My Best Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (2024)

My Best Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (1)

About This Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe

My best Dutch baby pancake recipe makes a tall, puffy pancake similar to a popover! The pancake is baked in a cast-iron skillet, comes together in less than 5 minutes, and doesn’t require any fancy equipment like a stand mixer or a blender. Top the Dutch baby pancake with fresh whipped cream and sliced fruit for an impressive-yet-incredibly-easy brunch treat!

What is a Dutch baby pancake?

A Dutch baby pancake is a giant pancake that serves multiple people. They are puffier and thinner than American pancakes because the batter is baked until it puffs up like a popover. Their texture is more similar to a crepe—soft and thin in the middle, but with crispy, puffed edges. They’re absolutely delicious!

My Best Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (2)

Why You Should Make This Recipe

Here are all the reasons to make my best Dutch baby pancake recipe:

The Dutch baby pancake batter comes together quickly and easily.

Dutch baby pancakes come together incredibly quickly and easily. The batter takes just 5 minutes to whisk together! After that, pour the batter into a cast-iron skillet and bake for 20 minutes. That’s it! It’s so much less time consuming than a regular pancake recipe, where you’re stuck at the stovetop making individual pancakes for each person.

My Dutch baby pancake recipe doesn’t require any specialty ingredients.

You probably already have everything you need at home to make this Dutch baby pancake. Why? The batter is made with basic pantry staples like butter, eggs, milk, flour, sugar, and salt. That’s it!

The Dutch baby pancake recipe doesn’t require any specialty cooking or baking equipment like a stand mixer or a blender.

Some Dutch baby pancake recipes instruct you to use a stand mixer or a blender to bring together the batter. But not mine! All you need is a bowl and a whisk.

My Best Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (3)

Ingredients and Substitutions

Now that I’ve convinced you to make my best Dutch baby pancake recipe, here’s everything you need:

Shopping List for My Best Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe

Be sure to scroll down to the recipe card for the exact ingredient quantities—hit the “Jump to The Recipe” button on the page for a quick shortcut!

  • unsalted butter
  • large eggs
  • whole milk
  • all-purpose flour
  • granulated sugar
  • pure vanilla extract
  • salt

And let’s talk about some key ingredients and their potential substitutions:

Butter

You need 4 Tablespoons unsalted butter to make my best Dutch baby pancake recipe.

I only have salted butter! Can I use that instead?

Yes! In a pinch, you can use salted butter to make this Dutch baby pancake recipe. There’s no need to modify the amount of salt in the recipe, either!

Milk

You need ⅔cup milk to make my best Dutch baby pancake recipe.

Can I use skim, low-fat or non-fat milk instead?

Yes, but with reservations. Using skim, low-fat, or non-fat milks will lead to a less flavorful Dutch baby pancake.

Can I use non-dairy milk like almond milk, coconut milk, soy milk, or oat milk instead of whole milk?

Yes! You can use alternatives like almond milk, coconut milk, soy milk, and/or oat milk in this recipe without altering the results too much!

However, be mindful that using an alternative milk with “strong” flavors (like coconut or oat milk) will impart their flavors into the pancake, too. Specifically, your pancake might have a subtle coconut or oat milk flavor to it.

My Best Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (4)

How To Make The Recipe

Here are the basic steps to make a Dutch baby pancake recipe from scratch:

  1. Prep the oven and ingredients. (Prep Time: 5 minutes)
    For this recipe, it’s especially important to preheat the oven. You want the oven to be SCREAMING hot when you bake the Dutch baby pancake. That’s the secret to a super tall and crispy Dutch baby pancake!
  2. Melt the butter. (Work Time: 5 minutes)
    Once the oven is preheated, it’s time to preheat your cast-iron skillet. Place the butter in the middle of the cast-iron skillet and bake the whole thing for 5 minutes. Your goal here is to preheat the pan to get it ready for the batter, as well as brown the butter for flavor.
  3. While the butter is melting, make the batter. (Work Time: 5 minutes)
    The batter comes together SO quickly. In a medium bowl, whisk together the eggs until light and foamy. Then, add the milk, flour, sugar, vanilla, and salt. Whisk to combine—that’s it!

