Honey and Oat Pancakes

Honey and Oat Pancakes

Honey and Oat Pancakes

This recipe for Honey and Oat Pancakes comes from Adrianna Adarme’s stunning new pancake book! All the recipes are FAB, A+++

and the gorge photography and styling in the book was done by the awesome people from Spoon Fork Bacon.

Honey and Oat Pancakes

Notes:

– (this note is just for the sake of food styling which I copied from the photograph in the book itself) If you want to have visible oats on the pancakes, sprinkle some extra rolled oats onto the batter once you’ve poured it into the pan.

– the recipe has been re-published here with permission, from Adrianna Adarme’s Book: Pancakes, 72 Sweet and Savory Recipes for the Perfect Stack (it’s on page 22)

Honey and Oat Pancakes

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Ingredients

Dry:

  • 1/2 cup all purpose flour
  • 1/4 cup whole wheat flour
  • 1 tbsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 tsp salt

Wet:

  • 1 cup whole milk
  • 3 tbsp honey
  • 1 large egg

Mix-in:

  • 1/4 cup rolled oats
  • Butter / vegetable oil for skillet

Instructions

  • In a medium bowl, mix together the flours, baking powder, cinnamon and salt.
  • In a measuring cup or small bowl, measure out the milk. Add the honey and egg and beat for 1 minute, or until the honey has completely dissolved into the milk.
  • All at once, add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and mix until just combined. The batter should have some small to medium lumps. Gently fold in the rolled oats.
  • Preheat your skillet over a medium heat and brush with 1 1/2 tsp of butter or 1 tsp of vegetable oil. Using a 1/4-cup measure scoop the batter onto the warm skillet. Cook for 2-3 minutes until small bubbles form on the surface of the pancake, and then flip. Reduce the heat to medium-low and cook on the opposite sides for about 1 minute, or until golden brown.
  • Transfer the cooked pancakes to a baking sheet and place in a preheated 200 F oven to keep warm. Repeat the process with the remaining batter, adding more butter or vegetable oil to the skillet when needed. Serve immediately.
Tried this recipe?Let me know how it went! Mention @izyhossack or tag #topwithcinnamon!

43 thoughts on “Honey and Oat Pancakes”

  1. I agree, I have taken this to other baked good too. If I see some refer to a friand as a muffin,. I must correct them. This also goes for cookies and biscuits too (I am from Australia, so British roots).
    Lovely pancakes and yes they always better than crepes!

  2. Actually, in Sweden and Crêpes are the same things. Nobody calls crêpes pancakes.
    Thus, for me, crêpes are “pancakes” that are more savory, which means that you eat it with some sort of white sauce and mushrooms. But that’s just the Swedish food tradition. Swedish pancakes have always looked like crêpes so.

    Btw, how many pancakes will you get?

  3. I am American and my husband is English. We’re always debating the definition of a pancake. Every time I try to tell him his “pancakes” are actually crepes, he says crepes are French and all but spits on the ground in disgust. I get him to make crepes for Pancake Day anyway, because I can fill them with sugar and lemon juice and call it dinner. These pancakes look legit. I want to dive right in.

  4. Yup, seriously. What the crap with the pancake-crepe, cookie-biscuit, cake-sponge, cupcake-muffin, dessert-pudding, jello-jelly, jelly-jam?!?! And I am sure there are plenty plenty more atrocities. Including every time I make the British guest a real pancake and they pick it up with their hands, roll it up, and put jam (jelly) on it. But your PANCAKES with real syrup are amazing.

  5. I can’t look at a pancake (American speaking here) without wanting to shove chocolate chips inside it. Yours look delicious even without those precious dark morsels.

