The Best Cornbread on the Planet {and Fluffy Honey Butter}
This really is the best cornbread on the planet. It’s been my go-to tried-and-true recipe for over a decade. Fluffy, moist, PERFECT!
Sometimes a recipe comes along that changes your life forever.
Dramatic? Not at all. Especially when it comes to this cornbread. It is honestly, truly the best cornbread on the planet.
I am guilty of claiming to have found “the best” recipe and then inevitably find myself still trying other versions. Chocolate chip cookies, I’m looking at you.
But when it comes to this cornbread, it has been my go-to recipe for over a decade.
Once I tried it, I knew it was the one. And I have never had a desire to make or try another cornbread recipe again.
If you’ve made it, you know what I mean.
It is fluffy, moist, and super easy.
Now, I know when it comes to cornbread, there are southern cornbread fans (sweet and cake-like) and northern cornbread fans (not sweet and crumbly). I like my cornbread fluffy, thick and sweet.
Cornbread batter
This is a one-bowl cornbread batter. It comes really fast.
The batter is simple:
- cornmeal (I use yellow cornmeal)
- flour (all-purpose or a mix of all-purpose and whole wheat)
- sugar (the amount in the recipe can easily be halved for a less sweet, but still delicious, cornbread)
- baking powder
- salt
- wet ingredients: oil, melted butter, eggs, and milk
The batter is runny. And it’s ok if there are a few lumps here and there.
It bakes up super fluffy and soft.
Fluffy Honey Butter
Now, let’s talk about this honey butter for a sec. Is it mandatory for this best-ever cornbread.
Nope. I make the cornbread all the time without making the honey butter. But when I do make the honey butter, it is a combo that can’t be beat.
There’s nothing quite like it.
The honey butter is three simple ingredients: butter, honey, and marshmallow fluff. You can add a bit of vanilla, too, if you like.
Sure, you can omit the marshmallow fluff and just go with honey and butter, but the marshmallow adds a light and fluffy texture that can’t be beat.
Delicious served with everything from chili to tacos, here are a few other comments from people who have fallen in love with this cornbread:
Samantha says: I’ve been meaning to write a review for this recipe for awhile now. It is fantastic! Everything I’ve ever wanted cornbread to be!
Maggie says: Fantastic. Over the past few years I’ve tried every cornbread recipe I could get my hands on had given up making it from scratch. It’s my new fav recipe.
Devanie writes: I loved this recipe. It came out perfectly moist and the texture was great. And so delicious. This is the only recipe I will use going forward. Thanks for sharing!
There are hundred more comments and reviews below (including readers who have made this recipe dairy and gluten-free).
So go ahead. Make the cornbread. Make the honey butter. Or JUST make the cornbread.
Either way, this cornbread is life changing. It has become a staple and a tried-and-true favorite.
While I may play around with a million other recipes for a million other things, this is the only cornbread I’ll ever need. It’s the best of the best of the best.
FAQs for The Best Cornbread and Fluffy Honey Butter
You can make these into muffins by using the same temperature and check at around 17-18 minutes.
Yes, I sub buttermilk all the time and it works great! I usually add 1/4 teaspoon baking soda as well.
Yes, I’ve frozen this cornbread before and it warms up really well.
The Best Cornbread
Ingredients
Cornbread:
- ½ cup (85 g) cornmeal
- 1 ½ cups (213 g) flour (see note)
- ⅔ cup (141 g) granulated sugar (see note)
- 1 tablespoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ⅓ cup oil
- 3 tablespoons (42 g) butter, melted
- 2 large eggs, beaten
- 1 ¼ cups milk
Honey Butter:
- 1 cup (227 g) salted butter, softened
- ½ cup (170 g) honey
- ½ cup marshmallow fluff
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Lightly grease an 8X8- or 9X9-inch baking pan (I always use metal; glass pans will bake differently).
- For the cornbread, in a large bowl, whisk together the cornmeal, flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt. Add the oil, butter, eggs, and milk and stir with a whisk or rubber spatula until just combined. The batter will be runny.
- Spread the batter evenly in the prepared pan. Bake for 30-35 minutes until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean or with a few moist crumbs.