    Be especially careful not to overwhisk the batter. Your batter will probably be a little lumpy. That’s okay, I promise! According to @cooksillustrated, the lumps hold on to air pockets as the pancake cooks, making it extra tall and fluffy.

  4. Assemble the Dutch baby pancake. (Work Time: <5 minutes)
    Once the cast-iron skillet is preheated and the butter is melted, it’s time to assemble the Dutch baby pancake!

    Remove the skillet from the oven—be careful, it will be VERY hot—and quickly swirl the pan so that batter coats the bottom and sides of it. Pour the batter into the center of the pan and immediately return the pan to the oven.

  5. Bake the Dutch baby pancake. (Bake Time: 20 minutes)
    The Dutch baby pancake needs 20 minutes in the oven. You’l know it’s ready when it’s puffed and golden!
My Best Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (5)

Recipe Troubleshooting and FAQ

FAQ: What Equipment Do I Need To Make A Dutch Baby?

Baking Equipment To Make A Dutch Baby

To make this recipe, you need the following “specialty” baking and cooking equipment:

  • a 10-inch cast-iron skillet
  • a bowl
  • a whisk
  • a wire rack
  • a metal cooking turner

I have a cast-iron skillet, but it’s not 10 inches wide. I think it’s smaller/bigger. Can I still make this Dutch baby pancake recipe?

Yes, with reservations. The recipe will work just fine with a 9-inch or and 11-inch cast-iron skillet. It starts to get a little wonky if you go smaller or larger than that. Specifically, your Dutch baby pancake probably won’t get as tall as mine did.

I don’t have a 10-inch cast-iron skillet. What can I use instead?

If you don’t have a 10-inch cast-iron skillet, you can use the following instead:

  • A stainless steel frying pan (Just make sure that it has at least 1-inch tall sides, and it is ovenproof at 425°F. That means no plastic or wooden handles!)
  • A 10-inch cake pan with at least 2-inch tall sides (I like this one!)

FAQ: Troubleshooting Common Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe Mistakes

I followed your recipe exactly, but my batter looks super lumpy. Are you sure that’s okay?

Yes! According to America’s Test Kitchen and Cook’s Illustrated, lumps in the batter hold onto air pockets as the Dutch baby pancake cooks. This extra air helps the Dutch baby pancake rise as it bakes in the oven.

The sides of my Dutch baby pancake didn’t rise and puff as much as yours. What did I do wrong?

There are two main culprits to flat, sad Dutch baby pancakes:

  1. Your oven wasn’t hot enough. The hotter your oven, the more puffed your Dutch baby pancake will be. Make sure to preheat the oven for at least 10 minutes before baking the batter.
  2. Your ingredients were too cold. It’s especially important that the eggs and milk are warmed to room temperature before using in this recipe. The Dutch baby pancake will not rise and puff in the same way if these ingredients are cold!

Help! My Dutch baby pancake immediately deflated. What did I do wrong?

Don’t panic! It’s totally normal for a Dutch baby pancake to deflate after pulling it out the oven. It’s one of those baked goods that needs to be eaten immediately after baking.

That being said, if you want it to maintain some (but probably not all, I’m not gonna lie—that’s an impossible task) of its puffiness, follow my instructions in the recipe to cool the pancake in the pan on a wire rack for 1 minute. After that, use a metal cooking turner to transfer the Dutch baby pancake directly onto the wire rack. Doing so will prevent the Dutch baby pancake’s sides from deflating!

FAQ: How To Store Dutch Baby Pancakes

How To Store Dutch Baby Pancake

I do not recommend storing a Dutch baby pancake for serving later. It will be sad, cold, and deflated. Please only bake the Dutch baby pancake right before you’re ready to serve it!

Can you freeze Dutch baby pancakes?

100% no. The Dutch baby pancake almost immediately loses its height, crispiness, and puffed texture after you pull it out of the oven. Freezing and thawing a Dutch baby pancake would result in a sad, sloppy mess of soggy pancake!

Best Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe Tip

  • It’s especially important that the eggs and milk are warmed to room temperature before using in this recipe. The Dutch baby pancake will not rise and puff in the same way if these ingredients are cold!

