Take your pancake game up a few notches with pancake art. This is SUCH an easy technique with great results. Because we aren't all Picasso. Or Banksy. Or Mr. Dressup. Check this out ...
IT'S A FRIGGIN PANCAKE.
Not an overcooked fried egg. A pancake.
Because I made the world's easiest pancake art. The pancake egg. I made this design up, but I'm guessing I'm not the first to do it. I just don't want to Google it and find out I'm not as smart as I think I am.
There are two ways you can go about making artistic little pancakes. You can either use a box of pancake batter, which is perfectly fine, or you can use a homemade pancake recipe. I've put my pancake recipe at the bottom of this post but if you have your own favourite, just use that.
The one thing you'll have to do regardless of which you use, is thin out some or all of the batter. It needs to be quite runny for intricate designs or using in a squeeze bottle.
These types of pancakes are often done by people far more skilled than you or I so I wanted to come up with a few designs that the average person could actually do and get great results.
I'll give instructions on how to do each individually.
Table of Contents
Easy Pancake Art (examples)
From easiest (and I think best) to most difficult, left to right:
Egg shaped pancakes, pancakes using no food colouring, pancakes made with outlines.
Materials
For "painting" with the pancake batter you'll need one or more of the following, with squeeze bottles being the best choice.
- Squeeze bottles
- Food colouring (optional)
- Pancake batter
- Liquid to thin batter (if your recipe uses milk, thin with milk if it uses water then thin with water)
- Non stick pan or griddle
If you want to try this but don't have a squeeze bottle you can also make decent pancake art with:
- a piping bag
- a plastic baggie
- a teaspoon
Your results will be a lot more precise with a squeeze bottle but unless you plan on starting a TikTok account that showcases clips from your new Food Network show "I'm the World's Best Pancake Artist" then I don't think it matters that much.
But if your plan is to do that, why are you reading a how-to blog about how to make beginner pancake art??
The Egg
Instructions
- Mix your pancake batter together. It needs to be runnier than ketchup. If it isn't, add more milk or water (whichever the recipe uses)
- Ladle ½ cup of your pancake batter into a bowl. Add enough yellow or orange food colouring to the batter to make it "yolk" coloured. Mix until well combined.
- Add any flavourless oil to a non stick pan and heat over very low heat.
- Using a teaspoon drop enough yellow batter onto the pan to make a yolk.
- For thin pancakes spoon a circle of uncoloured batter around the "yolk".
- For thicker pancakes you can ladle batter right over the yolk instead of spooning it around.
- When the batter just starts to bubble up, flip the pancakes over and cook until done.
Are these as good as regular pancakes? They taste just as good as a regular pancakes, but because pancake art is made with thin batter, they aren't nice and thick and fluffy like the kind you'd get in a restaurant that has bench seating and whipped cream listed as a condiment.
The reason they aren't as big and fluffy is because a) the batter has to be thin to flow through the tip of a squeeze bottle and b) Even if you aren't using a squeeze bottle, like these teaspoon dropped eggs, you still have to add food colouring and mix it up until the batter is smooth, which thins it out.
Easy Art Designs - Emojis, initials, simple shapes
Everyone can draw a smiley emoji type face. These pancakes are particularly easy because you don't use food colouring to get a design. The colour difference shows up because the design portion cooks a little bit longer - therefore it gets darker.
Pancakes with faces smiling up at you. Good morning indeed.
Instructional video
Pancake Faces for Shrove Tuesday
EASY way to make pancakes way more fun. Pancake faces!
Instructions
- Mix together the pancake batter.
- Add a few small scoops (around ½ cup) of the batter to a small mixing bowl and whisk until smooth. It needs to be the consistency of runny ketchup. If it isn't add more liquid and mix.
- Pour this smooth mixture into a plastic squeeze bottle.
- Lightly butter or oil a non stick pan and heat over low to medium/low.
- Squeeze your face design onto the pan. (monograms work well too)
- Once the design starts to bubble, ladle the regular pancake mix over the face.
- Cook until bubbles form, then flip.
- Cook a minute or so longer then remove from pan.
- Keep pancakes warm in 210 f degree oven.
That, by the way, is a stack of face pancakes dripping with maple syrup that I made from my own maple tree and yes, you too can make your own maple syrup. It's not hard it just takes a lot of time.
