Shrove Tuesday

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Why do we eat pancakes?

PancakesWhy do we eat pancakes?
Pancake Day, or Shrove Tuesday, is the traditional feast day before the start of Lent on Ash Wednesday. Lent - the 40 days leading up to Easter - was traditionally a time of fasting and on Shrove Tuesday Christians went to confession and were "shriven" (absolved from their sins). It was the last opportunity to use eggs and fats before embarking on the Lenten fast and pancakes are the perfect way of using up these ingredients.
 
Pancake Tradition
A thin, flat cake, made of batter and baked on a griddle or fried in a pan, the pancake has a very long history and featured in cookbooks as far back as 1439. The tradition of tossing or flipping them is almost as old: "And every man and maide doe take their turne, And tosse their Pancakes up for feare they burne." (Pasquil's Palin, 1619).
 
Tossing pancakes
Certainly these days part of the fun of cooking pancakes is in the tossing. To toss a pancake successfully takes a combination of the perfect pancake and good technique - it's so easy to get it wrong and end up with half the pancake still stuck to the pan while the other half is stuck to the ceiling or floor. All in all, it's probably best to practise a few times without an audience.
 
For more Pancake facts, click here!
 

 
 

When is Shrove Tuesday?

PancakesWhen is Shrove Tuesday / Pancake Day?
Shrove Tuesday, also known as Pancake Day, is held on the day before Ash Wednesday, when Lent starts.  This is 41 days before Easter.
This year, 2008, Shrove Tuesday falls on Tuesday 5th February.
 

 
 

Pancake Recipe

Recipes
If you're unsure where to start with making pancakes, try this classic recipe from Delia Smith for basic pancakes with sugar and lemon. Or try some of these very different variations on the humble pancake.
 

 

With thanks to the BBC

Pancakes