One of the earliest French culinary imports to make a dent in America was the crepe. As a kid in New York during the ’60s, I remember dining with my family at quite a few creperies. I also remember the black steel crepe pan my folks bought, a token of their desire to make crepes at home every once in a while.
This admirable ambition faced two stumbling blocks. First, if the pan wasn’t well-seasoned (which required using it a lot and treating it with special care), the crepes stuck to it. And that meant we usually destroyed the crepes when the moment came to dig them out of the pan.
Second, conventional wisdom had it that each crepe in a stack of cooked crepes needed to be separated from the crepes above and below it using individual sheets of waxed paper, otherwise they’d all stick together. Well, who had the patience for that kind of fussiness?
Happily, I have solved both problems. Though I’m not generally a fan of non-stick pans — the usual choice for making crepes these days — they do work. I prefer stick-resistant skillets, which are coated with a safe enamel that works well with crepes. I’ve also discovered that you can stack crepes. They don’t stick to each other!