German Pancake with Butter Syrup
This easy German pancake recipe is a breakfast staple! Five basic ingredients for a perfect baked pancake. Those craggy, golden edges are the best!
This simple German pancake is a staple breakfast around here, especially on the weekend!
Puffy and golden, it’s a classic, and this recipe has been in our family for years.
Blender Recipe
Five basic ingredients go into a blender:
- eggs
- milk
- vanilla
- salt
- flour
Process until smooth and well-combined. You don’t want to over blend here, but at the same time, you don’t want flour bits and lumps.
Best Pan for German Pancake
I always use a glass 9X13-inch dish for this recipe.
I’ve tried baking in a metal pan, and while it worked ok, it was much harder to clean the metal pan of the egg-based batter than the glass pan.
A cast iron skillet could also be used, although you’d likely need to cut down the recipe to use for a 9- or 10-inch skillet.
One word of caution for glass pans: after removing the baked pancake from the oven, ALWAYS set the hot glass pan on a trivet or hot pad and NOT on a cold countertop (even if it’s a material that can withstand heat). I’ve learned the hard way that the glass pan will shatter in to a million pieces.
Puffy Golden Pancake
German pancakes are notorious for their puffy, golden edges and wavy middles.
Our house is deeply divided on which section is best. Several of us fight over the craggy edges while the others try to sneak seconds on a middle piece before anyone notices.
Three Tips for the Puffiest German Pancake
- Blend the batter until very well-combined.
- Pour the batter into a warm, buttered pan (not a cold pan).
- Bake in a hot 425 degree F oven.
What to Serve with German Pancake
This German pancake is delicious served with maple syrup, jam, or a sprinkle of powdered sugar.
But when we’re feeling like we want to treat ourselves in a special way, I’ll make the buttermilk syrup featured here. It’s also included with the recipe below.
It may seem unusual to simmer butter, buttermilk, baking soda, and sugar together to make syrup, but I promise it works.
I mean, if you are morally opposed to eating caramel for breakfast, you might want to look away, but otherwise, this is the breakfast dreams are made of.
A Special Breakfast
Brian makes this recipe more often than I do. It’s his signature recipe for weekend breakfasts, and we all love him for it.
For our family of seven, one pan isn’t enough anymore. So we (or rather, Brian) doubles the recipe and splits between two 9X13-inch pans.
It’s gobbled up lickety split, and it will definitely be a recipe that is passed down to future generations!
One Year Ago: Amazing Romaine Salad with Light Poppy Seed Vinaigrette
Two Years Ago: Stir-Fried Broccoli with Brown Rice {Meat Optional}
Three Years Ago: Cinnamon Roll Sugar Cookies
Baked German Pancake
Ingredients
For the Pan:
- 2 to 4 tablespoons butter
Pancake:
- 6 large eggs
- 1 cup milk
- ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 cup (142 g) all-purpose or white whole wheat flour
- ¼ teaspoon salt
Syrup:
- 1 cup (212 g) granulated sugar
- ½ cup buttermilk
- ½ cup (113 g) salted butter
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
Instructions
- For the pancake: preheat the oven to 425 degrees F. Put the butter in a glass 9X13-inch baking dish and pop the pan in the oven while it preheats (if it's taking a while to mix up the batter, keep an eye on the dish so the butter doesn't burn; take it out when the butter is melted). Swirl the melted butter to coat the bottom of the 9X13-inch pan and set aside.
- Combine all the pancake ingredients in a blender and process until smooth and well-combined, 20-30 seconds.
- Pour the batter into the prepared pan and immediately return to the oven. Bake for 20 minutes until the pancake is puffy and lightly browned on the bottom and edges.
- Serve immediately with jam, butter syrup, maple syrup or whatever else your heart desires.
- For the syrup: in a larger than you think saucepan (it will foam and triple in volume at the end), combine the sugar, buttermilk and butter and bring to a boil, stirring often. Reduce the heat and simmer for 5-7 minutes. Off the heat, stir in the vanilla and baking soda until well-combined. Serve warm over pancakes. For an extra caramelly version, add the baking soda at the beginning with the buttermilk.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: pancake recipe from my Aunt Marilyn, syrup a combined recipe from Aunt Marilyn + Lindsay, a reader who emailed me her favorite butter syrup recipe eons ago
We did the Carmel version and added the soda at the beginning and we didn’t like it at all. Didn’t taste like Carmel. Anyone else have this issue?
