Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (2024)

By Kelsey Steffen

In Bread, Breakfast, Recipes, Sourdough

8
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Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (1)

Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancakes are great for a “quick-and-easy” weekday meal and the perfect way to use up excess sourdough starter so it doesn’t go to waste.

Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (2)

Because I’m determined to findALL THE YUMMYWAYSto use up excess sourdough starter…here’s one more to add to the list: A Sourdough Dutch Pancake(or a puff pancake, as we like to call it).

A snap to whip up and only takes 15-25 minutes to bake. This is a super fun recipe to get the kids involved as the pancake puffs up really big in the oven. Our kids always request the oven light be turned on, and they pop a squat, right in front of the oven to watch.

As an extra bonus, these pancakes are full of protein, can be completely sugar-free, and will surely hold over your appetite well into lunchtime.

Even better, because they only use sourdough starter, with no additional flour, there’s no waiting around for a “soak time” to make them gut-friendly. They’re so easy, we even whip them up on weekday mornings!

Recipe for Excess Sourdough Starter

This sourdough Dutch Baby pancake is just one of the many ways we like to use up our excess sourdough starter. We do a LOT of baking with sourdough in our home. As a family of 6(with four growing kiddos),we go through our fair share of food. And one way we like to save money is by baking at home with Sourdough.

Read how our family saved enough money with sourdough to buy a new car here!

Other ways we like to use up our starter are with No-Wait Sourdough Muffins. Because we’re constantly making up sourdough goodies like bagels, flat bread, tortillas and cakes, we tend to need quick-and-easy recipes to utilize all the unused starter (because I HATE tossing it in the trash!).

If you’re new to sourdough, or simply looking for more incredible, tried and true recipes, be sure to check out our eBook, Everyday Sourdough: Easy Sourdough Recipes for the Everyday Baker.

This recipe is featured in our Sourdough eBook! If you love easy and delicious sourdough recipes(including gluten-free options!),click here!

Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (4)

Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake

Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancakes are great for a "quick-and-easy" weekday meal and the perfect way to use up excess sourdough starter so it doesn't go to waste. This recipe is adapted from Martha Stewarts Dutch Baby Pancake recipe.

4.25 from 4 votes

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Course: Breakfast, Sourdough

Prep Time: 5 minutes

Cook Time: 5 hours 43 minutes

Total Time: 5 hours 43 minutes

Servings: 8 servings

Calories: 246kcal

Author: Full of Days

Ingredients

  • 6 Tbs. butter
  • 6 farm fresh eggs
  • 2 cups sourdough starter*
  • 1/3 cup milk raw is best
  • 1/2 tsp. salt
  • 4 Tbs. organic sugar or honey optional

Instructions

  • Preheat your oven to 425°F.

  • In your stand mixer using the whisk attachment add eggs to bowl and beat well.

  • Add sourdough starter, milk, salt, and sugar or honey(if using).Whisk on medium-low until smooth.

  • Put butter into a 9-15 inch stainless steel orcast-iron skillet and place into oven for butter to melt and pan to preheat (about 5 minutes).

  • Carefully remove pan from oven and swirl butter around to coat sides. Pour batter into the pan and quickly place back in the oven.

  • Bake for 15-25 minutes (depending on size of pan) until pancake has puffed up and is beginning to turn golden brown on top(do not open oven during the first 15 minutes or your pancake may deflate).

  • Carefully remove pan(it will be HOT)and, using a spatula, release pancake from pan and slide out onto a serving plate.

  • Dust with powdered sugar and a squeeze of lemon, drizzle with maple ormarionberry syrup, slice some fresh fruit and add a dollop of homemade sweetenedsour cream.Fancy it up however you like best!

Notes

  • You can also toss all the ingredients into a blender (except the butter) and give it a quick whirl in there! That's my favorite "time saving method".
  • This pancake would pair perfectly with thesehomemade Maple Turkey Sausages!Slice it up like a pizza and serve immediately.*If you prefer a thinner pancake, use a larger pan, for the pancake in the photo above, we used a 9 inch cast iron skillet. It was thick and fluffy, and oh so delicious!

