A tablespoon may be fine to your palette now, but just saying, that's a "p".
Look at the "P" in pancakes and p in "tps of salt"and the "b" in bowl vs "tbs" . Note how the line from drawing the round part of the "p" crosses the line while she doesn't do that with "b" 's
I did a check online at other recipes to see if I'm an outlier, and the standard seems to be 1/4 to up to 1/2 a teaspoon for each cup of flour used in the recipe. And yes, milk and other things are added.
If you're putting in a tablespoon, you're using 3 teaspoons per 4 cups of flour or 3/4 tsp per cup of flour (3x to 50% higher than the norm).
And again, her handwriting is consistent, that's a "p"!
Edit: You can see what I mean if you do a search for "Buttermilk pancakes". Click on "Print Recipe" or "Jump to Recipe" and check the ratio of salt to flour.
Interesting fact, most modern recipes use baking powder in addition to the baking soda for extra fluff (though I'm definitely gonna try your aunt's recipe with yeast) and most use unsalted butter in lieu of oil (or salted butter with even less added salt in the recipe).
A tablespoon may be fine to your palette now, but just saying, that's a "p".
Look at the "P" in pancakes and p in "tps of salt"and the "b" in bowl vs "tbs" . Note how the line from drawing the round part of the "p" crosses the line while she doesn't do that with "b" 's
I did a check online at other recipes to see if I'm an outlier, and the standard seems to be 1/4 to up to 1/2 a teaspoon for each cup of flour used in the recipe. And yes, milk and other things are added.
If you're putting in a tablespoon, you're using 3 teaspoons per 4 cups of flour or 3/4 tsp per cup of flour (3x to 50% higher than the norm).
And again, her handwriting is consistent, that's a "p"!
Edit: You can see what I mean if you do a search for "Buttermilk pancakes". Click on "Print Recipe" or "Jump to Recipe" and check the ratio of salt to flour.
Interesting fact, most modern recipes use baking powder in addition to the baking soda for extra fluff (though I'm definitely gonna try your aunt's recipe with yeast) and most use unsalted butter in lieu of oil (or salted butter with even less added salt in the recipe).