Sourdough Pancake or Waffle Batter
Updated May 7, 2023
- Total Time
- 15 minutes, plus overnight rest
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
FOR THE OVERNIGHT SPONGE, OR BASE
1 cup/240 grams sourdough starter “unfed”
1 cup/224 grams buttermilk
1 cup/120 grams all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon/about 13 grams light brown sugar
FOR THE BATTER
1 large egg
¼ cup melted unsalted butter or neutral oil
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon/3 grams kosher salt
1 teaspoon/6 grams baking soda
Preparation
- Step 1
Put the sourdough starter in a large bowl and add the buttermilk, flour and sugar, then stir to combine. Cover the bowl and allow it to rest overnight at room temperature.
- Step 2
When you are ready to cook, whisk the egg, melted butter or oil and the vanilla extract together in a small bowl, then add the rested sponge. Add the salt and the baking soda to the batter and mix to combine.
- Step 3
Pour some of the batter onto a preheated greased waffle iron and cook until the waffle is brown and crisp, then repeat. Or use a small ladle to create pancakes on a preheated oiled pan or griddle, flipping them when they are well browned on the bottom. Serve immediately.
Private Notes
Comments
An equal volume (1 cup) of a liquid and a solid will have different masses. 1 cup of water = 8 oz or ~ 230 grams. Flour is less dense that water. It weighs less. Throw out the measuring cups, buy a scale.
Quit already with the mass-over-volume kool-aid. I do know what I'm doing. There is just as much variability in consumer instrumentation for weighing ingredients as there is for measuring volume and it is simply not superior for most single meal preparations. Ambient temperature, elevation, humidity and freshness of the same ingredients over time and brand cast wide differences in the their mass . Care, attention and technique in all measurement is more important. Lose the white horse.
I just want to say thank you to Mr. Sifton and the Times for including gram measurements.
I'm on a crusade for this. When I see cups and teaspoons, my assumption is that this a recipe is by and for people who have no idea what they're doing.
These waffles are so good. So light and yet the edges crisp up beautifully. Can’t beat the texture. This recipe is similar to a King Arthur recipe I’ve used before but the main difference is that this recipe uses only half the flour. It makes all the difference.
Wonderful recipe, but if you’re being careful to not over mix your batter in Step 2, it’s easy to not sufficiently mix in the baking soda or salt. As a result it’s easy to then end up with little pockets of baking soda in a waffle or pancake -- not fun. I modified Step 2 to make sure that doesn’t happen: Step 2 When you are ready to cook, whisk the egg, melted butter or oil, salt, the baking soda and the vanilla extract together in a small bowl, then add the rested sponge. Mix to combine.
Made the recipe as-is and wound up with truly delicious pancakes. I saw others recommend switching out the buttermilk for regular milk, but I didn't and the final result wasn't sour at all.

