Hoecakes With Fruit Recipe (2024)

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Cooking Notes

JudyR

Delicious idea, but the batter adhered like crazy glue to my well-seasoned, lightly oiled cast iron skillet. I tried scraping the top off and flipping that but the problem happened again. I'm sure there's a way around this but I haven't found it yet.

RTab0625

I was nervous to try these after reading about others' difficulties, but I have successfully made them twice now and found no problems. A few things I think helped:
1. Carefully time how long the cornmeal sits to absorb the water.
2. Boil the water in a kettle & keep it boiling for the 2nd addition.
3. Measure the oil: half in the batter, half to cook with.
4. A non stick electric griddle worked a bit better than cast iron
5. Don't try to flip too early!
Hope that helps!

Celia

To all those complaining about sticking...the key to these is having a *hot* pan and keeping them small (2-3” across). Tip from a Rhode Islander who’s been making johnnycakes (similar) for many years.

Teresa

Maybe it's just me, but I had a heck of a time w/this recipe that looks so simple! Needed tons of water to get it thin enough to pour, and those bubbles didn't quite appear as predictably as promised. I'm not an expert cook, but this recipe made me feel even less than competent!

blisssu

Since others had trouble with sticking, I followed the recipe carefully--boiled the water, let the cornmeal soak, heated the pan and oiled it generously. Still, my "hoecake" ended as a pile of warm cornmeal with a hard crust stuck to the pan. I checked other recipes and found one that was the same, but it called for heavily greasing the pan. Other recipes added eggs, flour, and milk to the mix. How did Mr. Bittman get those lovely hoecakes in the photo?

Kathryn

Mine stuck to the pan a little bit in a cast iron, but it stuck like crazy in the steel frying pan. It also worked better when it was a little thicker and didn't pour, which was surprising. I think this recipe could be great if I had added more fruit or some additional fruit puree, because it was the plums that were the star of this recipe and the corn was just the vector.

M

I made this recipe and it turned out great. I used 1 cup fine cornmeal and 1/2 of coarse cornmeal. I actually only needed 1-1/4 of cup boiling water and I was afraid it would be too liquids bud was fine after sitting. These turned out great and I topped it with runny egg. I actually spiced the batter with chili and salt pepper and garlic to add to it more savory. Great breakfast pancake!

ff

These worked out great for me but I added one egg to the recipe.

Celia

To all those complaining about sticking...the key to these is having a *hot* pan and keeping them small (2-3” across). Tip from a Rhode Islander who’s been making johnnycakes (similar) for many years.

M

I made this recipe and it turned out great. I used 1 cup fine cornmeal and 1/2 of coarse cornmeal. I actually only needed 1-1/4 of cup boiling water and I was afraid it would be too liquids bud was fine after sitting. These turned out great and I topped it with runny egg. I actually spiced the batter with chili and salt pepper and garlic to add to it more savory. Great breakfast pancake!

nybakes

This is not the hoecake that I grew up with. We called this hot water cornbread. A hoecake, in my family, is pan fried biscuit dough. It was how we used the scraps that couldn’t be turned into biscuits.

Anderson M

This was a genuine mess of a recipe, perhaps a video or additional information would rescue it. With exact measurements of water and cornmeal the batter was a sandy dough rather than a pourable batter.

Roberta

What a mess! I won't try this recipe again, but I will try the recipe from the link MRG shared.

Trudy

Try cooking SPRAY rather than oil. It always works better to stop batter from sticking to the pan for me.

RTab0625

I was nervous to try these after reading about others' difficulties, but I have successfully made them twice now and found no problems. A few things I think helped:
1. Carefully time how long the cornmeal sits to absorb the water.
2. Boil the water in a kettle & keep it boiling for the 2nd addition.
3. Measure the oil: half in the batter, half to cook with.
4. A non stick electric griddle worked a bit better than cast iron
5. Don't try to flip too early!
Hope that helps!

blisssu

Since others had trouble with sticking, I followed the recipe carefully--boiled the water, let the cornmeal soak, heated the pan and oiled it generously. Still, my "hoecake" ended as a pile of warm cornmeal with a hard crust stuck to the pan. I checked other recipes and found one that was the same, but it called for heavily greasing the pan. Other recipes added eggs, flour, and milk to the mix. How did Mr. Bittman get those lovely hoecakes in the photo?

Kathryn

Mine stuck to the pan a little bit in a cast iron, but it stuck like crazy in the steel frying pan. It also worked better when it was a little thicker and didn't pour, which was surprising. I think this recipe could be great if I had added more fruit or some additional fruit puree, because it was the plums that were the star of this recipe and the corn was just the vector.

JudyR

Delicious idea, but the batter adhered like crazy glue to my well-seasoned, lightly oiled cast iron skillet. I tried scraping the top off and flipping that but the problem happened again. I'm sure there's a way around this but I haven't found it yet.

