Essential Brunch Recipes: Fluffy Pancakes, Home Fries and a Bacon Bloody Mary

Hansen —
Aug 22, 2014
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Hold onto your eggs, we’re getting ready for Autostraddle’s International Brunch Weekend 8/23-24! Find a brunch meetup in your city or create your own by heading over to our events page. You can also load up on all things brunch by watching this space. From playlists to recommendations to personal essays, we’re writing all about the brunch experience. Get excited! BRUNCH.


Sometimes you can’t go out to brunch. Sometimes you gotta brunch at home. For those times, you need to have some perfect, secret recipes up your sleeve. We’ve got your essentials covered here: fluffy pancakes, crispy home fries and a damn fine bacon bloody mary.

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The Fluffiest Pancakes In The Entire World

by Hansen

Making pancakes on lazy morning weekends is one of my new traditions. They’re so easy and comforting. I make them nearly every weekend, to be honest, and I pile them high on a plate and eat them with my girlfriend while snuggling on the couch, watching a movie or planning the day. Pancakes are deceptively simple. In reality, they’re tricky, because it’s a fine line between getting awesome pancakes and getting a hard lump of tough dough so dry you need gallons of syrup. In fact, I used to be a maple syrup girl, but this recipe doesn’t even need them.

One weekend, I couldn’t find the pancake recipe we usually use, so I googled “fluffy pancakes.” I made them according to the recipe even though I was skeptical as hell, and this was my legitimate reaction after taking a bite:

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itssofluffy

See, the trick to fluffy pancakes is to spoil the milk with vinegar. It creates tiny bubbles which make your pancakes fluffy, and it’s super fast, and it has worked for me every time. It sounds, well, it sounds disgusting, and it looks disgusting, but I need you to trust me. I have eaten these so many times I can’t even count.

Also, I’ve made these pancakes a variety of ways, using gluten-free flour, regular flour, whole wheat flour, regular butter, vegan butter, olive oil once (all we had!), almond milk, regular milk and soy milk. You can substitute to make it completely vegan or gluten-free and the fluffiness is there every time. You with me? Let’s do this.

not pictured: vinegar, which is like the whole basis of this post, don't even worry about it
not pictured: vinegar, which is like the whole basis of this post, don’t even worry about it

adapted from All-Recipes

makes 9-10 medium-size pancakes

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Ingredients: 

  • 3/4 cup milk
  • 2 Tbsp white vinegar
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 2 Tbsp white sugar
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 egg
  • 2 Tbsp butter, melted
  • Chocolate chips (optional, but really, I mean, just do it, and get dark chocolate morsels while you’re at it because they’re bigger)
  • cooking spray/oil/butter for pan

I like to have three bowls handy for this: my large mixing bowl, a small bowl to combine dry ingredients and a large mug in which to melt the butter, then stir in the egg.

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trust me!

1. Mix the milk and vinegar in the big mixing bowl, stop grimacing at the weirdness that’s happening, set aside.

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sifting is for suckers and also Martha Stewart, probably

2. Combine all dry ingredients. (Not the chocolate chips! those are last minute additions!) I am not a fussy cook, so I don’t sift it all together, but follow your arrow.

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guess who cleaned the microwave halfway through making these pancakes? this guy!

3. Melt the butter in the microwave. Pro tip: watch your fucking butter so it doesn’t explode all over the place. (I may not be a fussy cook but I am a distracted cook and this happens to me almost every time.) Take it out as soon as it’s about 1/2-2/3 of the way melted, then stir it together to melt the rest. Add the egg and stir together.

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DSC_0014
yummmmmm spoiled milk

4. Add the butter and egg concoction to the weirdo milk mixture. Stir that all together. It’s totally fine that it’s lumpy, you’re going to forget all about its lumpiness in .7 seconds.

5. Add half of your dry ingredients to the wet ingredients, whisk/fork/stir it all together, then add the other half.

6. Get your pan ready, and set your chocolate chips on the counter beside it. My girlfriend taught me this trick: add the chocolate chips after you put your pancake mixture in the pan. That way you can distribute evenly, and every pancake eater in your house gets chocolate chips. This is especially helpful if you are feeding small children/your roommate who can just tell that you gave another person more chocolate chips. It also prevents clumping of the chocolate chips all at the end which everyone knows leads to intense regret.

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there are clearly two more chocolate chips in that one omg

7. Pour in your pancake batter. Make them Mickey pancakes, make them heart pancakes, make them tiny or big – just make them however you’d like. I do about four-inch diameter pancakes and this recipe makes ~10 of those.

8. Your pancakes are ready to flip as soon as you start seeing bubbles pop up on the sides that pop and don’t fill in on themselves.

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DSC_0016
sorry there aren’t more on this plate: I ate them all

9. Check your brownness level and transfer to a plate when they’re done. I kinda burnt half of mine because I got distracted drinking coffee and playing with my cat, but they still tasted awesome, let me tell you. Serve ’em hot. You can add syrup if you’d like, but like I said, they are so moist and wonderful they don’t need it.

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check out the fluff factor going on here
fluffyyyyy_pancakes
eating pancakes and looking at furniture on Craigslist: so, so domestic

Go be amazed by your fluffiness.


Next page: The secret trick to making your home fries crispy and delicious.

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Hansen

Sarah Hansen lives in Colorado where she rides bikes and drinks beer. She is an MFA candidate in Creative Writing at Colorado State University in her free time. She is also the poetry editor of qu.ee/r magazine when she can get around to it.

Hansen has written 189 articles for us.

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