Genius

One Little Step to the Best Whole-Grain Pancakes

This week in Genius Recipes, Josey Baker’s pancakes are 100% whole-wheat and proud of it.

June  2, 2021

Every week in Genius Recipes—often with your help!—Food52 Founding Editor and lifelong Genius-hunter Kristen Miglore is unearthing recipes that will change the way you cook.


Josey Baker loves whole grains. His son, Cassidy, does not.

At Josey Baker Bread, the San Francisco whole-grain sourdough bakery that opened in 2010 and now operates out of The Mill, Josey and his team mill flours for crusty sourdough loaves every day. Their griddle cake mix is pebbled with at least eight different types of crushed-up grains and seeds, from rye chops to millet. Even their Wonder Bread starts with whole wheat.

But try as Josey might, he couldn’t warm Cassidy up to the legendary nine-grain pancake recipe from Big Sur Bakery or his own griddle cake blend. The baker who uses little refined flour in his baked goods had a kid who wanted only traditional pancakes that were made with nothing but.

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Top Comment:
“I soak my whole grains for whole wheat bread overnight, and have for more than 20 years. I do so for oatmeal with oats anywhere from old fashioned to groats for a more tender crumb. All make for a lighter outcome. Learned this from having leftover cooked porridge that I used to make bread. Also grew up with putting Scottish oats in pot with water the night before, then cooking the next morning. So much creamier. in the last 4-5 years I have been allowing ALL batters, even ones made with AP flour for cake, to sit for 20 minutes to a few hours before use. This technique came from learning the no-knead bread making method. I have a dutch baby batter that is much better for a day or two sitting in the fridge before use--and it is a recipe I have used with all AP to all WW flour. Soaking the flour makes a HUGE difference in most of my baking, I have learned. Recently there was a pancake suggestion on Food52 to separate yolk and white, and at least beat with fork, if not whip completely. This would also lighten the pancake. So this might also improve WW/grain pancakes. For those who have difficulty with the grains. ”
— judy
Comment

“My sweet son, Cassidy, with his discerning palate, did not appreciate the graininess,” Josey told me.

Whole grain pancakes, without the graininess. Photo by Julia Gartland. Food Stylist: Sam Seneviratne. Prop Stylist: Megan Hedgpeth.

In the early days of sheltering in place in 2020, while cooking for his family at home, Josey started experimenting with the ratios of his son’s favorite buttermilk pancakes. “Slowly and surely, I started incorporating whole wheat into it, until eventually it was all whole wheat,” Josey told me. “And he still liked them.”

Here’s his secret: Whole-wheat flour, which still has the fibrous heft of the bran and germ in play, benefits from extra time to hydrate that refined flours, like all-purpose, don’t need. (1) While Josey’s pancake recipe was designed to be flexible—and will work straight away after mixing the batter if needed—the difference when soaking the whole-wheat flour in milk overnight is profound.

Try the two versions side by side, like I did, and you’ll see. The batter griddled immediately will be good, though a bit drier and more noticeably whole-grain, the crags of wheat still pronounced. (Don’t worry—butter and maple syrup level the playing field.) But the batter made with grains soaked overnight will be astoundingly tender, light, and creamy-smooth. (2)

“Also, due to some enzymatic activity, you make more of the sugars available, which leads to more caramelization in the cooking process,” Josey explained. “What it yields is a pancake that is actually a little bit sweeter,” without leaning on more sugar.

Because I knew you’d ask, I kept testing. I tried swapping in buttermilk—the pancakes were great, their thick batter needing just a little more nudging into place. (Josey even called for buttermilk in an earlier version of this recipe, but switched to milk to make it more accessible.) I tried mixing the whole batter the night before—the pancakes, while slightly thinner, were again great, and I was able to scoop and flip them on a Wednesday morning with my two-year-old daughter at my side. Miraculously, she was pancake-fed and dressed within half an hour of getting up.

I’ve found that for every need, this pancake recipe will bend, and one thing will remain constant: The overnight soak will bridge the gap between people like Josey who love whole grains, and people like Cassidy who do not.

(1) Some whole-grain flours are friendlier to swapping in for all-purpose, without the soak, like brown rice flour and buckwheat—see Alice Medrich’s full list here.

(2) Cooks who soak grains for health reasons often do so in an acidic liquid like buttermilk or acidulated water (you can read more about it here). While milk is slightly acidic, I’m more focused on this recipe for its flavor and texture benefits and can’t speak to the nutrition side, other than that it got me eating (a lot) more whole grains.

Got a Genius recipe to share—from a classic cookbook, an online source, or anywhere, really? Please send it my way (and tell me what's so smart about it) at [email protected]. Many thanks to Basically editor and Instagram genius spy Sarah Jampel for this one!
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See what other Food52 readers are saying.

  • Bonniesue
    Bonniesue
  • Hailey Gonzalez
    Hailey Gonzalez
  • judy
    judy
I'm an ex-economist, lifelong-Californian who moved to New York to work in food media in 2007, before returning to the land of Dutch Crunch bread and tri-tip barbecues in 2020. Dodgy career choices aside, I can't help but apply the rational tendencies of my former life to things like: recipe tweaking, digging up obscure facts about pizza, and deciding how many pastries to put in my purse for "later."

4 Comments

Bonniesue June 13, 2021
Missed seeing my favorite 2 year old recipe tester. Please bring her back.
 
Hailey G. June 12, 2021
love the idea of soaking overnight
 
judy June 7, 2021
I soak my whole grains for whole wheat bread overnight, and have for more than 20 years. I do so for oatmeal with oats anywhere from old fashioned to groats for a more tender crumb. All make for a lighter outcome. Learned this from having leftover cooked porridge that I used to make bread. Also grew up with putting Scottish oats in pot with water the night before, then cooking the next morning. So much creamier. in the last 4-5 years I have been allowing ALL batters, even ones made with AP flour for cake, to sit for 20 minutes to a few hours before use. This technique came from learning the no-knead bread making method. I have a dutch baby batter that is much better for a day or two sitting in the fridge before use--and it is a recipe I have used with all AP to all WW flour. Soaking the flour makes a HUGE difference in most of my baking, I have learned. Recently there was a pancake suggestion on Food52 to separate yolk and white, and at least beat with fork, if not whip completely. This would also lighten the pancake. So this might also improve WW/grain pancakes. For those who have difficulty with the grains.
 
Hailey G. June 12, 2021
could you pass me the dutch baby batter recipe?
my husband would be
thrilled