A word on the apple banana (a.k.a. "bananito"): this is a variety of the fruit common on Oahu (it originally hails from South and Southeast Asia), and as far as I know, it's not something widely available on the mainland. Apple bananas have a slightly more nuance flavor than the standard, all-pervasive Chiquita-purveyed variety (officially known as the William banana), with mild apple and strawberry overtones. Substituting William bananas when no apple bananas are available shouldn't hurt things appreciably, though it should be noted that a apple bananas are somewhat diminutive compared to their mainland brethren (the size ratio is roughly 50-65%), so adjust the proportions below accordingly.
The batter:
- ¾ cup rice flour
- 4 apple bananas
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1 ½ tsp. salt
- ¼ tsp. cinnamon
- ¼ cup vanilla soy milk
- 1 tsp melted vegan butter substitute
- ¼ cup raisins
- 1 cup chopped pineapple
- 2 tsp. raw cane sugar
- 1 tsp. corn starch
- ½ tsp. salt
- ¼ cup sliced almonds
While the pineapple is cooking, grease a skillet with oil or vegan butter substitute (I use Earth Balance here) and warm that skillet on a burner set to medium heat. Puree the apple bananas together with the soy milk in a blender. Combine the dry ingredients in a bowl and then pour in the butter and the banana puree and stir until it attains a uniform consistency. Stir in the raisins. Ladle the batter onto the skillet and cook as you would any other sort of pancake. After you have a stack of flapjacks, make stacks four pancakes high (the amounts listed above yield roughly four such stacks), spreading a layer of pineapple topping and a sprinkle of sliced almonds between each two laminae, and then again on the top of the uppermost one, as shown in the photo.