Sourdough Pancake Recipe (Easy Version) - Nourished Kitchen (2024)

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With a wonderfully soft and tender crumb, these sourdough pancakes make a lovely companion to lazy Saturday mornings, especially when you pair them with pats of salted butter, a drizzle of maple syrup, and a mug of strong tea.

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Since I started baking sourdough bread nearly a decade ago, I’ve always needed a use for my leftover, discarded starter. And these pancakes, sweetened by the slightest trace of honey, are such a perfect use for it. I've meddled and toiled with this recipe over the years, making small adjustments here or there: leaving out the honey, beating in whole eggs, soaking the batter overnight.

And I finally have a version I'm really happy with: Marvelously rich with the flavor of whole grain flour, but tender, too, with a soft light texture.

Pancakes Are Great for Spent Starter

To maintain a lively and active starter for sourdough bread baking, you must feed it a slurry of water and flour. This carbohydrate-rich slurry nourishes and provides food for the bacteria that give good bread its characteristic tartness and it also feeds the yeast that give the bread a lofty rise. Bread needs lively and active yeast to give it a wonderful rise an airy crumb. And recently fed, bubbly starter does just that.

But, maintaining sourdough is all about timing. Once you feed your starter, and it bubbles up and doubles, those lively yeast will exhaust their food source and the starter will fall. This spent starter won’t make for good bread, but it’s perfect for making sourdough pancakes.

How to Make Tender Sourdough Pancakes

Tender pancakes achieve their loft through leavening. When you make pancakes the leavening comes from the natural chemical reaction between acidic and alkaline ingredients.

Thanks to all its friendly lactobacillus bacteria, spent sourdough starter is very acidic (that’s what makes it wonderfully tart!). When you combine the sourdough starter with baking soda, which is very alkaline, the pancake batter will bubble up beautifully - and a bubbly batter makes for airier pancakes with a tender crumb.

But that’s not all you need to make fluffy pancakes. Whipped egg whites will lighten your pancakes when you gently fold them into the batter, and also give the batter enough structure to hold the air that will make your pancakes light and fluffy instead of dense or chewy.

Use a Whole Grain Flour

When baking and cooking for my family, I like to keep our grains (mostly!) whole. Not only do whole grains offer the clear benefit of higher dietary fiber, vitamins, and minerals (when properly prepared), but they also offer incredible, complex, and rich flavor.

The problem is that many whole wheat flours are very high in protein and are flecked with dark bits of bran. That makes for great bread, but not so great pancakes.

So, instead of opting for plain whole wheat flour; make your pancakes from white or ivory wheat. These flours are still 100% whole grain, but they’re made from softer wheat with a lower protein and a much lighter color. That means lighter, softer pancakes that are still a whole grain.

If you're looking to make pancakes with an alternative flour, try einkorn pancakes instead.

Rate this Recipe

5 from 4 votes

1 dozen pancakes

Sourdough Pancakes

Wonderfully fluffy and delicious with their rich whole grain flavor and mild tartness, these sourdough pancakes are a great way to use up leftover sourdough starter.

Prep Time8 hours hrs

Cook Time40 minutes mins

Total Time8 hours hrs 40 minutes mins

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Ingredients

  • 2 cups whole wheat pastry flour
  • 2 ¼ cups whole milk
  • ¾ cup sourdough starter
  • 1 teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 3 eggs separated
  • 3 tablespoons honey
  • ¼ cup salted butter plus additional butter for frying the pancakes
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda

Instructions

The Night Before

  • Toss the flour, milk, sourdough starter and sea salt together in a blender, and blend until they form a smooth batter. Pour the batter into a mixing bowl, and cover it with cling film or with a tight-fitting lid (this bowl set works well).

  • Let the batter sit, covered, at room temperature overnight, or 8 to 12 hours.

The Next Morning

  • Beat the egg yolks together with honey and melted butter. When they're uniformly combined, beat the egg yolk mixture into the pancake batter you made the night before.

  • In a separate bowl, whip the egg whites with the baking soda until they hold stiff peaks.

  • Gently fold one third of the whipped egg whites into the pancake batter. Continue folding the remaining egg whites, one third at a time, until you’ve added them all. Incorporate the egg whites into the bowl slowly, carefully and gently, leaving some streaks of unbroken whites, until the batter is light and fluffy. The key to a light sourdough pancake is to avoid deflating the whites.

