Chestnut flour blini with fruit salad filling |
I've been on a a blini-binge the past few weeks: trying a different type of gluten free flour each week. So far, corn, chestnut, and rice flour all work wonderfully, each with a distinctive color and taste. I'm going to keep experimenting with other gluten free flours. Blini can be paired with fruity/sweet fillings, or savory fillings, or just served on the side as a vehicle for wiping up sauces at the end of a meal.
Basic Blini Recipe (thin style)
You can use a blender, but they are such a pain to clean! It's really easy to whip the batter by hand with a whisk:
- 2 eggs
- 1 1/4 cup milk (or almond/soy/hemp)
- 1 cup flour (rice, corn/masa, GF blend, or half-chestnut and half-rice)
- dash of salt
- 2 Tbs vegetable or olive oil
Heat a non-stick or cast iron skillet on medium high, and brush with oil.
Using a 1/3 cup ladle, spread a portion of the batter on the pan, and tilt the pan circularly to get a nice thin blin. (If you're using a cast iron skillet like I do, you get an added arm muscle workout!)
When the top is dry and the edges are a tiny bit brown (around a minute), flip the blin and let cook no more than 30 seconds. This excellent video shows the process: Foodwishes.com Guide to cooking the perfect crepe
Heat oven to 200 degrees, and keep a cookie sheet there to keep them warm, adding as you cook them.
Ready to be devoured! Corn flour makes really yellow blini |
Set your table with lots of filling options. You and your guests can make each blini roll-up unique!
- Any and all fruit, cut up small into a fruit salad
- Sour cream & jam mixed
- Fresh lemon wedges
- Cinnamon
- Crushed nuts
- Honey, maple syrup
- Caviar (the authentically Russian choice!)
- Savory scrambled eggs with salsa
- Asian stir fry
- Mexican spiced black beans
- Any meat & vegetable saut
- Base for cannoli