its hard to turn cooked pancakes back into batter
Its chemical b/c its burnt and can't turn back. CHEMICAL.
no its chemical you can't change it back into batter
There are a number of different chemical changes associated with cooking a pancake. First, the proteins from the egg and buttermilk become denatured. Second, the baking soda breaks down into carbon dioxide and water, resulting in the little bubbles in the batter. Third, the carbohydrates in the flour, sugar, buttermilk and egg all undergo some degree of denaturing.
no
It is actually the egg and milk in the pancake batter that holds it together. The milks lactose reacts chemically with the flour and many other ingredients and creates gluten, which hardens the pancake batter and holds it together.
Though it can vary slightly per cake and based on the ingredients used, a cake batter is typically very smooth. It is smoother and less dense than a pancake, bread, or muffin batter, but not quite as thin as a crepe batter.
Pancake batter, oil.
Absolutely! Just make sure the consistency is that of pancake batter. Add a little milk to thin out the scone batter if necessary.
Shouldn't you have eaten them by now? Isn't a pancake only a pancake after its been made? Before that it's just batter, pancake batter. So If you've made your pancakes already, just eat them, jeez.
Mixture !!!
No It will be really bad by then
Mixture !!!