More Pancake Recipes

  • Mini Pancake Cereal Recipe

My Best Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (6)

Print

Get the Recipe:My Best Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe

Prep: 5 minutes mins

Cook: 5 minutes mins

Bake Time: 25 minutes mins

Total: 35 minutes mins

Servings: 1 (10-inch) pancake

Author: Michelle Lopez

My best Dutch baby pancake recipe makes a tall, puffy pancake similar to a popover! The pancake is baked in a cast-iron skillet, comes together in less than 5 minutes, and doesn’t require any fancy equipment like a stand mixer or a blender.

(5 stars) 8 reviews

Leave a Review

Ingredients

For the Dutch Baby Pancake Batter

  • 4 Tablespoons (2 ounces or 57 grams) unsalted butter
  • 3 large eggs, at room temperature
  • cup (5.35 ounces or 152 grams) whole milk, at room temperature
  • cup (3 ounces or 85 grams) all-purpose flour
  • 1 Tablespoon granulated sugar
  • ¼ teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • pinch of salt

To Serve

  • whipped cream
  • fresh, sliced fruit

Instructions

  • Prep the oven. Position a rack in the center of the oven and preheat the oven to 425°F.

  • Melt the butter. Place the butter in a 10-inch cast-iron skillet and bake for 5 minutes, or until the butter is completely melted and the skillet is piping hot.

  • Meanwhile, make the batter. In a medium bowl, whisk the eggs until light and foamy, about 30 seconds. Add the milk, flour, sugar, vanilla, and salt. Whisk until just combined, about 30 seconds. The batter will look a little lumpy, but that's totally okay, I promise!

  • Assemble the Dutch baby pancake. Remove the skillet from the oven (but keep the oven on!). Swirl the pan to coat with the butter. Pour the batter into the center of the pan and immediately return the pan to the oven.

  • Bake and serve the Dutch baby pancake. Bake for 20 minutes, or until the pancake is puffed and golden. Cool the pancake in the skillet on a wire rack for 1 minute, then use a metal cooking turner to turn out the pancake onto the rack to keep its sides from deflating.

    Serve immediately, with a dollop of whipped cream and slices of fresh fruit.

Notes

  • It’s especially important that the eggs and milk are warmed to room temperature before using in this recipe. The Dutch baby pancake will not rise and puff in the same way if these ingredients are cold!

Did you make this recipe?Please leave a star rating and review in the form below. I appreciate your feedback, and it helps others, too!

Did you make this recipe?

Please leave a comment and rating for the recipe using the form below!

Your ratings make it easier to find the recipe online, and I’m always looking for ways to improve Hummingbird High.

get new recipes via email:

buy the book

Weeknight Baking:
Recipes to Fit your Schedule

Over the past several years of running Hummingbird High, I kept a crucial aspect of my life hidden from my readers: I had a full-time, extremely demanding job in the tech world. In my debut cookbook, Weeknight Baking, I finally reveal the secrets to baking delicious desserts on a tight schedule.

Get your copy today >>

My Best Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why did my Dutch baby pancake not rise? ›

There are two main culprits to flat, sad Dutch baby pancakes: Your oven wasn't hot enough. The hotter your oven, the more puffed your Dutch baby pancake will be. Make sure to preheat the oven for at least 10 minutes before baking the batter.

Why is my Dutch baby so flat? ›

The recipe doesn't contain any chemical leavening as the milk and eggs create steam that causes the Dutch Baby to rise. If the pancake was a little flat it is most likely that either the oven or the skillet (or other pan) was not hot enough.

What is a Dutch baby pancake made of? ›

Dutch Baby Ingredients

Eggs and milk: This light and fluffy Dutch baby recipe starts with two eggs whisked with milk. Flour: All-purpose flour lends structure and helps hold the batter together. Seasonings: These sweet Dutch babies are flavored with nutmeg and a pinch of salt.

How do you make pancakes rise more? ›

Adding baking powder is the easiest way to make fluffy pancakes. There's more than one way to make the bubbles that make a pancake fluffy, but the easiest way is by adding a raising agent such as baking powder.

Which pancake ingredients cause the batter to rise? ›

Pancakes and waffles typically both contain baking soda, which causes them to rise. As soon as the baking soda is combined with the wet ingredients (which contain an acidic ingredient, like often buttermilk), it starts producing carbon dioxide gas bubbles that cause the batter to rise.