  • Set your oven to warm, and place a baking sheet in the oven on the middle rack.

  • Heat a cast iron skillet or pancake griddle over medium heat, and melt a touch of butter in the pan. When the butter foams, pour a ladleful (approximately ¼ to ⅓ cup) of pancake batter into the pan. Let it cook without disturbance until you see bubbles forming in the center of the pancake. Flip the pancake and continue cooking it 1 to 2 minutes further until cooked through. Transfer the pancake to the baking sheet in the oven to keep it warm.

  • Continue cooking pancakes, one at a time, and adding more butter to the pan as needed until you’ve exhausted the batter.

  • Serve with additional butter, maple syrup or homemade blueberry syrup.

Notes

Gluten-free? If you are looking for a gluten-free sourdough pancake recipe, you might try this one.

Grain-free? You might give these almond flour pancakes a go.

Rate this recipe!If you loved this recipe, give it a rating. Let us know what works, what didn't and whether you made any adjustments that can help other cooks.

More sourdough recipes

  • Wild Yeast Bread
  • Sourdough Bagels
  • No-Knead Sourdough Bread
  • Wild Yeast (Yeast Water)
Sourdough Pancake Recipe (Easy Version) - Nourished Kitchen (2024)

FAQs

Why are my sourdough pancakes gummy? ›

Why are my sourdough pancakes gummy? Gummy sourdough pancakes are usually due to cooking issues. Be sure to fully cook the pancakes all the way through.

Why does my sourdough look like a pancake? ›

It might be cold dough. One of the most common mistakes is having a dough temperature that's too low for the starter to feed on all the flour in the dough, resulting in a crumb that's dense, with fewer openings.

Will sourdough pancake batter keep in the fridge? ›

They may also be cooled completely and then frozen in an airtight container or plastic bag. The pancake batter may be prepared up to 2 days in advance, just store in an airtight container in the refrigerator and note that the pancakes may not be quite as fluffy the next day.

How do I make my sourdough less gummy? ›

Try less water with your flour. Uneven heat in your oven can be the culprit – if you loaf is nicely golden on the outside but gummy or moist in the inside, it's baking too quickly on the outside. Trying reducing the temperature you're baking at and bake for a bit longer.

What is overproofed sourdough? ›

Overproofed is when the dough has rested too long and the yeast has continued making carbon dioxide while the strength of the dough (gluten bonds) have begun to wear out. The dough will look very puffy, but when you touch it or move it you may notice it deflate or sag.

Why should you not refrigerate sourdough bread? ›

The most important thing to know is that you should never store sourdough in your fridge. The inside of a fridge is a very harsh environment that's much too cold and dry to store bread in. Your sourdough will get hard and stale much faster in the fridge than if you leave it out.

Can you reheat sourdough pancakes? ›

Another great difference I've noticed with this recipe in comparison to others is that sourdough pancakes keep really well in the fridge and they reheat almost as good as the day you make them.

Why is my sourdough bread gummy after baking? ›

Most likely when this happens, it's not you - it's your starter. If your loaf is dense, has uneven holes and a gummy texture, most likely there wasn't enough active wild yeast in your starter to make the bread develop and rise during baking. This can be the case even if your starter seems really happy and bubbly.

Why did my pancakes come out gummy? ›

Overmixed Pancake Batter

When you overmix the batter to “make sure there are no lumps left” you are activating the gluten (a protein found in flour). While you won't notice it in batter form, overmixed pancake batter will yield a gummy or rubbery pancake texture.

How do you keep pancakes from getting gummy? ›

If you mix the batter too much, you knock all of the air bubbles out and your pancakes won't rise very well, resulting in a gummy texture. Mix it until it just comes together and no more. Another cause of gummy pancakes is leaving the batter to sit for too long before frying.

What causes rubbery pancakes? ›

Over-mixing pancake batter develops the gluten that will make the pancakes rubbery and tough. For light, fluffy pancakes, you want to mix just until the batter comes together—it's okay if there are still some lumps of flour. Fat (melted butter) makes the pancakes rich and moist.

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