- For the honey butter, whip all the ingredients together with an electric mixer. Best served at room temperature so it is soft and spreadable.
Notes
Recommended Products
Recipe Source: My brother Nate and his wife, Kylie (love you forever!)
Recipe originally published August 2009; updated April 2020 with new photos, commentary and recipe notes
I have self-rising corn meal. Do I need to still add the baking powder and salt?
You’d have to experiment as I’ve never made this recipe with self rising cornmeal before.
Do you think I could make this gluten & dairy free by using a substitute flour and milk?
Could definitely try! I think others in the comment thread have done so with good results.
Hi Mel! Loyal groupie here 🙂 You should seriously put together a cookbook because I would totally buy it for myself and friends and family and pass it down to my posterity! But to the point, we LOVE this cornbread and make it almost weekly. Please don’t judge. My little family of 4 eats about half the pan the first day. It is never quite as good the next day. Do you have a storage tip to keep it fresh?
Haha, thanks Molly! I hear you – this cornbread is best the first day. I find it keeps better at room temperature vs putting in the refrigerator.
Was wondering I wanted to add sweet corn kernels into the batter have you ever tried it? If so what do you use frozen, fresh or can? Btw I love this recipe.. it’s my go to recipe been making it for 2 year
I haven’t tried that, but I think for this recipe I’d use canned that’s been drained so the kernels are softer, but that’s just a guess.
How many slices of cornbread will this recipe make?
It depends on how big you cut the pieces but anywhere from 9-15 or so.
This is the exact same recipe from the verybestbaking.com website (Nestle) that I’ve been using since 2006. It’s my family’s favorite and my go-to cornbread recipe.
I’ve been vegan for about a year and a half now, and I still touch back here to see anything new and how I can tweak it for my lifestyle now. (Still miss and love ya so much, Mel!)
I switch the milk out with soy milk, (I think hemp or almond milk should do fine as well,) the butter out with Earth Balance, and the eggs out with, “flax eggs.” My ratio for 2 eggs is 2 TBS of ground flax mixed with 5 TBS of water.
Still makes yummy corn cake!
Thanks for the comment, Amanda! Glad you are still able to adapt some of your favorite recipes!
Any idea how I can make this dairy free but still taste good? For a Nursing mommy who can’t eat dairy right now but is craving corn bread…
Any recommendations on making this dairy free, no milk no butter!? For a mommy who can’t eat dairy for her nursing baby, but she is craving corn bread???
You could try using almond milk and maybe coconut oil in place of butter?
Fantastic. Over the past few years I’ve tried every cornbread recipe I could get my hands on had given up making it from scratch. I used whole milk with a bit of lemon juice and added 1/2 tsp of baking soda. I baked it in my preheated 10″ cast iron skillet as per directions. It’s my new fav recipe. Maggie
Hi! Has anyone used buttermilk instead of regular milk? Thanks!
Yes, I sub buttermilk all the time and it works great! I usually add 1/4 teaspoon baking soda as well.
Very good. Moist and sweet. We also enjoyed the honey butter!
This is definitely the best cornbread, because I don’t even really like cornbread, but this stuff is amazing! Not the dry, crumbly mess I think of when I think cornbread. While I don’t think it’s necessary to cook it in a cast iron skillet, we tried it last night and we one and a halved the recipe for a 12 inch skillet and it was perfect. No bubbling over or mess in the oven. This is the only recipe I use, and fortunately for my family, we now eat cornbread occasionally.
This is really the best cornbread!! The best taste and texture of all the cornbreads I’ve ever made.
Hi Mel!
I haven’t made the cornmuffins yet bc I don’t know what type of cornmeal to buy. Could you let us all know please?
Sunny L
I use yellow cornmeal.
I loved this recipe. It came out perfectly moist and the texture was great. And so delicious. This is the only recipe I will use going forward. Thanks for sharing!
