How to Make the Best Buttermilk Pancakes: 3 Tips and Tricks
For this recipe, I wanted to make fluffy, light, and airy buttermilk pancakes with crisp edges, and a slightly sweet, buttery flavor. Forty pancakes later, I was happy with my results: I finally figured out how to avoid the common pitfalls of dense, chewy, eggy, or rubbery pancakes.
Video: How to Make Buttermilk Pancakes
The Role of Buttermilk
Some buttermilk pancake recipes call for a combination of milk and buttermilk, but it’s not necessary to use both. To simplify the recipe, I used only buttermilk. Here’s why:
It imparts a subtle tangy note in baked goods like these pancakes.It provides the acidity needed to react with the baking soda in the pancake batter. This reaction creates carbon dioxide gas, which helps the pancakes rise and gives them a tender crumb.Without the acidity from the buttermilk, your baking soda also can’t perform another key function: to speed up the caramelization sugar, which gives you a darker, caramelized color on the outsides of quick-cooking baked goods like pancakes. While plain milk does have some acid in it, it’s not enough to get the reaction you need from the baking soda.Most baking powder is double acting, which means it responds to both liquid and heat. The two-stage process provides most of the leavening in your pancake. Buttermilk provides the liquid needed for the baking powder to dissolve and create the carbon dioxide gas, which contributes to the light airy texture of a pancake.
What to do if you’re out of buttermilk? Thin some yogurt or sour cream with a little milk until it’s the same consistency as buttermilk. This will work just as well as buttermilk in your pancakes. In a pinch, you can also add lemon juice to your milk, though it won’t be quite the same.
Sift the Dry Ingredients
Pancake recipes often call for whisking together the dry ingredients, but I prefer to sift them through a strainer or sifter. I live in an area that can be humid in the summer, which can cause leavening agents like baking powder and baking soda to clump. If you’ve ever had a slight metallic or bitter flavor in something you’ve baked, it could be from a small clump of baking powder or soda. Sifting eliminates that problem in a way that whisking won’t.
Don’t Over-Mix the Batter
Flour has gluten in it. Gluten helps provide structure to breads and cakes. Stirring batter or kneading dough helps to develop gluten – which you want with pasta, and sturdy breads, but not for quick breads, muffins and pancakes. With these delicate baked goods, too much mixing can make them tough, chewy or rubbery. When adding dry ingredients to wet ingredients in pancakes (and other quick breads), it’s best to stir just until incorporated and not a second more. If you’re adding fruit or chocolate chips to the batter, add them when your batter still has a few dry pockets of flour. Here’s another tip to help avoid over-mixing: use a whisk or fork to thoroughly beat the egg . This makes it easier to incorporate into the dry ingredients, so you don’t have to mix as much.
The Best Skillet for Making Pancakes
I use a 10-inch square nonstick flat griddle with 1/2-inch sides for making pancakes, like this one, but any large skillet with low sides will work. You want to be able to easily get a spatula under the pancakes to flip them. And the lower the sides, the better.
Make Sure Your Skillet Is Hot!
Be sure the skillet is hot enough that your butter is foaming and sizzling before you add the pancake batter. This makes sure your pancakes start to cook as soon as they hit the pan. If you add the batter too soon, the pancakes will spread too much and won’t be quite as thick and fluffy.
When to Add Mix-Ins Like Fruit or Chocolate Chips
I prefer to fold most fruits and chocolate chips into the batter itself, rather than dotting the pancake with fruit after the pancake has been scooped onto the pan. This way, the batter coats the fruit or chocolate and encloses them in a little pancake bubble, which makes them less likely to burn when they are flipped. That being said there are two exceptions to this rule—sliced bananas and when cooking for large families:
Sliced bananas are best added to the top of the pancake after the batter has been scooped onto the skillet. When you flip the pancake, the bananas will caramelize in the butter and taste even better.When feeding families, everyone usually wants something different. So, dotting fruit or chocolate on the top makes breakfast easier to customize.
How to Freeze and Reheat Pancakes
To freeze, let the cooked pancakes cool to room temperature, then layer them between sheets of parchment paper and seal in a gallon-sized zip-top bag. The parchment will prevent them from sticking together once frozen, allowing you to remove just one or two as needed. To reheat, spread a few frozen pancakes on a plate in a single layer (it’s ok if they overlap a little) and zap in the microwave for about 30 to 45 seconds. Then, pop them in the toaster. The microwave thaws them, and then the toaster finishes the job. It also provides the crisp fresh-off-the-griddle edges.
Bonus Pancake Tips!
Out of butter? You can fry pancakes in oil and replace the butter in the recipe with oil if you prefer, just make sure it’s a neutral flavored oil like canola.Want to cut out the butter and sugar entirely? You can eliminate either or both the sugar and the butter from this recipe and still make pancakes. The flavor won’t be as rich or sweet, the color as golden, or the texture as light, but it will still be a pancake!
More Great Pancake Recipes to Try!
Blueberry Buttermilk Pancakes Lemon Ricotta Pancakes Buckwheat Pancakes Chocolate Chip Pancakes with Raspberry Sauce Oatmeal Buttermilk Pancakes
Cook until you see bubbles forming in the center of the pancakes, and the edges look slightly drier than the middle, about 3 minutes. Flip and cook for about 2 minutes on the other side. The cakes should be lightly golden on both sides with crispy edges.