Skip to main content

All-Purpose Crêpes

Crêpes are easy indeed to make and are a most useful resource for simple but dressy main courses and desserts. What is helpful, too, is that you can make a good number while you are at it and freeze the extras, ready almost at once for many a quick meal.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    for about twenty 5-inch or ten 8-inch crêpes

Ingredients

1 cup instant-blending flour or all-purpose flour, scooped and leveled (see page 97)
2/3 cup cold milk
2/3 cup cold water
3 “large” eggs
1/4 tsp salt
3 Tbs melted butter, plus more for brushing on pan

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Mix all the ingredients smoothly in a blender or food processor, or with a whisk. Refrigerate 10 minutes if you’ve used instant flour, 1/2 hour or more if all-purpose. A rest allows the flour particles to absorb the liquid, making for a tender crêpe. Heat a nonstick frying pan with bottom diameter 5 to 8 inches until drops of water dance on it; brush lightly with melted butter. Pour in 2 to 3 tablespoons of batter and tilt pan in all directions to cover bottom evenly. Cook about 1 minute, or until browned on the bottom; turn and cook briefly on the other side. Cool on a rack as you continue with the rest. When thoroughly cool, stack and refrigerate for 2 days, or freeze for several weeks.

  2. Savory Spinach and Mushroom Crêpe Roulades

    Step 2

    For 8 crêpes, serving 4. Prepare 2 cups béchamel sauce (page 13); 1 1/4 cups chopped, cooked, well-seasoned spinach (page 25); 1 cup quartered sautéed mushrooms (page 31). Spread a thin layer of sauce over the bottom of a buttered gratin dish and sprinkle with 2 tablespoons grated Swiss cheese. Mix spinach and mushrooms with 1/2 cup of sauce and divide into 8. Spoon 1 portion on the lower underside of each of 8 crêpes. Roll up the crêpes and arrange, seam down, in the dish. Spoon remaining sauce over them and sprinkle on another 1/2 cup of grated cheese. Bake in the upper third of a preheated 375°F oven for 25 to 30 minutes, just until bubbling and lightly browned on top.

  3. Strawberry Dessert Crêpes

    Step 3

    Mix a pint or more fresh sliced strawberries with a teaspoon or two each of sugar and kirsch, orange liqueur, or cognac, and let stand for an hour. Drain, spoon berries generously over the lower underside of a crêpe, and roll up. Arrange 2 crêpes, seam down, on each serving plate. Drizzle over a spoonful of berry juices and top with lightly whipped cream—crème Chantilly (page 101).

Julia's Kitchen Wisdom Knopf
Read More
Khao niaow ma muang, or steamed coconut sticky rice with ripe mango, is a classic in Thai cuisine—and you can make it at home.
With just a handful of ingredients, this old-fashioned egg custard is the little black dress of dinner party desserts—simple and effortlessly chic.
This classic 15-minute sauce is your secret weapon for homemade mac and cheese, chowder, lasagna, and more.
With rich chocolate flavor and easy customization, this hot cocoa recipe is just the one you want to get you through winter.
Make this versatile caramel at home with our slow-simmered method using milk and sugar—or take one of two sweetened condensed milk shortcuts.
Crunchy and crowd-pleasing, this salad can be prepared in advance and customized to your heart’s content.
High on zucchini, corn, eggplant, and tomatoes. Low on dirty dishes.
Juicy peak-season tomatoes make the perfect plant-based swap for aguachile.