If happy faces aren't your thing you can do all kinds of other stuff with this basic technique.
Or if you aren't into the intricate portraiture of a smiley face, you might want to go with monogrammed pancakes. Or a nice motivational message like you see above.
Pancake art can really be as elaborate or simple as you want and that's what's so fantastic about it.
You can get extra fancy if you want and do shapes.
Finally, something a bit more fancy but realistic.
Line drawing pancakes
If you head to your pal Google and search for an image of something you'll be able to find either clipart or easy line drawings of almost anything. They make perfect reference patterns.
I searched lion and came up with this easy lion drawing.
Does it look like a true artist did it? No. But it looks good and like something almost anyone could do, which is the goal here!
Instructions
- Make your pancake batter.
- Ladle ¼ cup of batter into a bowl and add 4 teaspoons of black cocoa.* Mix until colour is thoroughly dispersed and the mixture is smooth.
- Add the coloured batter to a piping bag with a #2 piping tip (or any fairly small tip).
- Heat your non stick pan and oil over low heat.
- Using your reference photo, pipe the line drawing/outline onto the warm pan.
- As soon as your outlines are done, spoon batter in between the lines or ladle batter over the whole thing.
- Cook until the batter just starts to bubble then flip.
- Cook for 1 minute or so more.
*Bulk barn also carries black cocoa
Food colouring
If you want colourful pancakes ladle ½ cup of the batter into a bowl and add your food colour. Mix the batter until it's smooth and the colour is mixed in.
I use Wilton gel paste food colour; their master set has 24 colours that include much more than your basic red, green and blue. It has ivory, peach, burgundy and 21 more nuanced colours.
The photo below shows a bit of this detailed colour chart from an Australian company for getting the nicest shades out of food colouring. These ratios are per 1 cup of icing. I know we're not dealing with icing here, I'm just letting you in on a good food colouring tip.
Black food colouring
You need to use SO much gel or liquid black food colouring that the resulting product always tastes like the plague to me. Food colouring isn't the best way to colour your food, pancakes or otherwise. There are two alternative ingredients I use for tinting things *very* black.
- Activated Charcoal
Activated charcoal is perfectly safe and it's what I add to savoury dishes I want to darken. Things like bread or pizza dough. I add a small amount and keep building until it's the black I want.
2. Black Cocoa Powder
Black cocoa powder is a type of dutch processed cocoa powder. The processing is what neutralizes the cocoa and makes it less bitter and strong. Black cocoa powder is very dark in colour and tastes like cocoa.
It works WONDERS as a black food colouring. It will turn whatever you're trying to colour into a true black, as opposed to a sickly grey. Plus it adds cocoa flavour to the pancakes!
These are made for Sunday mornings and that one night you don't have to worry about what to have for dinner - Pancake Tuesdays.
There's nothing worse than waking up Wednesday morning and realizing you forgot Pancake Tuesday. Nothing.
Pancake Art Tips
Here are a few tips on getting the pancakes right.
- Cook them on very low heat so they cook but don't darken too much.
- If doing words or letters you have to do a mirror image of them (do them backwards) so when you flip the pancake over it will be readable.
- Try to add allllll your filling batter at once and quickly. This way your pancake will have an even colour and not be splotchy.
- Once your pancakes are bubbling that means they're ready to flip.
- If the batter spreads out beyond your outline, just trim them with a knife before you serve them.
The Recipe
Easy Pancake Art
Ingredients
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 tablespoon sugar
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- ¼ tsp. salt
- 1 egg lightly beaten
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 1 cup milk
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil or other light flavoured oil
Instructions
- Mix together the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt.
- In another bowl mix together the egg, milk, cooking oil and vanilla.
- Add wet mixture to dry mixture, stirring just until combined. Your batter should be lumpy.
- Add a few small scoops of the batter to a small mixing bowl and whisk until smooth.
- Pour this smooth mixture into a plastic squeeze bottle.
- Lightly butter a non stick pan and heat over medium/low.
- Squeeze your face design onto the pan.
- Once the design starts to bubble, ladle the regular pancake mix over the face.
- Cook until bubbles form, then flip.
- Cook a minute or so longer then remove from pan.
