By Joe Baur
This article originally appeared on The Nosher.
I see your carefully curated Instagram brunch with chia seed pudding, avocado toast and kombucha and raise you this: Chremslach.
Chremslach (‘chremsl’ for singular) are better known as matzah meal pancakes or even bubbaleh and are a lesser-known delicacy of Ashkenazi cuisine. You can find cousins throughout the Jewish culinary world. Sephardic Jews, for example, might be more familiar with bimuelos (Ladino for “dumplings”), a Hanukkah or Passover treat also made with matzah meal batter.
Chremslach rarely enter the conversation when it comes to figuring out what to do with extra matzah meal after Passover. But there’s nothing about chremslach that makes them extra palatable while recounting the Exodus. In fact, they’re better than your typical batch of pancakes. Chremslach are what you actually want when you’re craving pancakes for breakfast.
There’s more substance than a typical, white-flour pancake. Chremslach are hearty yet moist, fluffy and tasty on their own in a way your average pancake just is not. The latter relies heavily on what you put on top of it, but chremslach can survive on their own. They’re nutty, but not too sweet. What you put on top (fresh fruit, honey, cinnamon) are just complimentary, but not necessary.