Nutrition

Serving: 1/8th recipe | Calories: 246kcal | Carbohydrates: 27.3g | Protein: 7g | Fat: 12.4g | Saturated Fat: 6.7g | Cholesterol: 146mg | Sodium: 261mg | Fiber: 0.7g | Sugar: 9.4g

Dutch Pancakes, Pancakes, Puff Pancake, Skillet Pancake, Sourdough

Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (5)

Kelsey Steffen

I am a wife, a mother of five, and forever a learner. My husband and I desire to live a life “Full of Days”. This means finding “fullness” in the everyday grind, which encompasses all areas of life including real food, cooking, health and wellness, time-management, homeschooling, etc., etc. I spend my days homeschooling our four older kiddos (and wrangling our youngest), cooking food the traditional way, and unabashedly doting over "The Hubs". I'm constantly refining it all while sharing with you...get to know us behind the scenes on Facebook and Instagram where we share our attempts at living life Full of Days.

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Showing 20 comments

  • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (9)

    Cheryl

    Reply

    Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (10)
    Loved this! I sautéed some apples and cinnamon in the butter first. Poured the batter on top and baked. Loved the consistency. Thought this was really good! All my kids gobbled it up! Thanks!

    • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (11)

      Kelsey Steffen

      Reply

      You just gave us a FANTASTIC recipe to try out this weekend! Thanks for sharing Cheryl, we’re so glad you liked it!

  • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (12)

    Rande

    Reply

    Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (13)
    This was great! Easy. I like that it’s not so gut heavy using sourdough!

    • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (14)

      Kelsey Steffen

      Reply

      Agreed Rande! Although we do love a traditional Dutch Baby Pancake, we love that the sourdough recipe is a bit healthier!

  • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (15)

    Alyssa Clevenger

    Reply

    Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (16)
    This Was so good! I added a shake of baking soda because my discard was pretty strong! And i added a cup of frozen blueberries which added moisture and made it messy, but as it cooled, it was perfect! Had mine with maple syrup!

    • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (17)

      Kelsey Steffen

      Reply

      YUM! Great tip on the baking soda for extra-sour starers! Thanks for sharing Alyssa!

  • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (18)

    Anne

    Reply

    Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (19)
    The flavor was good but it didn’t puff up like i expected. It was a bit gummy. I used a 12 i cast iron skillet and baked 20 min.
    Any ideas to get a more puffy texture? I didn’t open the oven before 15 minutes.

    • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (20)

      Kelsey Steffen

      Reply

      Hi Anne, sorry for the late reply. The sourdough Dutch baby pancake doesn’t puff up like a traditional dutch baby. It’s just a much denser batter. You can try adding a pinch of baking soda to see if that helps with more rise!

  • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (21)

    Feroza Saeed

    Reply

    In order to have 2 cups of discarding your sourdough initial starter must be in to make large quantity or can I collect four days discard to have two cups of discard? Sorry, I’m new to this. Thanks.

    • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (22)

      Kelsey Steffen

      Reply

      Hi Feroza, I actually like to feed my starter enough to have 2 cups all at once. If you just save your discard, it could become quite sour, and storing it in the refrigerator first isn’t great for this recipe. This one really tastes best with starter that’s been fed within 8-12 hours.

  • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (23)

    Karen

    Reply

    My kids really liked this! I’m assuming it was supposed to have a sense spongy texture and taste almost savoury (even with the honey)? I was wondering about the amount of butter. Most rested on the top and I sopped a lot of it up with a paper towel after it came out of the oven. Is the butter bubbling on top part of what makes this dish what it is, or could it go with less? The sides came away from the pan nicely, but a portion of the bottom still stuck.
    A great way to use up sourdough starter! We enjoyed it!

    • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (24)

      Kelsey Steffen

      Reply

      I’m so glad they liked it Karen! Yes, it does have a dense, spongy texture. We just made this again recently with a sourdough starter that hadn’t been fed enough and the flavor was actually TOO savory/sour for my taste, even adding maple syrup on top! The butter is supposed to float around, and I think it depends on your pan size for how much gets absorbed into the pancake and how much floats on top. It’s best to experiment with what works in your kitchen!

  • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (25)

    Barb

    Reply

    Should I use active starter or discarded starter?

    • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (26)

      Kelsey Steffen

      Reply

      Hi Barb! Everyone’s definition of “active” and “discarded” is different. I’m usually using my starter that’s on “maintenance feedings” (being fed once every 24 hours) that I feed in the evening. It’s not always at the peak of activity, but it also hasn’t been more than 12 hours. Hope this helps! Enjoy!

  • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (27)

    Margaret

    Reply

    Hi there. This looks great! Can you add fruit before baking?

    • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (28)

      Kelsey Steffen

      Reply

      Hi Margaret! I’ve never tried adding fruit before baking so I’m not sure if it would affect the cook time or rise. I imagine it would work great with a little experimentation! Let us know if it works out and post a picture of the recipe on our Facebook page!

  • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (29)

    Naomi

    Reply

    Hi, what’s the consistency of your sourdough starter? Mine’s a nearly doughy, thick rye sour. To use in most American recipes, I tend to mix it with an equal weight white flour and double the weight water and let it fermente several hours. Then it’s the “pancake batter” consistency I’ve heard mentioned elsewhere.

    • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (30)

      Kelsey Steffen

      Reply

      Hi Naomi! Our starter is at 100% hydration. The reason we love this pancake recipe is there’s no added flour, so there’s no need for the long fermentation time. But if you wanted a thinner starter, perhaps the night before you could take some of your rye starter, feed it with a combination of white/rye flours and a little extra water, then by morning you’d have an active thinner starter to use for this recipe! I’d give it a try no matter what, this pancake isn’t SUPER picky when it comes to the thickness of the batter, you just may not get quite the “puff” in your pancake if your batter is on the thicker side. If you give it a try, let us know how it worked out! We also love seeing photos of people trying our recipes on our facebook page!

      • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (31)

        Patricia Sweisford

        Reply

        Looking at your recipe. Saw another one that wanted the starter fed the night before so it could ferment for 12 hours. The recipe doesn’t say let it set in the refrigerator, just “sit for 12 hours”. Would you recommend it sit out for 12 or in the frig for 12? I’m not a member of your group so if you reply can you send it to me at FB? Patricia Palafox Sweisford

        • Sourdough Dutch Baby Pancake Recipe (32)

          Kelsey Steffen

          Reply

          Hi Patricia, I recommend using a starter that’s been fed within 6-12 hours for this recipe (and all recipes that use sourdough “discard” as the main ingredient). This will give you a nice active starter that’s not too hungry or sour tasting. And you can leave the starter out at room temperature, between 68-80 degrees is a sourdough starter’s happy place! If you put it in the refrigerator, the activity of the starter actually goes dormant and slows way down. So if you feed it the night before then pop it into the refrigerator, it won’t actually have worked on that flour completely as a sourdough starter should.

          We have an entire sourdough book filled with helpful tips if that interests you! https://everydayfull.com/everyday-sourdough

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Sourdough 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.

What is another name for a Dutch baby pancake? ›

A Dutch baby pancake, sometimes called a German pancake, a Bismarck, a Dutch puff, Hooligan, or a Hootenanny, is a dish that is similar to a large Yorkshire pudding.

Why are my sourdough pancakes tough? ›

Don't stir too hard though, or the pancakes will be tough. Drop 1/3 cup of batter onto heated skillet/griddle. Cook on first side until bubbles begin to form on surface, 2-3 minutes. Flip over and cook another 2-3 minutes until golden brown and centre springs back when lightly touched.