Any tips for making this in high altitudes? I can’t seem to keep mine from falling.
Hi Nicole, what type of pan are you using? You might try adding a few more tablespoons flour to the batter.
Would it work to make this in a cast iron skillet? I have a large 16 in cast iron and love to find recipes that I can bake in it…Thank Mel
Hello from Roseau.
Jill
Oh, miss Roseau! Yes, this should work great in a cast iron skillet!
I tried this for the first time today. It is simply fantastic! The buttermilk syrup is so delicious that I could eat it by the spoonful!
Delicious!! Make the syrup!!!
My six year old son said: This is so good I want 8ths! It’s from Mel’s Kitchen Cafe, right?”
My family does better without most dairy, but butter is fine. This MILK-FREE sub worked great:
Sub for buttermilk: 2tsp white vinegar + canned coconut milk to make 1/2 cup. Proceed as written.
Easy and delicious! The butter syrup completes the pancake, and it is very good drizzled over fresh strawberries and blueberries. This will be added to our Christmas morning breakfast! Thank you so much for sharing this recipe.
When you double the batch, do you bake both 9x13s at the same time? #idreamofadoubleoven
Yes, I do! They both fit in my standard size oven. (I dream of double ovens, too!)
Great, thanks! I’m always nervous to “crowd” the oven, but glad to hear that it will work fine!
Saved me this pregnancy
This is such a great recipe. I make this every Christmas morning for the past several years. Thank you for sharing!
I made this on a whim today. I love these baked breakfast recipes for lunch (what can I say, I’m a breakfast person). I made this today instead of the other baked pancake recipe on this blog I usually make. Holy śh!t it was fantastic. You weren’t lying about the decadent syrup. I could seriously eat that alone. I didn’t bake my pancake long enough, it wasn’t golden on top and it fell quite a bit after I took it out of the oven. It still tasted delicious but I’ll bake it longer next time. This recipe is a keeper. It’s so easy but makes me look like a kitchen rockstar.
hi,
just a quick not to this recepie.
this is not a german pancake, its a dutch baby pancake.
it is so sad, that food blogger and even star chefs do not do the proper research and representing so often origin recepies which are shown wrong. i am german and this is not a german pancake.
best regards Ludwig
Hi Ludwig,
In America “German Pancake” is another term for “Dutch Baby”–the etymology is pretty obscure but it seems to be named after a belief they had similarity to pfannkuchen. They seem to also be called “Dutch babies” likely because the words “Deutsch” and “Dutch” were commonly mistaken (for example that’s why the German speaking Pennsylvanians became known as “Pennsylvania Dutch” and not Pennsylvania Deutsch.
So in defense of Mel–this would be sort of like saying that “French toast” is not what you eat in France! It’s just the American term for the food. If you’re upset with it your worry is much bigger than Mel 🙂
The syrup with this pancake recipe is THE BEST! We had sliced fresh mango along side our pancake and drizzled the syrup over it….amazing! It tasted almost like my favorite sticky mango rice from my favorite Thai restaurant. Thank you for this wonderful, easy recipe that I will make over and over again!
This recipe was a huge hit with my family (as are all your recipes). I thought the syrup was an amazing addition to this pancake. My husband tends to like things a little less sweet than I do though. Is it possible to reduce the amount of sugar in the syrup an still have it come out with the correct consistency? Thanks!
You could definitely play around with the ingredient amounts – I’ve never reduced the sugar so I don’t know if the consistency will be the same.
Will the syrup keep if made in advance? What is the best way to store?
Yes, I store it in the refrigerator and warm it up before serving.
I made this with whole wheat (half hard red half hard white) flour and it was so good! And more filling than german pancakes usually are. Also I boiled the syrup a little too long and when it cooled it turned into taffy which my kids still ate!
I can’t thank you enough for this recipe. The pancake and the syrup both rocked my world!
If I like a thicker German Pancake could I just one and a half the recipe? Thoughts…
Yep!
I made the butter syrup this morning with maple sugar because I was out of white sugar….Holy Smokes!! AMAZING
We made the white whole wheat version and the egg separated from the flour and some sink to the bottom and some rose to the top.
