How to make Australia’s most famous weekend brunch dish at home
Like the recipe’s creator, Bill Granger, these fluffy ricotta hotcakes, served with honeycomb butter and banana, are the stuff of Australian legend.
The late Bill Granger’s influence on Australia’s cafe scene is undeniable. He exported our relaxed vibes, an attitude, and a handful of dishes that have become famous across the globe: avo on toast, creamy scramble eggs and fluffy ricotta hotcakes. Those hotcakes were on the menu at the first bills, on the first day, when it opened in Sydney’s Darlinghurst in 1993, and still put a smile on people’s face to this day. In Japan, they were credited as the start of the trend for the cloud-like souffle pancakes described as fluffy or fuwa fuwa – surely the world’s best onomatopoeia? Our Japanese kitchen teams have turned them into an art form, and now we get letters from people wanting to train as dedicated “hotcake chefs”.
Ingredients
Honeycomb
light-flavoured oil for greasing
150g caster sugar
75g golden syrup
1½ tsp bicarbonate of soda (baking soda)
Honeycomb butter
250g unsalted butter, softened
2 tbsp runny honey
90g honeycomb, recipe above or shop bought, crushed
Ricotta hotcakes
300g ricotta
175ml milk
4 eggs, separated
125g plain flour
1 tsp baking powder
50g butter
To serve
icing sugar
1 banana, halved and sliced lengthways
Method
HONEYCOMB
To make the honeycomb, lightly oil a 20cm cake tin. Put the sugar and syrup in a heavy-based pan over medium-low heat. Swirl the pan to dissolve the sugar, then stir with a spatula until all dissolved – this might take 10-15 minutes, so be patient and do not let the mixture bubble at this stage. Turn up the heat, use a sugar thermometer if you have one, and heat the mixture to 155C or until a dark amber caramel. Remove from the heat and quickly stir in the bicarbonate of soda until golden and foaming. Be careful not to over-stir: you want to retain as much air in the mixture as possible.
Carefully pour into the tin. Leave to harden and cool for about 90 minutes. Break into chunks and crush with a rolling pin.
If you are making the honeycomb butter, you will need half the amount, so store the rest in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 weeks. You can dip chunks in melted chocolate, sprinkle over ice-cream or make double the amount of butter and freeze.
HONEYCOMB BUTTER
To make the honeycomb butter, blend the ingredients in a food processor until smooth. Roll into a log, wrap in greaseproof paper and chill in the fridge for 2 hours.
HOTCAKES
Step 1
To make the hotcakes, mix the ricotta, milk and egg yolks. Sift the flour, baking powder and a pinch of salt into another bowl. Add the ricotta mixture and stir to combine. Beat the egg whites in a clean, dry bowl until stiff peaks form. Fold into the batter in two batches with a large metal spoon.
Step 2
Melt a little butter in a large non-stick frying pan. Cook the hotcakes in batches, pouring 2 tablespoons of batter per hotcake into the frying pan. Cook over low to medium heat for 2 minutes, or until golden underneath. Turn and cook the other side until golden and cooked through. Dust with icing sugar, and serve with sliced banana and honeycomb butter.
This is an edited extract from Australian Food by Bill Granger, photography by Mikkel Vang. Published by Murdoch Books, October 2020. RRP $49.99
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