Do you have to use a cast iron skillet for a Dutch baby? ›

The pan doesn't have to be cast iron; you can use any oven-safe pan or baking dish of a similar size. I've even done them in a pie dish!

How do I get my Dutch baby to rise? ›

Like popovers and Yorkshire pudding, the thing that gives Dutch babies their signature puff is steam. In order for that steam to work the pancake into its signature peaks and valleys, you need two things: enough air in a well-developed batter and a piping-hot pan and oven.

What makes Dutch babies rise? ›

The magic that makes that Dutch baby pancake rise to its signature heights is simple: Steam! The combination of air that's whipped into the eggs when you mix the batter and the super hot cast-iron skillet (and oven) create the conditions needed for the lift we love.

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 do Southerners call pancakes? ›

Pancakes are sometimes called hoecakes in the South. Most Southerners are familiar with lacy cornbread, aka hot water cornbread. A hoecake is a rustic fried version of a pancake made with ground cornmeal.

Why do they call a Dutch baby a Dutch baby? ›

The term “Dutch baby” was coined by an American restaurateur whose use of “Dutch” was a corruption of the word “Deutsch” (“German” in German). “Baby” referred to the fact that the restaurant served miniature versions.

How do I make my sourdough more fluffy? ›

Keeping the lid on for the first part of baking allows steam to expand between the gluten fibers to rise the bread and create a fluffy loaf. Step 4: Remove the lid and bake for an additional 12-14 minutes or until the crust is crispy and golden brown. Once you take the lid off, the bread likely won't rise anymore.

What can I do with throw away sourdough starter? ›

You can always use this discard by directly mixing it into a dough for baking. Your discard, as long as it's in good shape, will leaven any bread dough just as well. The discard is just like a levain you would make for a recipe. The only difference is it's the same makeup as your starter.

What does sourdough pancakes taste like? ›

TASTE: Just a word to the wise, these taste like pancakes from your favorite restaurant. Thick, fluffy, soft, and delicious! They do NOT have a sour flavor, and most likely no one would know you used your sourdough starter when making them!

Why does my Dutch baby stick to the pan? ›

The high oven heat causes the batter to puff up, and it naturally deflates once removed from the heat. How do I prevent the pancake from sticking to the skillet? Make sure your skillet is well greased with butter or oil, and it's adequately heated before pouring in the batter.

Why did my Dutch baby deflate? ›

Why did my Dutch Baby deflate? These pancakes emerge from the oven gloriously puffed, but deflate quite quickly. This is totally normal and to be expected. If you want to impress your brunch guests, make sure everyone is gathered to watch you remove it from the oven so they can see just how high and mighty it is!

What is another name for a Dutch baby? ›

Though “Dutch baby” is a frequently used moniker when referring to this giant pancake, it has also been referred to as a German pancake, a puffed pancake, a baked pancake, a Bismarck and even a giant Yorkshire pudding due to its resemblance.

Why wont my pancakes bubble up? ›

You may not have turned up the heat on your burner or griddle high enough, or maybe you did not wait long enough for the cooking surface to heat up. You should be using medium heat for pancakes. Don't flip the pancake until bubbles in the center rise and pop without reforming new bubbles.

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.

Why does my Dutch baby deflate? ›

It is normal for the pancake to get really puffy while cooking, and then quickly deflate once it's removed from the oven. Don't be frustrated, this is exactly what's supposed to happen! Mix things up and try adding about a cup of fresh fruit over the top of the pancake batter, before it goes into the oven.

How long should you let pancake batter rise? ›

A – If you are going to let your batter rest, leave it for at least 30 minutes in the fridge. If you've got time, leave it for longer – even overnight in the fridge. Some say that there is no point in letting the batter rest and there's certainly no harm in using it straight away. Go ahead if you're in a rush.

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