Today is Pancake Day: Shrove Tuesday. Shrove Tuesday gets its name from the ritual of shriving, when the faithful confessed their sins to the local priest and recieved forgiveness before the Lenten season began.
As far back as 1000 AD, "to shrive" meant to hear confessions. (Trivia note: the term survives today in the expression "short shrift" or giving little attention to anyone's explanations or excuses.)
Historically, Shrove Tuesday also marked the beginning of the 40-day Lenten fasting period when the faithful were forbidden to consume meat, butter, eggs or milk. However, if a family had a store of these foods they would certainly spoil by the time the fast ended on Easter Sunday. What to do? Solution: use up the milk, butter and eggs no later than Shrove Tuesday. And so, with the addition of a little flour, the solution quickly presented itself in... pancakes.
Today, the Shrove Tuesday pancake tradition lives on in Western Europe, the United States, Canada and Australia. It is most associated with the UK, where it is simply known as Pancake Day with a traditional recipe that looks to all the world more like a French crepe rather than the 'mile-high' stack so popular on National Pancake Day in America.
In many places in the world, there are pancake flipping contests. You may not be an expert flipper, but you can certainly enjoy making the following pancakes today!
For Shrove Tuesday, Pancakes are in order, and I suggest:
Chocolate Chip Pancakes
Chocolate Chip Bacon Pancakes
Chocolate Blueberry Pancakes
Chocolate Cherry Pancakes in a Jar
Strawberry Chocolate German Pancake
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