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Title: You're Doing It All Wrong - How to Make a Crêpe
Added: Jun 18, 2010
Author: CHOW
Duration: 1:46
Description:
Full recipe: http://www.chow.com/recipes/28467-basic-crepesAuthor and Tante Marie teacher Jodi Liano helps cooks avoid a crêpe's worst fate: gloppy, lumpy batter poured thickly into a regular old frying pan. Liano's crêpes are thin, light, and topped simply with butter, lemon, and sugar.
Related Videos:
Videos related to 'You're Doing It All Wrong - How to Make a Crêpe'
Channel: Shows
Tags: cbsepisode chow chow.com crêpe french food pancake tante marie's cooking school breakfast you're doing it all wrong how to diy myo tips technique method video expert nonstick pan
cbsepisode chow chow.com crêpe french food pancake tante marie's cooking school breakfast you're doing it all wrong how to diy myo tips technique method video expert nonstick pan
Youtube Comments: 179
magical11 Says:
Feb 23, 2012 - That is a huge fallacy you made. Cooking ability is irrelevant to pronuciation. She is a better cook than most Americans, considering she's on the show, so what part does her pronuciation play? Does a person that can pronouce "crepe" cook better than her?
Trisscarro Says:
Feb 24, 2012 - no the 2 aren't related, but when you're telling people "they're doing it all wrong" don't expect respectful replies. this video almost literally says "you're doing everything wrong, i do everything right do it like me".how would you like it when i teach you how to rip saw by only talking to you in a negative way?
unkichikun Says:
Mar 17, 2012 - -using a blender...you're doing it Wrong.-flip with your fingers....you're doing it very Wrong.
abitofblood Says:
Mar 24, 2012 - ITS A FUCKING PANCAKE!!!!
YTinjustice Says:
Mar 27, 2012 - if you put butter, lemon and sugar in ur crepe, ur doing it all wrong :D
Mr13born79 Says:
Mar 30, 2012 - I like Mike Birbiglia's take on La Quinta Inn in Walla Walla, Washington.
CitrineVlogging Says:
Apr 1, 2012 - In england we call that a pancake you're doing it all wrong.
ItThatBetrays Says:
Apr 2, 2012 - Milf.Period.
MajaF93 Says:
Apr 11, 2012 - Ok so... if anyone have ever tried to make a crêpe batter, and it turned out like the first thing we saw, then they do not deserve to cook. how can anyone make a crêpe batter look like that? That wasn't crêpes..
ItsAyeshaYeaaah Says:
Apr 11, 2012 - hahahaha that's hilarious and exactly what i was thinking! :D
yowzers97 Says:
Apr 11, 2012 - Dear people calling it a pancake. I'm an American and know that is a fucking crepe.It's a different batter and a thiner consistency and doesn't cook the same way a pancake does. So your from England so you must know better right? It's called a pancake in England hardy har har. Listen to the lady in the fucking video.
abareemo82 Says:
Apr 13, 2012 - Even if someone stirred with a fork , it wouldn't be that lumpy. Why ? because when she did it in the blender it had a watery consistency , while she had put in more flour than the liquids in the bowl she was mixing with the fork in -.-
bonkuraysan Says:
Apr 17, 2012 - In a video where you are telling people that they are doing it all wrong, you had better have your act together, no skipping corners, no mispronunciation, no botched steps. because if you are telling people they are doing it all wrong, they will point out everything you are doing wrong.
bonkuraysan Says:
Apr 17, 2012 - lets not forget that pancakes are leavened unlike crepes, a crepe is meant to have a slightly watery batter that is poured into a pan and spread thin, a pancake is a thick batter that is meant to be fluffy by way of chemical leavening like baking powder(or was it baking soda? i cant remember but its one of those). a crepe is made so you can fill it with whatever you wish, whether its pastry creme, jam, preserves, or jelly, its up to preference. pancakes are mad to be stacked high with syrup.
michaelnrdx Says:
Apr 18, 2012 - Fine! Put dog shit in it then!
PatrikStarFunk Says:
Apr 23, 2012 - Ooooooooooooooo my God, she's soooo hot!!!!
colomblanco Says:
May 9, 2012 - Crepe is pronounced like "rep".... what's so hard about that? I don't expect anyone to make a throaty french "r" sound, but why add a completely different vowel sound that doesn't even match the spelling in english? I'm a firm believer that if you should pronounce foreign words properly as long as we have the same sound in English. For example, "queso" is pronounced like "bread" not like "gay." And if Sarah Palin wants to call you pretentious for speaking properly, she can go to hell.
Smartass8504 Says:
May 9, 2012 - Has nothing to do with difficulty. When speakers of one language adopt a word from another language, they often pronounce it differently. Native English speakers are not the only ones to do this. Germans do it quite often with English words. I don't feel as if it is absolutely necessary to attempt to say every foreign word "correctly". Do you say kindergarten, bratwurst, angst, and spritz exactly like Germans do? Doubt it. We have the sounds needed for them in English.
colomblanco Says:
May 9, 2012 - We say all those words just fine. It's not like we say kandergarten.
Smartass8504 Says:
May 9, 2012 - I'm guessing you don't speak German then. I do. We (English speakers) have the needed sounds but do not pronounce them "properly" as you said we should. The differences in pronunciation are similar to "crêpe" vs "crape".
colomblanco Says:
May 9, 2012 - Well how should kindergarten be pronounced using sounds we have in English?
Smartass8504 Says:
May 9, 2012 - The "er" and "ten" are not pronounced the same in English. Americans say "kin-derr-gahr-dn". If you look up the pronunciation from, say, Duden.de, then you'll see that we don't say it "properly". For "spritz", the sp sounds like "shp" in German, and the Z makes a "ts" sound and not an English z sound. For "bratwurst", the w is pronounced like an English v and the u should sound more like an English "o" and not "errrrr". For "angst", the "a" should be "ah" and not "ay".
karolis685 Says:
May 16, 2012 - You beat me by 6 months, lol :D












Smartass8504 Says:
Feb 21, 2012 - Those two things have nothing to do with one another. The way you pronounce something has nothing to do with how well you can cook it.