![]() You can keep these warm in a low oven until you’re ready to serve. Nancy Cook teaches and supervises in the areas of gender and sexuality, qualitative research methodologies, imperialism and globalization, gender relations. Once the edges are crisping, carefully flip (about 3 minutes, depending on your stove & pan). I like to use either a 1 Tbsp measure (for small cakes), or a 1/4 cup measure (for medium cakes) to drop the batter into the pan. Once hot, add 1 or 2 tsp coconut oil or butter, and drop in pancakes. In a blender or food processor, combine all the ingredients until there are no large lumps (the batter will have texture from the oats). Enjoy!!Īnd here is my how-to video, from start to finish…ġ 1/2 cups gluten free oats (regular oats will work too)Ģ Tbsp almond butter (any nut/seed butter works)ġ/2 cup oat milk (or any milk of your choice) I find it’s much easier to flip them if you don’t make them super big. Just know that butter will burn a bit faster than coconut oil, so you need to keep an extra eye on them, if you’re cooking them in butter.Īlso, one more side note… Since these have no eggs, they can be a bit tricky to flip. You can use margarine or butter also to give that yummy pancake/butter flavor combo. I like to cook these with a bit of coconut oil in the skillet to give an extra little crisp to the edges. I mean, the batter is so good, you can just eat it with a spoon (and you can because no eggs!). Turns out, I had everything I needed (which isn’t much!), so I threw some ingredients in the food processor and BAM! Let me tell you these are SO GOOD. So, ok, I literally dreamt that I made some gluten-free vegan pancakes, so when I woke up I was super inspired to figure something out. It will appeal to fans of Melissa Albert’s The Hazel Wood or Kate Alice Marshall’s Rules for Vanishing and is suitable for ages 13+.Pancakes are liiiife! I mean, a lazy Sunday morning with pancakes just seems right, doesn’t it? Well, actually any morning (or afternoon or evening) seems better with pancakes, lets be real. It also has a very realistic investigation of the complexities of teenage female friendship. 555 likes, 28 comments - Katie Webber (katiewebbernyc) on Instagram on September 27, 2020: 'I haven’t stopped cooking (or eating) since I began writing my cookbook. This supernatural thriller has an exciting premise and delivers on its intrigue. This is the third YA offering from author Katherine Webber, who, with her husband, also writes the successful Dragon Realm middle-fiction series as Katie and Kevin Tsang. Bitsy becomes convinced that whenever Amy has a bit of good luck, she has an equivalent amount of bad luck.Īs their friendship begins to fracture, Bitsy grows more determined to work out what really happened at the Revelry, who has gone missing in the past, and how to break what she believes is a curse on her. ![]() But their dresses have significant burns on them and everything feels different. When Amy discovers an invitation to the Revelry, the two sneak into the woods for the party, despite serious reluctance on Bitsy’s behalf to break the time-honoured rules. Of course, there are plenty of rumours, and occasionally, attendees have never been seen again.īitsy’s family has lived in the town for generations, but her best friend Amy only arrived relatively recently. Though the Revelry has occurred for generations, nobody ever speaks of what happens there. Known as the Revelry, the festivities are shrouded in secrecy and only the graduating class of students are invited to attend. This intriguing horror story is based around a sleepy rural town and a legendary party in the woods.
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