How To: Turn a Tortilla into a French Crêpe

Turn a Tortilla into a French Crêpe

Making a good crêpe takes practice and commitment. The batter is rich—most recipes incorporate melted butter, whole milk, and several eggs—and the cooking of the crêpe requires good technique. You have to learn to deposit and swirl just the right amount of batter to get the thinnest possible crêpe, and then learn how to loosen the entire circle and flip it over without tearing or snagging.

The Traditional Way to Make a Crêpe

A traditional crêpes batter consists of whole milk, eggs, melted butter, flour, a spoonful of sugar, and a little vanilla or booze for flavor. All of those ingredients are whisked together to create a smooth, thin liquid in which microscopic particles of flour are suspended. Watch chef Jacques Pepin's video below for a demo.

Crêpes batter is delicate. Because it doesn't store well (it tends to "break," or separate after a while), you have to cook all of it up right after you make it, which isn't practical for most of us. If you don't eat all the crêpes, you have to then wait for them to cool down, pack them between layers of parchment paper, and find enough room in your freezer to store them flat.

Fortunately, there exists a much, much, much easier version that even the most cooking-adverse can take on. And it involves one easy ingredient that pretty much blew my mind: a tortilla.

Tortillas: The Easier Way to Make a Crêpe

Kenny Shopsin, legendary New Yorker/restaurant owner, got fed up with this problem. In his book Eat Me: The Food and Philosophy of Kenny Shopsin, he explains that a crêpe is mostly flour and milk, so why not take a tortilla, which is mostly flour plus a bit of water, and dip it into a mixture of eggs and dairy?

Could these burrito holders really be transformed/disguised into a haughty French crepe? Image by Karen Ahn/Food Hacks

When I read this, I thought, "This dude is crazy." But I do love crêpes, and his version sounded ever so much cheaper and easier than the traditional way (also somewhat healthier, if you can believe it). So I decided to see for myself if it worked.

The Tortilla Crêpes Recipe (Adapted from Kenny Shopsin)

This makes one crêpe. If you want more, just increase the recipe accordingly.

  • 1 large egg
  • 1 tablespoon heavy cream
  • 1 teaspoon maple syrup, vanilla, rum, or port for flavor
  • 1 12-inch flour tortilla (the thinnest kind available)
  • 1 tablespoon butter for frying

Step 1: Warm Up the Egg & Butter

Set out the egg and butter beforehand so they're room temperature (or use these tricks to get them to room temperature in a minutes). This is important, especially for the egg. If it's cold, the tortilla will have a harder time absorbing the mixture.

Seriously, use a room-temperature egg. You'll thank me later. Image by Karen Ahn/Food Hacks

Step 2: Whisk Together Egg, Cream, & Syrup

Whisk the egg, cream, and maple syrup together to form a thick, creamy batter in a large, shallow bowl. If you see lumps in the mixture (aka chalaza, or the cord that keeps the yolk suspended in the egg white), then take a tip from our French toast guide and strain it.

If you like, a sweet-tasting liquor or liqueur work in place of maple syrup or vanilla. Image by Karen Ahn/Food Hacks

Step 3: Soak the Tortillas

Take the tortilla and place it on top of the egg mixture. Press down to make sure the liquid spreads evenly all over the tortilla. You can also do this in a large, shallow plate.

Pick up the tortilla and dredge it thoroughly through the liquid. You want to make sure every square inch gets coated, especially the edges. This is key to creating the crêpe-like effect. Do this a couple of times on each side. You want the tortilla to get thoroughly moistened, but not be so wet it starts to disintegrate.

Dip those edges, folks. I can't emphasize it enough. Image by Karen Ahn/Food Hacks

Step 4: Melt the Butter

Heat a wide, flat skillet on medium-high. I used a non-stick pan. In my opinion, crêpes are too delicate for cast iron, since cast iron both conducts and retains heat. You'll just scorch your crêpe.

Melt the butter and make sure to move it around so the entire surface of the pan is covered. While this is going on, flip the tortilla once or twice in the egg mixture to make sure one side doesn't get too soaked.

Step 5: Cook Your Tortilla Crêpe

Wait until the butter is lightly bubbling, then gently place the tortilla in the pan. Cook for one or two minutes until the first side is crispy and brown. Flip and cook on the other side.

This is a lot easier than dealing with real crepe batter. Image by Karen Ahn/Food Hacks

That's How Easy These Crêpes Are

I have to say, I had big doubts about this recipe, but the results are pretty damn impressive. The texture is very, very close to that of an actual crêpe, but you and your guests won't really care about how quote-unquote authentic it is. Everyone will be too busy gobbling them down and asking for more.

These work well with sweet or savory fillings, or also just plain with a little syrup or sugar. Image by Karen Ahn/Food Hacks

One last tip: Faisal suggested that I see if this technique could possibly be used to revive stale tortillas. After making a few inedible batter-covered tortillas that were as stiff as Frisbees, I'd say no. This recipe has the most success when you use really fresh tortillas. If they're dried out, they won't absorb the egg mixture well, and you'll end with a crunchy/chewy disk that lacks the tenderness and richness of a real crêpe.

If you don't already know about Kenny Shopsin, be sure to get his book and check out the documentary about him. He's a true original, and he has a lot of great ideas about food.

Need more quick, innovative, and delicious recipes? Then check out two-ingredient pizza dough, three-ingredient pasta sauce, and three-ingredient pork belly and kimchi stew (aka kimchi jjigae).

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2 Comments

Wow. Apparently "Kenny" found our family secret. In as much as we had for years been making "bread pudding style French Toast" for decades as a way to dispose of the last half dozen (half dry) slices from store bought bread, we also long ago experimented with both with fresh bread that had been "flattened" with a rolling pin to get most of the air out (fresh bread falls apart too easy in our milk + egg "wash") and then later found that the soft flour tortillas (the ones sold as "Homestyle Fajita size) are thick enough to absorb a fair amount of the "batter" without falling apart. Much less work than smashing the bread slice by slice. The "taco" size are too thin and somewhat small. In case you are wondering what "bread pudding style French Toast" means, most cook books (and many restaurants) want the bread just dipped long enough to have the surface well coated, and when cooked it still looks like bread at the center, allowing a place to absorb syrup. We do ours to just short of falling apart, cook slower on our griddle pan, and the center is like custard when the bread is done cooking. No, it won't absorb syrup, but we prefer butter melted on top of the slices, then doused liberally with cinnamon sugar (we keep that premixed). Leftover (yeah, that doesn't happen unless someone is sick or doesn't show for breakfast) slices are good cold topped with a slather of your favorite jelly / jam. Using the tortillas makes a lot less of the "pudding center" but also allows them to be coated with jelly, rolled up, wrapped in plastic and stored in the fridge for up to 3 days (they never last that long in our house).

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