At the top of the recipe it says “cook time 30 minutes” but in the recipe it says 20 minutes. I learned by sad experience last night that 30 minutes is too long . Next time I’ll pay more attention to the recipe, but you might want to fix that. This recipe is almost identical to one I grew up having, so I know it’s good. I’ll try again.
The cook time at the top of the recipe includes the time needed for all components of the recipe (in this case, the pancakes and the syrup) so that people know how long the full recipe will take. Sorry if that was confusing!
Made these again over the weekend for a family reunion – they were delicious! Thanks!
Would this turn out with gluten free flour?
I haven’t tried it, but I’m pretty sure others have tried it and reported back in the comment thread about using gluten free flour.
I used it with Bob’s 1 to 1 Gluten Free flour and it worked okay. Not amazing as the original recipe is a family staple and we could definitely tell the difference, but it was still okay, and the butter syrup is the real star anyway lol.
My 10th grader is taking German and I thought he’d think it was funny to have German pancakes. He liked them but LOVED the syrup. Thank you for posting! Definitely making again
These turned out really good! No surprises there though, everything I’ve made from this website has been good! I WAS wondering though where I can find white whole wheat flour? I’ve looked a couple different places now with no luck♀️
Hi Alexa, most prepackaged wheat flour is red whole wheat flour – I think King Arthur Flour sells a lighter “pastry” whole wheat flour in stores that is white wheat, but I’m not sure. I know you can buy it more easily online but that doesn’t help if you are looking to use it right away.
Kroger/Smiths sells a brand of whole wheat white flour. The brand is called Wheat Montana, the bag is yellow and says Prairie Gold.
Mel, first off we love you. Thank you for the amazing recipes, tips, and love you share. I was excited to see German Pancakes pop up on your feed. A true classic. A very delicious, simple classic. Please, please try topping it with a generous sprinkle of “snow” powdered sugar, then squeeze fresh lemon juice, finally top with fresh strawberries! You will LOVE it! I honestly request if for my birthday treat. So delicious!
Thanks, Nicole! Will definitely try that!
This is awesome!
We LOVE this syrup! It is a family favorite. This morning I was reheating some left over syrup on the stove and forgot about it. By the time I realized it the syrup had caramalized. We cut up some apples and dipped them into the now caramel butter syrup. It was delicious! It had a similar texture/flavor to dulce de leche.
Why German? I have never seen Pancake Like this and german people never war Pancake at breakfast!!!
At least it’s not “French” like most everything else that also has nothing to do with food origins. It’s just what it’s called here. Although it also goes by Dutch baby. I assume the Dutch wouldn’t claim any culinary roots either. It’s basically a giant popover; although if you have English heritage, it would be a giant Yorkshire pudding. That last one just might be geographically accurate!
Oh my gosh that syrup is amazing! The pancake was light and delicious. My son could not stop telling me all day how good my “new” pancakes were. Thank you for sharing!
This recipe is amazing!! Our family really loved it! It looks really weird toward the end of baking , but the taste is so delicious and with the butter syrup, it is over the top! Definitely a keeper. Thanks for sharing this.
Perfect breakfast for our snow day today! I made this and the chocolate version side-by-side. The syrup is probably my favorite part!
The recipe was great! I followed it to a T and it turned out wonderful. Tastes delicious, and I can understand how one family would devour it. Thanks!
In case anyone was wondering, over-mixing the flour portion of this will DEFINITELY result in a super dense, firm… thing. Don’t even want to call it a pancake. Scientific experiment courtesy of a 2-year-old who enthusiastically whisked while Mom wasn’t looking. Will have to try again sometime…
Loved it! Easy & quick to make. I had to use a smaller round bowl to bake it & it puffed up like a souffle, but it was great nonetheless. Thanks for the recipe.
LOVE this recipe! We have it every Sunday morning (: my picky toddler will eat as us adults. Thank you Mel!
Just wanted to leave a comment on the syrup though- I’ve found I can only let it simmer for 5 minutes or it crystallizes. Super yummy crystals though!
Thanks for the feedback, Emily!
This is too funny! My husband has been making these for our kids from the Betty Crocker cookbook for maybe a dozen years (doubled, just like Brian), and they call them “Dad’s Famous Pancakes”. He actually may have been the one to dub them that because, like Bart, he wanted a food tradition to be remembered by! I guess this is the perfect dad recipe.
