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Answer for the clue "Pancake accessory ", 7 letters:
griddle

Alternative clues for the word griddle

Word definitions for griddle in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
A griddle is a cooking device consisting of a broad flat surface heated by gas, electricity, wood, or coal, with both residential and commercial applications. In industrialized countries, a griddle is most commonly a flat metal plate, elsewhere typically ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
shallow frying pan, early 13c., apparently from Anglo-French gridil , Old North French gredil , altered from Old French graille , from Latin craticula (see grill ).

Usage examples of griddle.

Aunt Chloe, pausing while she was greasing a griddle with a scrap of bacon on her fork, and regarding young Master George with pride.

And, with that, aunty gave George a nudge with her finger, designed to be immensely facetious, and turned again to her griddle with great briskness.

Falk had returned with the flour and eggs that Jack had asked for and the boy set about making the batter for griddle cakes.

Master Frallit would beat a boy whose griddle cakes were anything less than flat.

The iron platter hissed and smoked but soon settled down, and minutes later the delicious aroma of griddle cakes filled the den.

Behind him, the griddle hissed when fresh pancake batter touched down upon the hot metal.

And he scrapes his griddle with the spatula and looks moodily at the stew kettle.

The creature, when she looked around, had retreated to the front door, its eyes fixed on the hot griddle where the flatbread steamed.

He greased a griddle and poured out two neat, round blobs for flapjacks.

He looked quizzically at Hyacinth when the scarecrow-looking fellow placed some griddle cakes in front of him.

Pitts making tea in the kitchen, and the prospect of griddle cakes to come, began as he worked at the desk to indulge in his one vice.

Pitts, standing in the doorway, a forgotten tray of griddle cakes in her hands.

I put four small circles of batter on the hot griddle and watched them spread and begin to rise.

I clutched it with my right hand, hesitated as I was overcome with nostalgia for the griddle and the grill and the deep-fryer, then grabbed it with my left hand, as well, and stepped off the ladder.

If the griddle proved too taxing on my nerves, on top of everything else that was perpetually cooking with me, I might succumb to the lure of the tire life, working not sales but installation.