58limited
Well-known member
The Pizzelle thread fell off the active list before I got to post my first foray into making pizzelles.
I first had a pizzelle at my office: a client has been bringing them in every Christmas for the past few years. When I would try one, I never went "WOW! This is great!" but, like Lay's potato chips, I couldn't eat just one. In fact, I couldn't get enough. The pizzelle thread finally convinced me to get my own pizzelle maker.
I bought a Rival pizzelle/waffle iron on ebay for $20.00 and it arrived this Tuesday. I used the recipe on the handle - the same recipe that Xraytech posted on the other thread. They turned out great. I did not use the anise or lemon, just the vanilla. I ate several as they were finished and I have a nice stack to last for several days (I hope). One thing I did different on the advice of the client who brings these to the clinic: I kept adding flour until the dough wasn't sticky and I could roll a 1 1/2" ball in my hand without it sticking to my hand. The ball was placed in the pizzelle iron. This ended up being a total of 2 cups of flour instead of the 1 1/2 cups the recipe called for.
I think I'll experiment with the recipes from the other thread (especially the cannoli filling recipe) and I might try adding cocoa powder. I have several vanilla beans so I might also try a version with real vanilla instead of extract.
Link to previous thread:
www.automaticwasher.org
I first had a pizzelle at my office: a client has been bringing them in every Christmas for the past few years. When I would try one, I never went "WOW! This is great!" but, like Lay's potato chips, I couldn't eat just one. In fact, I couldn't get enough. The pizzelle thread finally convinced me to get my own pizzelle maker.
I bought a Rival pizzelle/waffle iron on ebay for $20.00 and it arrived this Tuesday. I used the recipe on the handle - the same recipe that Xraytech posted on the other thread. They turned out great. I did not use the anise or lemon, just the vanilla. I ate several as they were finished and I have a nice stack to last for several days (I hope). One thing I did different on the advice of the client who brings these to the clinic: I kept adding flour until the dough wasn't sticky and I could roll a 1 1/2" ball in my hand without it sticking to my hand. The ball was placed in the pizzelle iron. This ended up being a total of 2 cups of flour instead of the 1 1/2 cups the recipe called for.
I think I'll experiment with the recipes from the other thread (especially the cannoli filling recipe) and I might try adding cocoa powder. I have several vanilla beans so I might also try a version with real vanilla instead of extract.
Link to previous thread:

Pizzelle recipes and tips
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