Cream and Jam Roly-Poly Pancakes

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photo from National Geographic Kids UK

Today is Shrove Tuesday in the Catholic Christian church. It is the day before Lent. During Lent a Christian is supposed to give up indulgence and be repentant. I grew up Catholic until I was 15 when my atheist father decided to go to church. Although this made my mother incredibly happy he wanted to go to a different church, a Baptist church. See, the reason was my older brother was smoking pot and he thought it would be good for him. To make a long story short, we never went to the Catholic Church again. Instead, we went together as a family to the Baptist church. They don’t celebrate or have traditional Lent season.

To this day I miss the traditions we celebrated in the Catholic Church. One of them is Ash Wednesday which kicks off the Lent Season. As a Catholic you are supposed to give up something you really like and be repentant, whatever that means. I guess as a kid I thought it was like putting your nose on the blackboard. You wouldn’t face the rest of the classroom anymore for the entire time. Or perhaps it meant walking around moping, feeling extra sorry for whatever you had done wrong. For which I had no idea. I always made stuff up when going to confession.

Anyway, back to pancake day! I never celebrated this until I met my English boyfriend (now husband). Every Shrove Tuesday he would say: It’s Pancake Day!

Me: What’s That?

He: It’s a day we have pancakes!

This English tradition is handed down from hundreds of years. Similar traditions are found in Germany, France, and many other countries. People have been doing this for centuries.

The story goes that it originated way back in 1445, in the town of Olney in Buckinghamshire, England. A woman was so busy making pancakes that she lost track of time. She then ran to church with her pancakes.

In England it is celebrated as pancake day. It’s a day to splurge on eating and drinking before the fasting of Lent.

Germans call it Fastnacht. Which translates to Eve of the fast.

In France it is known as Mardi Gras which means Fat Tuesday.

In Iceland, it’s called “Sprengidagur” which means “Bursting Day”

I am not religious. However, we like to celebrate this time of year by making these pancakes that are more like crepes. We spread clotted cream and jam on them and roll them up to eat. So good!

Photo of Cream and jam Roly Polly Pancakes by Kat Adams

So happy pancake day and eat some pancakes! Here is a link to my favorite recipe

Pfannkuchen auf Deutsch

Crêpe aus Francais

Pönnukaka in Icelandic

Tschüss!

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5 responses to “Cream and Jam Roly-Poly Pancakes”

  1. Hazel Avatar

    When I got a husband who celebrate pancake Day, I think I’m with you about: what’s pancake Day?🤭🤔

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Alex Avatar
    Alex

    Chocolate Chip Pancakes for us today!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. weisserwatercolours Avatar

    We share many things in common, as we’ve already discovered, and yet another is how I was raised the son of a Baptist minister, who then went on to choose to be ordained in the Presbyterian church, and am now a member of the Anglican church (long story, obviously, heh heh), and tomorrow we have the liturgy and dispensing of ashes in the shape of the cross on our foreheads. It is my favourite Season, due to how its somberness and call to reflection and introspection is much more where I’m at as a man of 77, that trying to come up to the extreme levels of happiness and joy that Christmas has come to demand of me, hahaha.
    So, yes, let’s make those Pfannkuchens, and THANK YOU for the recipe I’m going to follow. And I may just combine them, rather cheekily, with potato Latkes, in the Jewish tradition (but not at all attached to anything even close to Lent and its meaning).
    Lance

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Momsthoughts Avatar

      I love that you also make potato Latkes! When I lived in the UK I went to an Anglican Church and really loved going! It had been a long time since I had felt comfortable inside a church. There was no judgement like I had felt at the Baptist church. I am happy for you Lance and enjoy those pancakes! It is snowing today here, which I feel is a promise of Spring to come! ❤️Kat

      Like

  4. lisaapaul Avatar

    a lovely tradition!

    Liked by 1 person

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