Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Classic Old-Fashioned Pancakes: Light & Fluffy

Tender, golden pancakes with crisp edges and a soft, fluffy center, made from simple pantry staples and a straightforward, two-bowl batter.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A stack of light and fluffy old-fashioned pancakes on a white plate with a pat of butter and warm maple syrup dripping down the sides on a sunlit kitchen table

If your idea of a perfect morning includes a warm stack of pancakes that somehow feels both old-school and still impressive, you are in the right place. This is the classic, best old-fashioned pancake recipe: lightly sweet, buttery, and fluffy enough to soak up syrup like it was born to do it.

The secret is not a fancy ingredient. It is the little stuff: not overmixing, giving the batter a short rest, and cooking on steady, medium heat so you get those crisp edges and a soft center. Grab the skillet and keep the coffee coming.

A glass mixing bowl of pancake batter with a whisk resting inside on a wooden countertop, with flour and baking powder nearby

Why It Works

  • Fluffy texture without fuss: Baking powder plus a short batter rest gives you lift without needing whipped egg whites.
  • No hockey pucks: A gentle mix keeps gluten from getting bossy, so pancakes stay tender.
  • Even browning: Medium heat and a preheated pan create that classic golden color with crisp edges.
  • Flexible pantry ingredients: Milk, flour, eggs, and butter. Nothing weird, nothing hard to find.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Fridge: Let pancakes cool completely, then store in an airtight container with parchment between layers. They keep well for up to 4 days (for best quality).

Freezer: Freeze in a single layer on a baking sheet until firm, then transfer to a freezer bag with parchment between pancakes. Best within 2 months for top quality.

Reheat:

  • Toaster: My favorite for getting the edges crisp again. Toast on a low to medium setting.
  • Oven: Wrap a stack in foil and warm at 350°F for 8 to 10 minutes.
  • Microwave: Works in a pinch, but keep it short (15 to 25 seconds) so they do not turn rubbery.

Pro tip: If you know you are freezing them, cook them just a hair lighter than your ideal. They will finish perfectly when reheated.

Common Questions

Why are my pancakes not fluffy?

The usual culprit is overmixing or weak leavening. Mix until you still see a few small lumps, and if you are not sure your baking powder is pulling its weight, test it: stir 1/2 teaspoon baking powder into a splash of hot water. It should fizz vigorously. If it barely bubbles, replace it.

Can I make the batter ahead of time?

You can mix the dry ingredients the night before. For the best rise, mix wet plus dry right before cooking. Once baking powder hits liquid, it starts working, and you lose some lift as it sits.

What is the best pan for pancakes?

A cast iron skillet or nonstick griddle both work great. Cast iron gives you slightly crisper edges. Nonstick is the lowest drama.

How do I know when to flip?

Look for bubbles on the surface that pop and leave little holes, and the edges should look set. Slide a spatula under and flip with confidence.

Can I swap buttermilk for milk?

Yes, and it is delicious. Use the same amount of buttermilk. As a starting point, reduce baking powder to 1 1/2 teaspoons and add 1/2 teaspoon baking soda. (Buttermilk brands vary in acidity, so consider this a flexible guide. If your pancakes brown too quickly or taste a bit too tangy, dial the baking soda down slightly next time.)

A golden-brown pancake being flipped with a spatula in a cast iron skillet on a stovetop

I love old-fashioned recipes because they do not try to impress you. They just show up, do the job, and somehow taste like a better version of your morning. Pancakes were one of the first things I learned to make without a recipe, mostly by messing up a few batches and realizing the goal is not a perfectly smooth batter. The goal is a hot pan, a gentle stir, and that moment when the kitchen smells like butter and vanilla and you suddenly have an audience hovering near the stove.