Happy New Year Mel. I got out the Jiffy cornbread mix to go with the awesome blackeyed peas simmering with ham hock on the stove and wondered……….maybe Mel has a better recipe I can use. Well you do and I made it and it is delicious. Part cornbread, park cake, moist, flavorful, not at all crumbly. Forget the peas, all I want to eat is the cornbread. Just called my neighbors and invited them to come over and try the cornbread. The box stuff is in the trash. Thank you Mel for sharing your delicious recipes with us. There is not a week that goes by that I haven’t incorporated one of your recipes with dinner . I would be lost without you.
Thank you so much, Linda! Happy New Year!
Linda, I’m not Mel and I don’t know you but this comment made me love you.
This cornbread is one of the best recipes I have tried on this website along with the lasagna and balsamic asparagus penne. The pan I used was a little small so it overflowed but even the parts that overflowed were crispy and delicious haha I had to omit the marshmallow fluff because they don’t have it here in Korea, but just with butter and honey it melted into the warm cornbread in the best way
Does the cooking time need to be increased if doubling batch and using 9×13 pan?
Over the years, I’ve actually started just 1 1/2-ing the recipe for a 9X13. It makes a more manageable batch. The baking time probably won’t need to be changed significantly.
This is my go-to recipe for corn bread! Typically, I make a double recipe (for a 9×13 pan), I use half the sugar, and some of the flour is white whole wheat flour. Perfect cornbread every time!
This is the best cornbread recipe. It was a big hit yesterday at our thanksgiving dinner. Thank you so much
Can honey be substituted for the sugar? If so, what would be an appropriate amount of honey?
Thank you,
Culver
I haven’t tried that, but you could certainly experiment! Maybe do about the same amount or slightly less honey?
Do you grease and flour your pan before baking for this recipe?
I lightly grease with cooking spray.
Do you grease and flour your pan before baking for this recipe?
Help!!! I love this cornbread and make it all the time and have so much trouble with the cooking time! I always have to add anywhere from 10-20+ minutes to the 8″ pan size. I have cooked in three different ovens and multiple altitudes with the same results. Am i doing something wrong??
No, probably not. It might just be the pan type or specific oven temperature. It’s a pretty thick cornbread, so I wouldn’t worry as long as it’s baking through and not drying out.
I’ve always had great success with this cornbread. Fluffy and with the right hint of sweetness. Question: I try not to overmix, but I always have little granules of baking powder/flour that don’t dissolve through baking. Is that just how it’s supposed to be? I’m terrified of mixing too much and ending up with a dense and dry cornbread! 😉
Hi Gail – good question. It’s ok to have some lumps of flour – but if you notice large dry patches, I’d keep mixing.
hi! this is so yummy!
Cornbread has always been okay–just okay–until I tried this recipe. Now, cornbread is better than cake. Love. it. so. much. Thank you!! And, anytime I want to try something new I come to your site, because I know that my family will love it. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Thank you!!
I posted on Facebook to ask for people’s best cornbread recipes and yours was mentioned multiple times. Guess I better try it! Thanks so much. Everything I’ve ever made of yours is the best!
Hope you love it, Robyn!
Oh my, I just subscribed to your newsletter and have printed out 8 recipes to try within about 20 minutes of looking around! Your food looks wonderful and simple enough to do after work for a good weeknight dinner! I’m so excited, thank you for sharing your love of food and talent in the kitchen with us not so talented folks, I can’t wait to get started!!
Thanks, Linda! I hope you love the recipes you try!
Can I make this in a jelly roll pan? Should I double it? Any advice on how long to bake it.
By jelly roll do you mean a rimmed baking sheet (12X18)? Yes you can double for that size of pan.
My go to cornbread recipe! Making it tonight.
One of my favorite Mel recipes! We make it at least once a month and it’s always amazing. I usually end up baking for an extra five minutes or so. Making it again tonight!
I have made this several times and it is truly amazing. Tonight I tried making it into cornbread muffins…some with hot dogs in them for a baked version of corn dogs…they were great! I used a mini muffin tin and baked at 350 for 15-16 minutes. They were just as tasty as the 8×8 pan is…just a little more handy for my kids.
So what do you do with the leftover marshmallow fluff in the jar? Can you save it for awhile?
Yes, it should be fine for a while on the shelf. I usually repurpose it into other recipes (like the S’mores brownies on my site) or make a larger batch of the honey butter.
