French crepes are a thin type of pancake that can be served either warm or cold. Crepes are usually served with a mixture of fillings such as fresh fruits. Some fill the crepes with whipped cream, strawberry jam, or chocolate sauce. This recipe takes about 35 minutes and makes 12 crepes.
Ingredients:
• 3 eggs
• 2 cups milk
• 2 tbsp butter (melted)
• 1 cup all-purpose flour
• 1 tsp white sugar
• 1/4 tsp salt
• 1 tsp vanilla extract
Instructions:
Prepare a sifter over a medium mixing bowl.
Add all-purpose flour, white sugar, and salt.
Sift the ingredients together.
Set aside.
In a separate bowl, crack open three eggs.
Add milk and vanilla extract.
Whisk using a handheld mixer to combine the ingredients.
Add the sifted flour mixture and whisk to combine.
Add melted butter and whisk again to combine the batter.
Set a non-stick, low-edged pan over medium-high heat.
Lightly grease the pan with a small amount of butter.
Pour 2 tbsp of batter in the pan.
Swirl around to distribute the batter evenly.
Let it cook for two minutes.
Flip on the other side and continue to cook for 30 seconds or until golden brown.
Do the same with the remaining batter.
Fill with mixed fresh fruits, chocolate sauce, and whipped cream.
Serve immediately and enjoy!
Tips and ideas:
Prepare fresh fruits such as strawberries, blueberries, and slices of bananas as crepe filling.
Drizzle with chocolate sauce, whipped cream, and powdered sugar.
Images – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ABfDv9OJuCI
😳 What Tinnitus Does To Your Brain Cells (And How To Stop It)
After 47 years of studies and countless brain scans done on more than 2,400 tinnitus patients, scientists at the MIT Institute found that in a shocking 96% of cases, tinnitus was actually shrinking their brain cells.
As it turns out, tinnitus and brain health are strongly linked.
Even more interesting: The reason why top army officials are not deaf after decades of hearing machine guns, bombs going off and helicopter noises…
Is because they are using something called "the wire method", a simple protocol inspired by a classified surgery on deaf people from the 1950s...