about 2/3 full. As the pancakes cook, they puff up. Then, you rotate them in their cavities, with a fork, skewer or knitting needle (sic), to put the unbrowned tops on the bottom and cook some more to brown them thoroughly. The outsides of the pancakes will get all crusty. Aebleskiver Pans are similar to Indian Kuzhi Appam Pans (aka Appakarai Pans), Thai "Kanom Krok" Pans, and Japanese Takoyaki Pans. Some North American versions may be found with a top and a bottom. Both have the same indents, lined up. The purpose of the top "lid" presumably is to help them cook faster, and maintain a more rounded shape as they cook. Cooking Tips Also called: Cacerola de Munk (Spanish)
See Also:Aebleskivers, Appachatti Pans, Appakarai Pans, Cast Iron, Kanom Krok Pans, TakoyakiOther entries for: PansAebleskiver Pans, Appachatti Pans, Appakarai Pans, Baking Pans, Bread Pans, Broiling Pans, Cast Iron, Chafing Dish, French Roasting Pans, Frying Pans, Kanom Krok Pans, Meat Loaf Pans, Non-Reactive Pans, Non-Stick Pans, Quiche Pans, Roasting Pans Other entries for: Cooking ToolsAlambic Stills, Apple Corer, Avocado Slicers, Baking Mats, Baking Stones, Batterie de Cuisine, Biscuit Brake, Blowtorches, Branding Iron, Bread Bins, Bread Machines, Bulb Baster, Butter Bell, Butter Muslin, Caja China, Can Openers, Canning Funnels, Cans, Chopsticks, Contact Paper, Cookware, Cooling Racks, Corkscrews, CorningWare, Cuppitiello, Dishwashers, Doughnut Cutters, Egg Cups, Esky, Fat Separators, Firkins, Flour Dredgers, Flour Duster, Food Pushers, Funnels, Girdle, Graters, Griddles, Heat Diffuser, Ice Pick, Icing Syringe, Kitchen String, Kitchen Tongs, Kneading Gloves, Knives, Measuring Cups, Melon Baller, Mesquite, Milk Cellar, Non-Electrical Rotisseries, Olive Pitter, Oshibori, Oxo Good Grips, Paraffin, Pastry Brush, Pastry Frame, Pea Sheller, Petites Marmites, Pie Plates, Pie Racks, Pizzelle Iron, Proof Box, Ramekins, Rolling Cookie Cutters, Rolling Pins, Salad Spinner, Salamanders, Scales, Spatulas, Steamers, Sugar Cutters, Sushi-oke, Tassie Cups, Tea Trappings, Thermometers, Tortilla Warmers, Treen, Tupperware, Uchiwa, Waffle Iron, Whisks |
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Munk Pans