I made these once for a surprise gluten-free guest, and they've become our go-to Saturday morning pancake. I feel like they're more nutritious than your average pancake, with the squash and oats and relatively heavy volume of eggs, and they're a tasty way to put a dent in the winter squash harvest.
Whenever we roast a squash, we freeze whatever we're not eating right away in one cup portions, so we always have a pile of roast squash puree ready to go.
Squash Pancakes (serves about 4)
2 cups rolled oats
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon ginger
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon clove
4 eggs
2 cups soft cooked winter squash
2 teaspoons vanilla
2 teaspoons maple syrup
2 tablespoons oil
-Put the oats in the blender and process into flour.
-Combine the oat flour with the other dry ingredients in a mixing bowl.
-Put the wet ingredients in the blender and blend to combine and smooth out any strings or chunks in the squash. If you're using commercial canned squash, you can probably skip the blender.
-Mix the wet ingredients into the dry and let stand 10 minutes.
-Preheat a griddle or frying pan to about 250 degrees while the batter sits.
-Scoop a scant quarter cup of batter onto the griddle. It will be thick, so use a finger to spread the batter out into a 4" circle, 1/4"-1/2" thick.
-Let the pancakes cook for about 3 minutes on one side, then flip and give them another minute and a half on the other side. Since the batter is so thick, the usual pancake tricks of watching for the bubbles to come through don't work, so go by time.
-Serve with butter and maple syrup, or apple butter, and enjoy. Leftovers reheat well, even from frozen.
