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Pancakes and Waffles

Pancakes or Waffles Mix Recipes

Light and fluffy buttermilk pancakes or waffles.

Pancakes or Waffles Mix Recipes
PrepAbout 25 minutes
CookAbout 25 minutes
ServesMakes 8-10 pancakes or 4 waffles
LevelEasy
Method

Cook it step by step

  1. 1

    Preheat griddle over medium heat.

  2. 2

    Measure 1 cup pancake mix into mixing bowl.

  3. 3

    Add oil, egg and 1 cup buttermilk. Blend well.

  4. 4

    Let batter sit for 10-15 minutes before cooking.

  5. 5

    Pour 1/4-1/2 cup batter onto hot griddle. Cook until edges look “dry” and a few bubbles form on surface of pancakes. Flip and cook the other side until golden brown.

  6. 6

    Preheat waffle iron. Lightly oil, or spray with cooking spray.

  7. 7

    Prepare batter as above with 1 1/4 cups buttermilk.

  8. 8

    Let batter sit for 10-15 minutes before cooking.

  9. 9

    Pour batter into center of the waffle iron. Close lid. Bake 4 to 5 minutes or until golden brown. Carefully remove with fork.

From the Mill Kitchen

A Few Notes Before You Bake

Pancakes or Waffles Mix Recipes gets better when the grain has enough character to carry the batch. Use these notes to fine-tune hydration, texture, and a few easy choices once the skillet, griddle, or pot is hot.

Use the recipe as a guide, not a rigid formula

Fresh stone-ground ingredients bring a little more variation in aroma, absorption, and texture, which is part of why the final bake tastes livelier. If the batter looks tight, loosen it slightly. If it seems loose, let it rest before adding more dry ingredients.

That small adjustment mindset usually leads to a better result than chasing exact appearance too early. Homestead recipes tend to work best when the cook watches the bowl, skillet, or sheet pan as closely as the measuring cup.

Why Homestead Pancake and Waffle Mix is the right match

Homestead Pancake and Waffle Mix gives this recipe the flavor anchor it needs. The goal is not just to finish the bake, but to keep enough grain character in the final result that the flour, cornmeal, oats, or grits still taste present after butter, sugar, cheese, fruit, or savory toppings join in.

For cookies, cakes, muffins, scones, and doughnuts, the ingredient choice also shapes tenderness. A softer flour keeps the crumb pleasant, while whole-grain character keeps the bake from tasting one-dimensional.

Serving, storing, and planning the next batch

Most breakfast recipes here are strongest when served warm and close to the first cook, whether that means straight from the skillet, griddle, or saucepan. If you are making them ahead, cool the batch fully and reheat gently so the texture stays pleasant instead of drying out.

If you want the next batch to lean heartier, milder, or more obviously whole grain, the related guides below make it easy to compare a few nearby options before you restock.

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