What does adding more eggs do to pancakes? ›

Eggs are a crucial ingredient. They provide the cakes with the structure to hold light bubbles. Eggs also give the batter additional, richer flavor from the yolk fat. If you add too many eggs, you'll have “pancakes” that look more like custard or crepes.

What not to do when making pancakes? ›

7 Mistakes You're Making With Your From-Scratch Pancakes—and How to Avoid Them
  1. Not Measuring Carefully.
  2. Over-Mixing the Batter.
  3. Over-Greasing the Pan.
  4. Forgetting to Preheat the Skillet.
  5. Not Measuring Out Batter for Each Pancake.
  6. Impatiently Flipping.
  7. Not Keeping Pancakes Warm.
Sep 28, 2022

Is it better to add milk or water to pancake mix? ›

Pancake lovers' biggest complaint when adding water instead of milk is that the flavor seems to change. Pancakes aren't as richly flavored with water. There are a few ways to improve your batter when you've used water, including: Add extra butter.

Why does my Dutch baby taste eggy? ›

If you would like the inside of the finished dish to be a little less "egg-y" then cut the number of eggs down to 3, and many many reviewers also found that just 3 Tablespoons of butter worked better for them.

Where are Dutch babies popular? ›

The Dutch baby is a specialty of some diners and chains that specialize in breakfast dishes, such as the Oregon-founded The Original Pancake House or the New England–based chain Bickford's, which makes both a plain Dutch baby and a similar pancake known as the Baby Apple, which contains apple slices embedded in the ...

When to eat a Dutch baby? ›

This large, fluffy pancake is excellent for breakfast, brunch, lunch and dessert any time of year. And it comes together in about five blessed minutes. Just dump all of the ingredients into a blender, give it a good whirl, pour it into a heated skillet sizzling with butter, and pop it into the oven.

Why are Dutch pancakes so good? ›

Dutch pancakes are traditional and worldwide famous, and there is a reason for that. They come with a topping of your choice or just plain. And it is the topping that makes the pancakes in a pancake restaurant so special.

What's the difference between a pancake and a Dutch pancake? ›

What's the difference between a Dutch pancake and an American pancake? A Dutch pancake is usually larger and much thinner than the thick and fluffy American pancakes. If you order a Dutch pancake at PANCAKES Amsterdam, you will get a delicious thin pancake with a diameter of 32 centimeters.

What is the difference between Yorkshire pudding and Dutch baby pancake? ›

To those in the know, a Dutch baby really is just a large, puffy pancake, while Yorkshire pudding is a savory side dish that has graced meat-heavy meals in England for centuries. Yet, some people tend to confuse the two as being the same, owing to a similarity of ingredients and appearance.

What causes pancakes not to rise? ›

TIP: Make sure your baking powder is not out of date, or your pancakes won't rise as well. Combine wet ingredients together in a separate jug – this step is more important than you might think. The less you mix the batter, the fluffier your pancakes will be.

How long should you let pancake batter rise? ›

A – Ideally make your batter and let it rest for about 30 minutes before cooking. This allows the flour to absorb the liquid, making the pancakes lighter and fluffier.

Why is my Dutch baby eggy? ›

If you would like the inside of the finished dish to be a little less "egg-y" then cut the number of eggs down to 3, and many many reviewers also found that just 3 Tablespoons of butter worked better for them.

Why won t my pancakes work? ›

My pancakes are too flat

If your mixture looks more like stale dishwater than it does batter, then you've added too much liquid. Add a little more flour to thicken it, so the batter drips (not runs) off the spoon. Another factor that leads to flatter-than-flat pancakes is the baking powder.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Nathanial Hackett

Last Updated:

Views: 5507

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (52 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Nathanial Hackett

Birthday: 1997-10-09

Address: Apt. 935 264 Abshire Canyon, South Nerissachester, NM 01800

Phone: +9752624861224

Job: Forward Technology Assistant

Hobby: Listening to music, Shopping, Vacation, Baton twirling, Flower arranging, Blacksmithing, Do it yourself

Introduction: My name is Nathanial Hackett, I am a lovely, curious, smiling, lively, thoughtful, courageous, lively person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.