Peanut butter and marshmallow fluff sandwiches (aka fluffanutter) are really tasty. These sandwiches are very common in the Northeast.
Mel, I’m making this for a crowd of 350, and I have 15 disposable jelly roll type pans (11×17). Would you recommend a triple batch per pan?
Yes, I’ve done that and it works great! Although I do remember last time I did it that I scooped maybe a cup of batter out of each 11X17-inch pan because they seemed overfull – so just judge it best by your pan. I wouldn’t fill them more than halfway, maybe 2/3, so a lot will depend on how high the sides are.
How long did you end up cooking in the jelly roll pan? Similar to the 9×13? I too need to feed a crowd- this seems easier than a bunch of 9×13 pans…
I check it right around 20 minutes.
Hi Mel! I’d love to make the honey butter ahead of time for a party I’m having. Would you happen to know how long you’d need to let it come to room temp before serving? Thanks!
Hi Lex, I would let it sit at room temperature for 1-2 hours.
I have made this for family parties and work potlucks, and it is a crowd-pleaser for sure. I love this recipe! This is for sure one of my favorite go-to recipes, especially for this time of year. Thanks, Mel!
Exceedingly delicious. I made it ahead, froze it, and then reheated it by putting the 9X13 pan wrapped in foil in a cold oven, bringing it to 250 for about 1/2 hour… worried it might be dry, but it was so light, moist and delicious. This is an amazing recipe.
I’ve been using this recipe from your site for years. I had some buttermilk to use up, and subbed it for half the milk. It was really good! I also have enjoyed using part whole wheat flour in this recipe.
This is my new – Easy-Peasy recipe. I lowered the sugar and since I did not really have vege oil, I used ghee and then used light olive oil in place of butter. Very happy with the results. I’ve read the other comments, so I plan on trying the butter milk (and adding 1/4 tsp soda). I’ll get some canola to try the reg way some day…. so I know the difference.
I might have made it work! Had to add about 20 minutes. Hope it’s not too dried out. But at least it will be edible!!! So I made your cinnamon rolls for Christmas morning, and they are seriously the best! My family was in Heaven!
Hey Bri – I just saw your comments, was the cornbread salveageable?
And this is my no fail cornbread. But wondering if cooking them together is making it not work?
Yikes! I think this recipe is failing! I quadrupled it, so I’m cooking it in two 9X13 pans at the same time. I’ve cooked it for 42 minutes so far, and the middle is still goopy. Still in the oven. What did I do wrong?! I’m feeding a small army tonight. Hoping I can make it work!
I have used many of your recipes and they always turn out great. I am planning to try this cornbread recipe and was wondering if I can use all purpose white flour or do I need to use white wheat or whole wheat flour ?
Thanks,
Lisa
You can use all-purpose, sometimes I use half whole wheat and half all-purpose.
I baked a pan of this tonight to take into work tomorrow; we take turns bringing in a crockpot meal and mine is going to be soupbeans (pinto). I had to try a slice of this and it was absolutely delicious! Throwing away all my other cornbread recipes.
I just have to say it again, that this IS the BEST cornbread EVER!!! I will NEVER try another cornbread recipe again!!!! THANK YOU MEL!!!’
This really is the best corn bread I’ve ever had! I know you have a corn bread muffin recipe on here already, but I was wondering if I could turn these into muffins or mini muffins? Thanks!
Honestly, I haven’t made this as muffins because we love it as is so much but I believe others in the comment thread have with good results. Good luck if you try it!
It’s several years after you’ve posted this recipe, but I just wanted to say THANK YOU for this!!! I LOVE this recipe and it truly is amazing. I will be making it again this week. Thanks!!
This recipe is really the best cornbread recipe as it claims to be. My family loved it and my husband is not a cornbread fan. I really appreciate your recipes because they are simple, delicious and all they claim to be. Thank you for sharing!
This recipe looks delicious! I am trying to get ahead of the game by baking and freezing some things before guests arrive next week. Planning to serve this bread with ribs. Will it freeze okay?
Hi Sarah – I’ve frozen this cornbread before and it warms up really well.