Bacon and Cheese Dutch Baby Recipe | Good. Food. Stories. (2024)

I’ll be honest: cheese gets me more than a little hot under the collar.

Whether it’s melted between bread, scooped up via fondue fork, or dripping off the edge of a tortilla chip, it’s absolutely impossible to resist.

And I feel incredibly lucky that cheese guru Tia Keenan feels the same way.

Keenan calls her new book, Melt, Stretch, & Sizzle: The Art of Cooking Cheese, “my love letter to hot cheese” and her feelings come through loud and clear on each page.

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Keenan has already extolled the wonders of unaltered cheese in her first cookbook, The Art of the Cheese Plate.

Now she turns her adoring gaze to cheese in all its warm, stretchable, oozable forms–and gets my pulse quickening with every recipe.

One of the nicest things about Melt, Stretch, & Sizzle is that you don’t have to go hunting down very specific, small-batch cheeses to make the recipes.

Keenan believes–and I agree wholeheartedly–that you shouldn’t be wasting that handmade $30/pound raw-milk cheese in a casserole of baked pasta, where you won’t be able to savor the complexity.

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Instead, each recipe includes trusted recommendations for her favorite dependable, affordable supermarket brands, from Mt. Vikos feta to Calabro ricotta to Belgioso burrata.

Nothing to scoff at here; just reliable and flavorful cheeses you won’t have to travel the world to find.

Now, think of all the things you could do with hot cheese, and Keenan will give you an irresistibly over-the-top take on each of them.

The chapter headings–like Saucy, Dip In, Pasta Lovers, and Live and Let Fry–allude to the inventively off-kilter and fun, but still comforting, dishes therein.

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Why make regular cheese sauce when you could do a beer-and-Worcestershire rarebit? How can regular artichoke dip compete with tangy baked feta folded generously with pickled peppers and dill?

The recipe for “little Dutch eggs” is reason enough to get over any reservations you might have about deep frying at home.

Instead of a traditional sausage-wrapped Scotch egg, these are enrobed in a salty, herb-flecked Gouda paste and are destined to be the most memorable party appetizer you’ll serve this holiday season.

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And when it comes to pasta, there’s nothing better than macaroni and cheese, am I right? Unless, that is… if you make a mac and cheese gratin with an entire burrata hidden inside.

Yes, an entire ball of burrata. I’ll just let you think about that one for a while.

Despite the heights of imagination to which these recipes soar, the execution of the dishes in Melt, Stretch, & Sizzle aren’t beyond the reach of home cooks.

Like the bacon and cheese Dutch baby made with smoked Gouda, for which the recipe follows.

As the love child between a popover and pancake, a Dutch baby likewise straddles the line between impressive brunch dish and simple weekend comfort food.

It’s a one-pot wonder in that it’s cooked up easily in a cast iron pan, and can adapt to almost any flavor profile you throw at it.

Keenan’s bacon and cheese Dutch baby is mostly savory with its double whammy smokiness, yet light and airy enough that you won’t have to take a nap after eating it.

Give it a go and don’t skimp on the cheese–after all, that’s the Melt, Stretch, & Sizzle way.

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Bacon and Cheese Dutch Baby Recipe | Good. Food. Stories. (7)

Smoky Bacon and Cheese Dutch Baby

Yield: 2 servings

Prep Time: 10 minutes

Cook Time: 30 minutes

Additional Time: 10 minutes

Total Time: 50 minutes

Weekend comfort food doesn't get any better than this bacon and cheese dutch baby made with smoked Gouda from the book Melt, Stretch, & Sizzle.

