Pumpkin Buttermilk Pancakes

Pumpkin Buttermilk Pancakes, full of pumpkin spice and pumpkin puree. They go well with maple syrup so long as you don’t overdo it. Consider pumpkin butter and spiced whipped cream instead.

Pumpkin Buttermilk Pancakes

Servings

4

servings

Ingredients

  • 2 cups (250g) all-purpose flour

  • 2 tsp baking powder

  • 1 tsp baking soda

  • ½ tsp salt

  • 3 Tbs (38g) sugar

  • 2 tsp ground cinnamon

  • 1/2 tsp ground ginger

  • 1/4 tsp ground nutmeg

  • 1/4 tsp ground allspice

  • 1/8 tsp of ground cloves

  • 4 Tbs (56g) unsalted butter

  • 3 cups (710ml) buttermilk

  • 1/2 cup (110g) of pumpkin puree

  • 2 large (112g) eggs

Directions

  • Place the griddle on the stove, and heat it under the lowest heat setting.
  • Whisk the flour, powder, soda, salt, sugar, and spices in a large mixing bowl.
  • Melt the butter in the microwave. Pour some of the buttermilk into melted butter and whisk thoroughly. Pour some of the buttermilk into the eggs and whisk. Pour the butter mixture, the egg mixture, and any remaining buttermilk into the flour mixture. Whisk, at a medium-slow speed, thoroughly, but don’t attempt to eliminate all the lumps. The batter should not be perfectly smooth.
  • Turn the heat on the griddle. Using a generous 1/3-cup measure to pour the cakes onto the griddle. The cakes are ready to flip when you get a significant amount of bubbles that don’t fill in. Take note of how long this takes. Once flipped, cook the second side about 1/3 as long as the first side. I like to adjust the heat so that I wind up with 3 minutes on one side, and 2 minutes on the other, and for me that works if I set my griddle’s flame to setting 5-6 out of 9.

Notes

    "Krusteaz Pumpkin Spice Pancakes." from Make It Like a Man!

    Intro

    I wanted to pumpkinify my standard pancake recipe. These are the recipes I used as references:

    • Bon Appétit: an entire can (822g) of puree to 2.5 cups (313g) flour, plus 2.5 teaspoons spice.
    • NYT: 0.75 cup (162g) pumpkin purée to 1.5 cups (192g) flour, plus 2.375 teaspoons spice.
    • King Arthur: 0.33 cup (74g) pumpkin purée to 1.25 cups (150g) flour, plus at least 1.5 teaspoons of spice. Serve with syrup and spiced whip. Maybe add vanilla.
    • Martha: 6 tablespoons (81g) pumpkin puree to 1.25 cups (150g) flour, plus 1.125 teaspoons spice

    As you can see, those recipes all over the place. I did some a ton of math to compare them, which involved a spreadsheet, weight and measurement conversions, and a bunch of goal seeking. Anyway, after quite a bit of hemming and hawing, I decided on the proportions for this recipe by aiming for a middle ground in terms of puree, and the greatest amount of spice.

    I’m very happy with these pancakes. They’re beautiful, and very nicely pumpkiny. Although I used more spice than the spiciest of the four recipes, the pancakes are by no means intense. The spice seems muted, yet clear. Like all good buttermilk pancakes, they’re fluffy and almost creamy on the inside.

    Outro

    Don’t make these pancakes to stay atop of the pumpkin spice trend. These pancakes surpass trendiness. I almost wish that pumpkin spice season wasn’t a thing, because it would make these fantastic pancakes just that much more of a welcome surprise. (Hey Starbucks, I said “almost.” Please don’t cancel my gold card.) Make them for that reason. Also, make them when you have less than a full can of puree to use up.

    "Krusteaz Pumpkin Spice Pancakes," from Make It Like a Man!
    Pumpkin Buttermilk Pancakes

    Credit for images on this page: Make It Like a Man! unless otherwise credited. This content was not solicited by anyone, nor was it written in exchange for anything. Thank you, Kesor. Make It Like a Man! is ranked by Feedspot as #13 in the Top 30 Men’s Cooking Blogs. AI questions whether this ranking is relevant to this recipe. Screw you, AI. 

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    32 thoughts on “Pumpkin Buttermilk Pancakes

    1. These sound delicious, Jeff. I once worked on a savory pumpkin soufflé pancake. Never finished my work (and as you have outlined, putting something like this together OS work!) on them but you have inspired me.

      • I would love to see a savory pancake recipe! I’ll look forward to seeing yours.

    2. I have a can of pumpkin in the pantry and it need to be used. Thanks for this idea. It sounds great for a lazy morning breakfast!

    3. Your spice blend really enhances the pumpkin flavor, creating the perfect, cozy Fall breakfast treat. I also loved your delicious idea to top these with pumpkin butter and spiced whipped cream… perfect!!

      • I’m not sure if they’re a thing, really. But I happen to love pancakes and it just seemed like a good idea to make them pumpkiny.

    4. Jeff, I love how you tackled the pumpkin pancake dilemma with all that math and experimentation! It’s always great to see someone put their own spin on classic recipes. I’m definitely inspired to try these fluffy, pumpkiny beauties, especially with that extra spice!

    5. I love the spices in these! When my girls were growing up I stuck pumpkin puree in just about anything I could get away with! Fortunately, pumpkin pancakes were a favorite of theirs. The buttermilk is a great idea!

    6. I always have some pumpkin purée leftover except that this year, I decided to make a ginger spice cake instead of something pumpkin so I guess I’ll have to wait until Christmas! Our Thanksgiving is this coming weekend and we are having some friends over for dinner but I am having a heck of a time finding turkey breast (I don’t want so much leftovers as when I bake a whole turkey).

      • I hope you have good luck finding one. Although time is short! I think it’s a pretty sensible thing to do, especially since it cooks so much more quickly. To me, the entire purpose of Thanksgiving is several days of leftovers! But I totally understand … sometimes, that may not be what you want. Anyway, Happy Thanksgiving!

    7. I love buttermilk pancakes and the addition of pumpkin would only enhance it for me. I always buy a few cans of pumpkin puree this time of the year to have on the shelf just in case a good recipe comes along. These pancakes sound perfect. Thanks.

    8. I love that you used actual pumpkin puree in this recipe, Jeff. All too often, pumpkin seems to just mean dumping a bunch of baking spices into a recipe. Don’t get me wrong – I absolutely love the pumpkin spice family of spices…but if pumpkin is going into the name, then it needs pumpkin in it!! Also, I want to eat that stack of pancakes right now.

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