From a store newsletter at the time:.
However, when the.recently tweeted out a recipe for a fluffy Dutch Baby pancake, some of our friends across the pond took issue with the un-savory application of, what they claim, is actually Yorkshire Pudding..

In a seemingly innocent-enough move, the.posted the above recipe as any publication with a recipe section would do.But the photo included seemed to spark something in the U.K. as one user's response heralded an onslaught of outraged reactions.. Then came the cries of hipster-appropriation for some reason..

recipe section become a hipster zine?But there were some defenders of the Dutch Baby, some citing that they had eaten both and believed them to be very different things.

Included in that mix is British chef and television presenter Nigella Lawson who happened to Tweet her own recipe just days prior:.
We asked our own (albeit American-born) test kitchen staff what they thought of the controversy.When I made the announcement on.
that I was leaving my restaurant for a new opportunity, one person named Jesse felt the need to comment negatively about it: "Please tell me you're not a waiter for ten years."That single comment elicited over 2,000 replies and 1,400 angry face emojis.
Clearly Jesse struck a nerve with.waiters and waitresses.
(Editor: Magnetic Switches)