Ingredients

  • 2 pieces thick-cut bacon, chopped
  • 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup milk
  • 3 eggs
  • 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted and cooled slightly
  • 2 ounces smoked Gouda, shredded (about 1/3 cup)
  • 1 tablespoon finely chopped chives
  • Maple syrup, for finishing (optional)

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.
  2. Cook the bacon in a 10-inch cast-iron pan over medium heat until crisp and the fat has rendered, about 6 minutes.
  3. Using a slotted spoon, transfer the bacon to paper towels to drain. Pour the fat into a small bowl and set it aside.
  4. Wipe out the hot pan with a wad of paper towels and place the pan in the oven to preheat.
  5. In a food processor, add the flour, milk, eggs, and salt and process for 2 minutes. Drizzle in the melted butter with the processor running.
  6. Keep the batter in the bowl of the food processor and place it in the refrigerator to rest for 10 minutes.
  7. After the batter has rested, remove the cast-iron pan from the oven and pour in the reserved bacon fat, swirling it to coat.
  8. Pour the batter into the pan, return it to the oven, and bake for 18 minutes, until puffed and just golden brown on top.
  9. Remove the Dutch baby from the oven, sprinkle it with the cooked bacon and the shredded cheese, and return it to the oven until the cheese is melted, another 2 to 3 minutes.
  10. Garnish with the chives and serve immediately. A wee drizzle of maple syrup never hurt anyone.

Notes

Reprinted with permission from Melt, Stretch, & Sizzle by Tia Keenan, Rizzoli, 2018

Keenan's trusted brands of Gouda: Maple Leaf, Marieke

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Bacon and Cheese Dutch Baby Recipe | Good. Food. Stories. (2024)

FAQs

How did Dutch baby get its name? ›

While these pancakes are derived from the German pancake dish, it is said that the name Dutch baby was coined by one of Victor Manca's daughters, where "Dutch" perhaps was her corruption of the German autonym deutsch. Manca's Cafe claimed that it owned the trademark for Dutch babies in 1942.

What is a Dutch baby? ›

Start your day off right with a Dutch baby—a big, puffy pancake baked in a sizzling-hot buttered skillet. Sometimes called a German pancake, a Dutch Baby is a big, poofy, family-style pancake with a custardy center—think of it as a cross between a crepe, a pancake, and a popover.

Why is my Dutch baby so eggy? ›

If you would like the inside of the finished dish to be a little less "egg-y" then cut the number of eggs down to 3, and many many reviewers also found that just 3 Tablespoons of butter worked better for them.

Why did my Dutch baby fall? ›

Why did my Dutch baby fall? If your Dutch baby does not rise, a few factors may be the culprit. The ingredients were too cold, the mixture wasn't mixed well (either too much or too little), the pan wasn't hot enough, or you needed more butter.

Who invented the Dutch baby? ›

Many credit Seattle's Maca Cafe for adapting the recipe in the early 20th century. Legend has it that when Victor Maca's daughter first saw the German-derived dish, she mispronounced Deutsch (“German”) as “Dutch,” and the Dutch baby was born.

What is the Dutch word for pancake? ›

Literally translated “pannenkoek” is the Dutch word for pancake.

What is the origin and history of a Dutch baby? ›

The most well-acknowledged origin story of Dutch baby pancakes was birthed in a Seattle diner called Manca's Cafe. According to the Everett Herald, It happened when Italian-American Victor Manca created them using custom-made Dutch baby pans as a quick turnover breakfast item.

What is the German name for Dutch baby? ›

A Dutch baby (or Dutch baby pancake), is also known as a German pancake, a Hootenanny, a Dutch puff, or a Bismarck, and is simply a large American popover. A large Yorkshire pudding shares a lot of similarities with a Dutch baby. A Dutch baby is usually baked in the oven.

Is a Dutch baby the same as a pannenkoeken? ›

They both can be made with the same mix but they are made differently. This pannekoeken is designed for an 11 to 12-inch Dutch baby pan or a skillet with rounded sides. This is a five ingredient–five step recipe that really goes together quickly.

What is the difference between Yorkshire pudding and Dutch baby pancake? ›

To those in the know, a Dutch baby really is just a large, puffy pancake, while Yorkshire pudding is a savory side dish that has graced meat-heavy meals in England for centuries. Yet, some people tend to confuse the two as being the same, owing to a similarity of ingredients and appearance.

Are Dutch baby pancakes from the Netherlands? ›

This is nothing like a traditional Dutch pancake made in the Netherlands. Known as a pannenkoeken, it's also quite large but typically features crispy bacon, melted cheese, and toppings such as berries, apples, or raisins. As the contemporary story goes, Dutch baby pancakes originated in the kitchen of a Seattle diner.

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