Orange-Anise Crepes

  3.6 – 7 reviews  • Sweet

This is the most amazing dish for acorn squash with apple filling. Each Thanksgiving, I cook it.

Prep Time: 10 mins
Cook Time: 10 mins
Additional Time: 8 hrs
Total Time: 8 hrs 20 mins
Servings: 6
Yield: 6 servings

Ingredients

  1. 4 large eggs
  2. 1 cup milk
  3. ¾ cup orange juice
  4. 1 tablespoon anise extract
  5. 1 cup all-purpose flour
  6. 2 tablespoons butter, divided
  7. Sugar, for dusting

Instructions

  1. Beat together the eggs, milk, orange juice, anise, and flour until smooth. Refrigerate overnight.
  2. To cook the crepes, melt a little butter in a heavy skillet over medium heat; brush the butter evenly over the pan. Pour in 1/4 cup of the batter, tilt the pan to distribute the batter evenly. Cook until the batter begins to firm up and bubble, when lightly browned, flip over, and continue cooking until browned on the other side, about 4 minutes total. Repeat with remaining batter. To serve, sprinkle crepes with sugar.

Nutrition Facts

Calories 213 kcal
Carbohydrate 26 g
Cholesterol 137 mg
Dietary Fiber 1 g
Protein 8 g
Saturated Fat 4 g
Sodium 91 mg
Sugars 9 g
Fat 8 g
Unsaturated Fat 0 g

Reviews

Michael Smith
I was intrigued with the anise extract which I love plus oranges. This recipe doesn’t work at all. It is too loose (watery) for crepe batter and just ran into an extremely thin layer that could not be flipped. Despite very heavy butter in the pan, it still stuck to the pan. So I had scraped up cooked dough. There isn’t a lot of flavor to the crepes. I’ve always used Julia Child’s crepe recipe successfully. It calls for 3 egg yolks and 1-½ cups flour for 1 cup milk plus 5 Tbsp melted butter in the crepe mix plus lightly brushing the pan with butter. Big differences! I pin the future, I will just add some anise extract and Cointreau to Julia’s recipe. No, I do NOT recommend this recipe.
Christopher Santiago
I did not care for this.
Amanda Collins
I used only 1 tsp. of anise extract and found it was the perfect amount. While the taste was amazing, I had a lot of trouble working with the batter – it tore even as I spread it. I may try adding these flavors to the basic crepe batter recipe to see if I can duplicate this recipe without the tearing.
Luke Jackson
Love these! I will make these again when family comes to visit. They are great served the orange crepe sauce recipe from this site!
Sean Martin
This was my first attempt at crepes and I thought that they were just okay. A tablespoon of anise extract seemed like too much. I couldn’t taste the orange flavor at all and my husband said that they tasted “mediciny,” but maybe anise just isn’t our thing. In the end, I sprinkled them with powdered sugar and then squeezed some lemon over that and that seemed to sufficiently cover up the mediciny taste.
Charles Wells
These were tasty!
Elizabeth Perez
This is an excellent breakfast or brunch fun but easy food. I do not chill mine and cook them in oil verses the butter. Serve with powder sugar and or whipped cream. Great and impressive.

 

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