Teresa

Maybe it's just me, but I had a heck of a time w/this recipe that looks so simple! Needed tons of water to get it thin enough to pour, and those bubbles didn't quite appear as predictably as promised. I'm not an expert cook, but this recipe made me feel even less than competent!

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Hoecakes With Fruit Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between Hoecakes and pancakes? ›

Pancakes are sometimes called hoecakes in the South. Most Southerners are familiar with lacy cornbread, aka hot water cornbread. A hoecake is a rustic fried version of a pancake made with ground cornmeal.

What is the difference between corn pone and hoe cakes? ›

The simplest are hoecakes, a mixture of cornmeal, water, and salt, so named because they were originally baked on the flat of a hoe over a wood fire. Johnnycakes and corn pone are somewhat thicker cakes that may have added ingredients such as fat or wheat flour.

Why are Hoecakes called Hoecakes? ›

The name hoe cakes seems to be more straightforward. The term hoe is an old term for a griddle, so substituting one word for another, you get griddle cakes, and a perfect description for just what they are.

What is another name for a corn pancake? ›

Depending on where you are from, hoe cakes are also called johnnycakes, hoecakes (I couldn't find a consensus about whether it was one word or two), cornmeal pancakes, corn pones, ashcakes, corn cakes, fried cornbread, journey cakes, Shawnee cakes, or johnny bread.

Is hot water cornbread the same as hoe cakes? ›

Old-fashioned hot water cornbread—also known as corn pone, hoecakes, or corn dodgers—is a simple yet simply delicious Southern dinnertime staple.

What are British pancakes called? ›

Not only are "flapjacks" their own thing in the UK, British cuisine also has a different understanding of what makes a pancake. Though they'll call it a "pancake," the British version is unleavened and closer to what we Yanks might call a crepe than the fluffy, pillowy food we tend to think of.

What is cornbread called in the South? ›

It is commonly called "cornbread" in the Southern United States and is not known by a different name in this region. Cornbread is a simple bread that is made by mixing cornmeal, flour, salt, baking powder, and milk to form a batter, which is then baked in the oven.

Why is cornbread called Johnny Cake? ›

Regionally, this bread is known by many names: ashcake, jonny cake, journey cake, Shawnee cake, and jonakin. It is believed that the name johnny cake came from the name Shawnee cake, derived from the Shawnee tribe in New England, but changed over time due to differing languages and pronunciation.

What is the origin of Hoecakes? ›

Hoecakes and honey is a distinctly American dish. The recipe originated with Native Americans and subsequently was utilized by enslaved people and European settlers alike. Recipes varied, but the basic idea of a flat cake made of cornmeal mush spread all throughout the country.

What is Mormon Johnnycake? ›

A molasses cornbread topped with agave. Barbara Robinson. PASTRIES - Cakes.

Why is it called Elvis Presley Pound Cake? ›

The recipe comes from an old lady who was a dear friend of Elvis. She made this cake for him every Christmas and on special occasions. She made the paper promise to keep her name anonymous for fear that people would deluge her Tupelo Mississippi home with requests by fans to make her cakes for them."

What is a Johnny Cake slang? ›

cornbread usually cooked pancake-style on a griddle (chiefly New England)

What do Southern people call pancakes? ›

For instance, folks from the South and Southeast call them flapjacks, while people from the West, North, and even the East tend to call them pancakes. Some states have entirely different names for pancakes altogether.

What do you call Mexican pancake? ›

mexican pancake: crossword clues

Matching Answer. TORTILLA.

What are the old pancakes called? ›

People began using the word “pancake” during the 15th century, and the word became standard in 19th century America. Previously, people referred to them as Indian cakes, hoe cakes, johnnycakes, journey cakes, buckwheat cakes, griddle cakes, and flapjacks. Early American pancakes were made with buckwheat or cornmeal.

What is the difference between funnel cake batter and pancake batter? ›

Funnel cake mix is basically the same as pancake mix. So, yes — you can absolutely make funnel cakes using pancake mix. To make funnel cake batter, it's as simple as mixing milk, egg, vanilla extract, plain flour, sugar and baking powder (and some cinnamon if you fancy), and pouring it through a funnel into hot oil.

What is another name for a hoe cake? ›

Johnnycake

Is a flapjack just a pancake? ›

The word flapjack has different definitions in different countries. In the US, a flapjack is the same as a pancake in the US—a thin cake made from batter and grilled. It has become a regional colloquialism in certain areas of the US (especially the Southeast) to refer to pancakes.

What are pancakes called in North Carolina? ›

Since then, many other sources have generated quizzes you can take that let you put together your own personal dialect map. Some of our favorite word wars include: flapjacks (North Carolina) vs. pancake (everywhere else); dropped eggs (New England) vs. poached eggs (everywhere else); a cabinet (Rhode Island) vs.

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