Nutrition Facts
Servings 5
- Iron 0.0 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
I make Perkins-Style Pancakes when I want pancake that tastes cared for without turning the kitchen into a project. The ingredient list is straightforward, but the small cues matter: I pay attention to the aroma and the way the texture feels, and I stop before the texture goes past where I like it.
This version keeps the source measurements intact and gives them a cleaner, more useful rhythm. I have written the method the way I actually cook it, with 10 minutes of prep and 10 minutes of cooking or baking and enough rest time for the flavors or crumb to settle.
My favorite thing about this recipe is how clearly the main ingredients show up. I want baking mix and club soda to taste like themselves, not like a pile of filler. If I am making it for guests, I do the measuring first so the cooking part feels calm.
I measure the ingredients before I start because perkins-style pancakes moves more smoothly when everything is ready. Here is how I think about each one in the bowl, pan, or pot.
I use a mixing bowl, combine 2 cups of Bisquick or Jiffy baking mix.
I add 1 large beaten jumbo eggs to the mix.
I pour in 1.25 cups of club soda at room temperature and mix well until the batter is smooth.
I stir in 2 tablespoons of melted vegetable shortening or margarine.
I heat vegetable oil in a pan for cooking. I give it a short pause before serving whenever the recipe allows; that rest makes slicing, spooning, or coating much cleaner.
I let perkins-style pancakes cool or set fully before covering it. Anything with frosting, cream cheese, custard, or fruit goes into the refrigerator once the serving window is over.
For cleaner slices, I chill first and cut with a wiped knife. I bring pieces back toward room temperature before serving when I want the crumb, filling, or frosting to taste softer and fuller.
I usually serve perkins-style pancakes with coffee, tea, cold milk, or something tart on the side. If the recipe is rich, a small portion is enough; if it is bread or a simple cookie, I like it with fruit so the plate does not feel heavy.
Yes. I do the measuring and any chopping ahead, then keep the components covered until I am ready to cook. If perkins-style pancakes needs chilling or setting, I use that time on purpose instead of treating it as dead time.
I look for the recipe's physical cues first: set edges, bubbling sauce, opaque protein, a clean tester, or a texture that holds its shape. The clock gets me close, but my pan and oven decide the last few minutes.
I make small swaps before big ones. Ingredients similar to baking mix and club soda usually behave best. If a swap brings more moisture, sweetness, salt, or fat, I adjust slowly and keep notes for the next batch.
Rushing is the mistake I see most. Not preheating, skipping a rest, overcrowding a pan, or cutting too early can make a solid recipe seem off. I slow down at the points where texture changes.
Usually, yes, but I prefer two pans or batches instead of one very deep pan. Doubling changes how heat reaches the center, so I keep the same temperature and add time only as needed.
If you make Perkins-Style Pancakes, leave a comment with what you changed or what worked in your kitchen; I always like reading the practical details.
My Perkins-Style Pancakes keeps the focus on baking mix and club soda. I include practical prep cues, 10 minutes prep and 10 minutes cook, storage notes, and variations I would actually make again.
Servings 5
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Measure before starting. I set up perkins-style pancakes completely before heat or mixing begins.
Watch texture. I use the listed time as a guide, then trust color, thickness, and firmness.
Rest when possible. A short pause makes slices cleaner and flavors calmer.
Season at the end. For savory recipes, I taste after simmering or baking because salt concentrates as moisture cooks away.