
Who doesn’t like pancakes?
Who is awake enough in the morning to make homemade pancake batter and then stand over a stove, flipping pancakes?
I can’t help you with the standing-over-the-stove part of pancakes. I feel your pain. But I do have a solution that allows you to avoid boxed pancake mixes and treat your family to wholesome homemade pancakes. In fact, just like my overnight waffle recipe, my overnight pancake recipe wins extra points with my family on taste alone. Better yet, you mix up the batter the night before while you are still coherent. Then, all you have to do in the morning is stand over the stove.
Win-win.
The overnight part is why I refer to my pancakes and waffles as sourdough.
What is sourdough?
Sourdough bread is made from what we call a sourdough starter. The starter batter-a combination of yeast, liquid, flour, and maybe some sugar—is combined hours before. Unlike regular bread dough that you shape after it rises, you allow the sourdough starter to rise and fall over several hours or days. This is what gives sourdough that slightly sour taste.
With traditional sourdough bread, you would then remove part of the starter and add more flour and liquid to keep the starter going. You would then combine the rest of the starter with other ingredients to make a dough. The starter, which contains yeast, replaces the need for any leavening.
You won’t remove any part of the batter for my waffles and pancakes. But, like a sourdough starter, you allow the batter to set overnight, allow the yeast to grow and work within the flour-liquid mixture.
What’s different about these pancakes?
Most recipe for for pancakes use baking soda or baking powder and you mix up the batter right before cooking. This recipe uses yeast. And, unlike most recipes for pancakes, you’ll mix most of the ingredients the night before. You’ll cover the batter with a towel, put it in a safe, draft free place and then let it set overnight. In the morning, you can tell from the dough line that it indeed has risen up, then fallen back. You’ll add eggs and a pinch of soda to offset the sour taste, and then cook like regular pancakes.
But here’s the big surprise. When you serve the pancakes, your family will never know they are sourdough. These pancakes, just like my waffle recipe, are light and fluffy. Restaurant and pancakes from a box will forever more will taste heavy and dense. Once I discovered this recipe, I never wanted to use another method again. And my family didn’t want me to either. They are that good.
Thanks to The Doubleday Cookbook, Volume 2, for the idea. (You can find used copies at Abebooks.) A yeast-based pancake was their idea. Letting the dough set overnight and adding the eggs right before cooking was mine.
How is this different from my recipe for Overnight Waffles? Waffles have a slightly different proportion of ingredients. It’s the same easy overnight method, however. You can find my overnight waffle recipe here.
For more about sourdough and overnight pancakes and waffles, see my video on my “The Bakers Dozen” playlist on Youtube.)

Ingredients
- 1/2 cup water (105-115 degrees)
- 1 tbsp active dry yeast
- 2 tbsp sugar
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 3/4 cups milk, room temperature
- 2 tbsp cooking oil
- 2 cups all purpose flour
- 1 egg
- 1 pinch baking soda
Instructions
- Place water in large crockery or plastic bowl. Sprinkle yeast over water; mix. Add sugar, then salt, milk, and oil; mix well. Add flour, ½ cup at a time, and beat till smooth.
- Cover with a clean dishtowel or plate, and place in a draft free place. Let set 4-6 hours or overnight.
- Beat egg in small bowl. Add egg and soda to batter; mix well. Preheat girddle over moderate heat. Pour about ¼ cup batter on girddle for each pancake. Allow plenty of space between pancakes, then spread each until about 4 inches across.Cook until bubbles form on surface and underside is brown. Turn, and brown the other sides.
- Remove from griddle; keep warm while cooking the rest of the pancakes. Serve hot with butter, fresh fruit, and syrup.

Where can I find the recipe for the overnight waffles and pancakes?
I’m so sorry! Somehow the recipe for Overnight Pancakes disappeared into cyberspace.
Try these links:
Wonderful Waffles: https://karenwingate.com/wonderful-waffles/
Overnight pancakes: https://karenwingate.com/overnight-pancakes/
Dear Karen, I had high hopes for these pancakes but I guess my baking soda was too close to its expiration date. They came out flat and not fluffy. The soda box said June 2026 so I thought it was fine. I wasn’t sure about a pinch, so I put in 1/8 tsp. When the first cooked ones were flat I added more soda. The latter ones were a bit better but still seemed almost gummy. I was planning to rave about them on your website! I will chalk it up to weak baking soda and I’m sure they are great when made properly. With appreciation for your writing and other ministries, Marcia.
My first suspicion might be that your water temperature for your yeast was too hot. You can tell if the dough raised through the nigh by whether there is dough residue on the side of the bowl. Another way to tell is by how the dough looks after you’ve added the first set of ingredients. When you stir the dough, it should have a stretchy look to it– that shows the yeast is working to stretch the gluten in the flour. The baking soda is not to help them rise but to take away that bit of sour taste that occurs when dough sits overnight. The baking soda is optional, so I don’t think that was the problem.
Try again and let me know!