The BEST One-Bowl Buttermilk Pancakes
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A hit with adults and children alike, these light and fluffy one-bowl buttermilk pancakes have become a weekend staple. The batter comes together in no time, and the recipe yields a ton. What’s more, the pancakes freeze beautifully! 🥞🥞🥞🥞🥞

Confession: Pancakes have never been my forte. For about a year now, however, I’ve had success with The Kitchn’s lofty buttermilk pancakes, which call for a peculiar trick: you separate the egg yolks from the whites; then you incorporate the yolks into the batter before the whites. The whites are never beaten. It’s odd but it works.
The rub with this recipe is that it requires three bowls: one for the dry ingredients, one for the yolks, buttermilk, milk and butter, and one for the whites.
First thing in the morning, this is two too many bowls, and I’ve found that using one bowl works equally well: I whisk the eggs directly into the dry ingredients as though I am making pasta, then add the milk and buttermilk, and finally the melted butter (which I do in the microwave).
These pancakes have become a family fave and a weekend staple. The batter makes enough for a ton of pancakes and leftover pancakes freeze beautifully — pop them in the toaster oven to reheat and ta-da, pancakes in an instant!
How to Make One-Bowl Buttermilk Pancakes, Step by Step
First, crack the eggs directly into the whisked together dry ingredients (flour, salt, baking powder, baking soda, and sugar):

Incorporate the eggs into the dry ingredients as though you are making pasta dough:

Then add the milk and buttermilk, and finally the melted butter:

Cook in an oiled skillet or stovetop griddle or an electric griddle util puffed and golden on each side:

A pancake breakfast is a happy breakfast…

The BEST One-Bowl Buttermilk Pancakes
- Total Time: 40 minutes
- Yield: 18–20 three-inch pancakes 1x
Description
A hit with adults and children alike, these light and fluffy one-bowl buttermilk pancakes have become a weekend staple. The batter comes together in no time, and the recipe yields a ton. What’s more, the pancakes freeze beautifully! 🥞🥞🥞🥞🥞
Recipe adapted from The Kitchn.
Notes:
- The best trick I’ve learned for cooking pancakes is to go small — I use my 2-tablespoon measuring cup to portion out batter. The pancakes cook quickly and evenly when I use this small scoop.
- If you want to use sourdough discard in this recipe, simply cut back some of the flour and water, preferably by weight. So, for example, if you want to use 100 grams of sourdough discard (at 100% hydration) in this recipe, cut back 50 grams of the flour and 50 grams of the buttermilk. That would call for using 270 grams of flour and 418 grams of buttermilk.
- If you don’t have buttermilk on hand, you can make it from scratch: Place 2 cups on buttermilk in a liquid measure or bowl and add 2 tablespoons of lemon juice or white vinegar. Let stand for 5 minutes; then stir until smooth.
Ingredients
- 2 1/2 cups (320 g) flour
- 2 tablespoons (25 g) sugar
- 1 1/2 teaspoons (8 g) salt
- 1 teaspoon (4 g) baking powder
- 1 teaspoon (5 g) baking soda
- 2 large eggs
- 2 cups (468 grams) buttermilk
- 1/2 cup (128 g) milk
- 10 tablespoons (142 g) butter, salted or unsalted, melted and cooled
- Canola or peanut oil for frying
Instructions
- Set a large shallow skillet or stovetop griddle over low heat.
- Whisk together the flour, sugar, salt, baking powder, and baking soda in a large bowl. Add the eggs and beat with a fork till the eggs are whisked and incorporated into the surrounding flour, as if you were making pasta. Add the buttermilk and milk, and stir with a spatula to combine. Add the melted, cooled butter and stir until combined.
- Turn the heat under the skillet up to medium. When hot, film with a thin layer of oil. Using a two-tablespoon (1/8 cup) measure or a large spoon or a small ladle, drop the pancake batter into the skillet giving space between each pancake to allow for spreading — the batter will spread into a pancake about 3 inches wide.
- Cook for about 2 to 3 minutes. (If the pancake scorches or the oil smokes, lower the heat.) When the bubbles that form on the edges of the pancakes look dry and airy, use a thin spatula to gently lift one side and peek underneath. If the pancake is golden brown, flip and cook on the other side for 2 to 2 1/2 minutes, or until the bottom of the pancake is golden brown.
- Transfer to a cooling rack briefly before serving. Scrape any stray crumbs or scraps out of the skillet, add a little more oil, and continue to cook the remaining batter.
- Store leftover pancakes at room temperature in an airtight bag or vessel for up to 3 days or freeze for up to 3 months.
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 30 minutes
- Category: Breakfast
- Method: Stovetop
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.