I’m excited to try your exact recipe, as well as the buttermilk syrup…yum! Thank you!
Oh, so funny!
Made this for the first time months ago as something new to try with my kids that they could be hands on with, which they loved. After being diagnosed with Celiac I wanted to be able to eat the same delicious things and so I tried the recipe with “all purpose” or “cup-for-cup” gluten free flour and it was even BETTER than before! The end result was slightly more dense which my family enjoyed. Also, the butter syrup is to die for!
I made the syrup and I get a baking soda aftertaste. My husband said he wouldn’t of noticed it if I wouldn’t of said anything. Did I do something wrong or am I just being weird?
You could try decreasing the baking soda a bit – but I’m guessing you didn’t do anything wrong. We are probably all just used to it. 🙂
Just made these, pancakes tasted great and syrup did too. But while adding the baking soda it had a sort of acid smell, it mostly disappeared as it set, but could still smell it a little. What did I do wrong?
I think it is just fine, Margaret – the baking soda might have a bit of an acrid smell but the flavor shouldn’t be noticeable.
I’ve eaten these my whole life. They are hands down the fastest way to become the favorite parent. I’ve never made them in a blender, but that is definitely happening the next time these are made. If you haven’t tried the topping of sprinkled lemon juice followed by sprinkled powdered sugar, it’s time.
Mel, have you ever tried subbing coconut extract for vanilla extract in the syrup recipe? It’s super yummy and a nice way to change things up.
Followed the directions to a T, but it didn’t rise up the dudes & got big bubbles in the middle. What’s I do wrong? I barely mixed the flour & salt in, just ‘TIL combined. I’m super bummed, I was really looking forward to this. 🙁
However, I did use milk & lemon juice to make butter milk & the syrup turned out perfectly.
I’m not Mel replying- sorry! But I discovered I had the same problem if I don’t pour the mixture into the hot pan almost immediately after it’s all been mixed or if the oven isn’t all the way preheated. Who knew such a simple recipe could be so temperamental! Good luck next time!
I’ve never commented on a recipe before, but we make this all the time, and are making it now. My daughter, who is 3, yells “I LOVE Dutch Babies!” when she hears we’re making this.
Haha, so cute!
My wife told me yesterday that she had a blog post that she wanted to share with me and although I was expecting it to be related to politics, SEO, religion, or parenting, it turned out to be this article. I guess it could loosely fall under the category of parenting.
I guess I need to learn to make this yummy dish. She made it for us all this morning and it was a hit. The kids said it reminded them of crepes ( which they like to pronounce as creepy’s).
Just made this. It was amazing!!! Thank you so much: to you and Bart!
I’ve made this a couple times and they are delicious!! But my center never puffs up. The sides get super puffy but the center is like a black hole of sadness….any idea what I could be doing wrong?? I typically half the recipe and bake it in an 8×8. Could that be the cause?
That sounds similar to mine, Megan – the sides puff up way more than the middle.
They’ll puff up much more beautifully if you use cast iron. They just retain the heat better and the hot pan is what’s key.
Best recipe ever. Bad, because I could eat the entire pan myself…if I let myself. Thank you for sharing!
My whole family LOVES this for breakfast. Don’t try to make the pancake part with buttermilk, though because it won’t rise very much.
Great recipe!! We ate this the other day and topped them with sauteed apples that had been tossed in cinnamon and sugar, and then we sprinkled a bit of powdered sugar on top. It was amazing, so much in fact that we decided this needed to be a traditional meal in our home. Thank you for being our “go to” site for recipes!
Yum! Sounds so delicious, Rachel!
My kids LOVED this so much when we had it for Brinner the other night that they requested it for breakfast this morning. As I went to add the flour I realized I was all out of all purpose so I used Sprouted Spelt flour instead. I was prepared for a less than puffy pancake, but surprisingly it still worked well and was delicious. The butter syrup is a game changer and certainly took it to the next level!
I was looking for something to shake up our breakfast routine and found this recipe. I’ve never had German pancakes before but the whole family loved them! I considered cutting the recipe in half because I have just three younger kids but the whole batch got eaten. Glad I left it the way it was! Thanks for a great new breakfast recipe!
Everything was delicious! I simmered the syrup at too high a temperature, though, and couldn’t do it for more than 5 minutes. It ended up coming out much too thick. It was delicious though, and I know better for next time!