  6. Ok I’m afraid I’m going to have to be difficult here! I am an English person who has grown up in and still lives in France for context.
    – What you make I do indeed refer to as American pancakes (or possibly Scotch pancakes). They are small and thick.
    – A normal pancake is much bigger in size and has a little thickness to it.
    http://0.tqn.com/d/britishfood/1/I/9/6/-/-/pancakeandlemon250.jpg
    РA cr̻pe on the other hand is even bigger than a pancake, very very thin and light. In France at stands and in restaurants they are not made in a pan. http://wheelsonourfeet.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/crepes1.jpg
    – We also have savoury ones made with buckwheat I think which are called galettes.
    http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSDSAlroV–v7TpdpW8kQlEtp-BAhcJ5riECuyaSm9oGts0Qny9i0svLBC3cg

    In any case these things will get more and more mixed as international barriers disappear.
    And they are all delicious!!! (yours look amazing) x

  7. So what are your thoughts on the names hotcakes and flapjacks? But yes I agree, calling crepes pancakes makes my eyes twitch. All that aside, my Aussie heart still beats for pikelets over anything else. Not that I wouldn’t shove my whole family to the ground to steal a whole plate of these 🙂

  8. To confuse the matter further: in Holland pancakes are sometimes called three in the pan (literal translation, its because you can usually fit three in a pan to bake). They co e often with raisins in them.
    But I will try these! They look deliscious.

  9. mmm, the look delish 🙂

    I love all sorts of pancakes & I must admit that in our house we call crepes ‘flat pancakes’ – not sure where it came from, but that is always what we’ve called them 🙂

  10. YES THANK YOU. FINALLY SOMEONE WHO APPRECIATES THAT CREPES ARE NOT PANCAKES.
    My American half has been eaten away at for the last 17 year of the English making that mistake, ohh ma gawd.
    These look delish!

    xo Camilla

    Into The Fold

  11. Honey and oats and maple syrup + black coffee = my hangover breakfast. Now I can have that in pancake form, so god bless you, young Izzy. God bless.

  12. Hey, you. You’re funny. I like this.
    Even if you said crepes are inferior to pancakes, which they are NOT AT ALL OMAGAD WUTYOUSAID ?!!! Those light and airy delicate sugar things ? Inferior to the plumpy chewy things ?
    But, well. I guess it’s fine to have some debate about crepes vs pancakes for a change. 😉

  13. Haha! I had no idea that “pancake” sans additional adjective refers to a crepe in England — who would have thought that! It seems like madness. We have a crepe place in town called The Skinny Pancake, so it really is the exact opposite over here. (: I love savory crepes stuffed with veggies and cheese, but that’s another food entirely, IMO. Not comparable to a good ol’ pancake!

    And these look delish. I never would have thought to put oats right in pancakes, but it sounds awesome!

  14. Ahhh! Gorgeous styling as always! And lol I love your crepe rant. SO TRUE! Pancakes and crepes are basically different food groups, almost. Kind of like when people call cupcakes cake…just not the same thing!

  15. I’ve been staring at this post for a solid few minutes and I still cannot get over how fluffy these look.

  16. Hi there, love your blog and your gorgeous photographs. In South Africa, where I come from we call these crumpets! And crepes are crepes and pancakes are a slightly thicker crepe. We top our pancakes with sugar and cinnamon, roll them up and eat. Crumpets are topped with anything delicious, Nutella, honey, syrup, jam…you name it. In fact my gluten free buckwheat pancakes/crumpets this morning were topped with warm, home made apple sauce.

  17. Made these today,tastes great with a hint of cinnamon and oath texture. But the insides a bit doughy,like undercooked,though I followed the recipe 100%. And it gets burnt quite easily.

  18. For all those people who use metric measurements like me:

    60g plain flour
    30g wholewheat flour
    22g oats

    And I usually start with 120ml milk and add to that according to how liquid I want the pancakes to be 🙂

  19. I made these for breakfast on a Bank Holiday morning and they were amazing! What a lovely sweetness in the pancake thanks to the honey, you barely even need the syrup. Although, of course, I love syrup, so there’s no way they weren’t getting doused…even though maple syrup is unfortunately expensive in Paris!
    Look forward to making these again, such a simple ingredient list..I had everything in my pantry and was able to pull these together super fast! I love recipes like this one!

  20. Hi! These look so good. Do you think it would work when replacing the flours with a gluten free flour mix instead?

    Thannks

  21. In Sweden pancakes are what you call crepes. So what you call pancakes are for us “American pancakes” and what we call “crepes” are actually thin swedish pancakes with a mushroom filling that you roll up and put in the oven topped with cheese 🙂

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