433 Comments on “The BEST One-Bowl Buttermilk Pancakes”
Crazy cake…it can be stirred up right in the cake pan!
One bowl Brownie for me. Baking Steel looks great but expensive! Nice f them to give me away!!
Oops!! Nice of them to give ONE away!! ?
i make most of my cookies in one bowl–thought i was the only one cheating in that way but apparently not!
Brownies!!!!! And thank you for the opportunity to win one of these. I use my baking steel all the time for pizza and love it. Would love one of these griddles. I make chocolate chip pancakes every weekend for the kids. I’ll have to try this recipe.
i would LOVE to be the winner of the Baking Steel Griddle!!
buttermilk pancakes. baking steel has an english muffin recipe on their website that is easy and good.
I am OBSESSED with pancakes. Love this!
My favorite one bowl dish – english muffins! They would be so great to make with the baking steel griddle… hint, hint 🙂 Love your photos by the way! So inspiring!
My favorite one-bowl dish? It is technically supposed to be a multi-bowl dish, but my mother throws all caution to the wind and mixes her popovers all in one vessel. Despite every effort at precision — be it mixing, dividing, flours, etc — I still can’t replicate them!
Dutch babies are great!
Oh my! The baking steel has been on my wishlist for so long! My favorite one bowl recipe is just a simple loaf of bread. I mix and knead the dough right there in one big bowl. I’d love to try baking a loaf on the baking steel one day 🙂
I like the idea of a Baking Steel it reminds me of a well seasoned cast iron pan.
One bowl recipe of simply sundried tomatoes, fresh mozzarella, fresh picked basil, olive oil, fresh ground pepper!
OH man! I’d lose my mind with excitement if I won that griddle (I’ve been following Baking Steel since their Kickstarter!)
My favorite one-bowl dish is probably quick’n’dirty cornbread! My deeply-held-gross-but-tasty-secret is substituting creamed corn for part of the liquid ingredients. Roasted hatch chilis from here in Colorado also add some magic.
I love pancakes, especially using the maple syrup my father made from his own trees!
Love pancake and waffle one bowl dish. Have tried several of your recipes and everyone of them have been excellent .
love to win one of these
Chocolate cake mixed right in the pan in which it bakes. Does that count as one bowl? 🙂
I am not great at keeping anything to one bowl….blueberry brownies are probably the best of those. I’d love to win this for my son and his family, but who am I kidding?
This is super heinous and an affront to all culinary enthusiasts out there, but sometimes when I’m down on my luck, itching for some sweeties, and the hourglass is on its final grains of sand, I reach for cake box mix and a pint of ice cream. Add melted ice cream to mix and add two eggs and VOILA, operation fatty is a go!
My favorite one bowl recipe would be either chocolate cake or brownies. Just depends on the type of texture and chocolatey flavor I am looking for 🙂
Brownies – chocolate and butter melted together in an old favorite glass bowl and then sugar, eggs, flavoring (various experiments along the way) and dry ingredients. I figured it out many years ago when I wanted to bake without waking napping babies (my youngest two are twins)
Hello! Looks like fun! Claire’s Corner Copia’s Pasta e Fagioli is probably my favorite one bowl (or pot) dish.
Pancakes are my favorite.
I have the pizza steel and love it. I’m sure that griddle would be fantastic!
Not one bowl, but one griddle: scrambled eggs (sunny side if you must), prosciutto (bacony smokiness w/o the grease), grilled sliced tomatoes, a couple of cups of baked beans in pile in the corner, and good piece of bread toasted on the griddle. Breakfast with minimal clean up!
Well, I guess pancakes would be mine too, but I would love to win the griddle. I have enrolled in a Craftsy.com class for Mexican food and I could really use the griddle for that!
I’ve always had a hard time with pancakes. I’ll have to try this recipe! My favorite one pot meal is Mark Bittman’s mostly veggie frittata. I saute all the veggies in my dutch oven and then add cheese and eggs. Super easy!
Hello, I would love to win this griddle. Years ago we had a huge gas stove that had one in the middle with the elements either side, it was great for pikelets (a softer version of pancakes best eaten with jam and cream).
Thanks for the chance.
My favorite one bowl recipe would have to be cereal. Nothing beats tearing open a fresh box, filling a bowl to its maximum capacity and gently inundating it with some ice-cold milk. One of life’s simple pleasures.
I like a bowl of grilled chicken salad.
Meatloaf!! Huge family favorite.