I know I'm not the only one who looks at foodie memes on Facebook and Pinterest wondering if they really work.
The perfect, low-calorie, gluten-free pancakes using only two ingredients sure caught my eye.
They look delicious. But, are they?
So, I made this for dinner last night. After all, the recipe uses two whole foods as ingredients! Here's my take on this recipe.
The perfect, low-calorie, gluten-free pancakes using only two ingredients sure caught my eye.
They look delicious. But, are they?
I put the pancake recipe to a test.
If you haven't seen this meme, the picture claims that mixing one large egg and one banana together into a batter and pan frying it makes pancakes. Wow!
So, I made this for dinner last night. After all, the recipe uses two whole foods as ingredients! Here's my take on this recipe.
- Texture: I used a very ripe banana, so the batter came out thick and very similar to pancake batter. The cooked pancakes were very moist. They reminded me of a dense omelet, not pancakes.
- Taste: They tasted good -- if you like banana pancakes. I think they'd make a good side dish with breakfast, but not as the main entree. The banana flavor is pretty dominant.
- Ease: This was super easy to make since there's no measuring or pancake mix to spill. But, they did seem to take a little longer to cook than traditional pancakes. Turn the heat to just below medium and don't flip them until the edges start to look a little dry. (The tops don't bubble like pancakes.)
- Calories: One banana, one large egg, 1/8 cup of real maple syrup and 1 tablespoon of real butter for frying and topping come out to roughly 380 calories.
Overall, I thought these were pretty good. Will they be my new go-to pancakes? No. But, will I make them again? Probably. They're simple and taste pretty darn good!
So, have you tried this simple "pancake" recipe? What did you think?
Until Next Time,
Choose Healthy!
Angela Tague
Whole Foods Living
Until Next Time,
Choose Healthy!
Angela Tague
Whole Foods Living