- Keep pancakes warm in 210 f degree oven.
Nutrition
When is Pancake Tuesday?
2022 - Tuesday, March 1st
2023 - Tuesday, February 21st
2024 - Tuesday, February 13th
2025 - Tuesday, March 4th
2026 - Tuesday, February 17th
2027 - Tuesday, February 9th
Now be a good egg and try it this weekend.
Amie
Perfect for April Fool's day breakfast, too!
Ann Visco
So I Googled fried egg pancake. A lot of strange things came up including a pancake with a fried egg inside of it. Didn't see anything like your cute little pancakes. Alas I don't have a week to go through every Google page.
Mary W
AND-----black coloring makes your poop a bright green, neon, scary, WTF green! Just saying.
Kat - the other 1
So do lucky charms now. Apparently. Heh.
Gail
When our son was 2, I began making his pancakes into lower case letters, progressing to simple words (cat, bat, dog). Tricky to pour “backwards” when necessary, so flipped to see finished side with correct letter. They froze beautifully b/w waxed paper, so always readily available. He loved them! Began reading just before 3rd birthday, and has been voracious reader ever since (now law firm partner). I repeated for his daughter with same outcome. Certainly “art” in our family :-).
sally
This is everything, Karen!
Karen
For me the only problem with these pancakes is that they're pancakes. I prefer French toast. But I LOVEEEEEE the pancake eggs. ~ karen!
Kat - the other 1
What if you use the squeezy batter to make the faces/ shapes/ egg, then flip a piece of frenched toast on top to cook? Shouldn't that work?
I don't think I'd do the motivational ones, even though I wrote it and know it's a joke, seeing my food tell me "u suck", would be depressing. lol.
Keep picturing French toast with an " egg" on it though, or smiley face. Take pictures and share please! :)
Randy Patka
Great tips and fun ideas....... but dang girl......... we need to start up a collection to get ya' a new Carote type non-stick skillet. That one of yours is lookin' a bit haggard?
Karen
I have not one but TWO haggard crappy teflon pans! And yes, I agree it's time for me to finally upgrade. :) ~ karen!
Norma
The Home Hardware Kuradori brand pans with a white coating are very slippery and work well - I received one for Christmas and am very pleased with it
Karen
Thanks Norma! ~ karen
Shauna Henry
There's a place in Maui and in Oregon called Slappy Cakes where you get to do this with several flavors of pancakes and toppings. It's so much fun. Here's one picture of my son after he made PacMan and the Ghost. My husband made a pretty cool palm tree and sunset, I made a butterfly and the word 'love'. So much fun, my son wanted to do it again on Mother's Day for breakfast in our own home. Wasn't quite as successful as having a stove in the middle of your table and different colors and flavors of perfectly liquidy pancake mix, but fun nonetheless.
Kole
Hey Karen, only just seen this so as we have pancakes regularly i'll give it a try your way BUT (yes, i know a big butt) have you ever seen the pintrosity pancake fails...just search it and enjoy
Fonda
My wife, Katie, and I made your pancakes together on this fine Valentine's Day. They were good. We were worried about the thin batter, but that baking powder kicked in and they puffed up a little. We'll save that recipe for later use!
Karen
Great! Yeah, I'm not in love with super-huge fluffy pancakes. They're too cakey for me, so these are a bit thinner, but like you said fluff up. ~ karen!
Suzie O
It is the best show! Have you seen the one where Josh takes his Mum and Dad to a Degustation meal? Gold.
Dawn
FYI - The tradition came about when they tried to use up all the fats on the Tuesday before Lent. They wouldn't eat the sweet treats for that period of weeks and the fats would have gone bad. So they make the treats to use it up and the tradition was born. Here in Pa it's fauschnauts but pancakes or traditional donuts work as well.
TucsonPatty
I don't know how I missed this post till now, but now it is too late to eat pancakes for Shrove Tuesday, unless I quick drive down to IHOP! Oh well. I reread all the comments, and snorted and laughed over the same comment that I snorted and laughed about two years ago about Pancakes with Feces.
Marti_J
OH HOORAY! Welcome back from Christmas... and then some! And thanks! Now I will have to eat pancakes on Saturday.
Is the nutrition chart for the recipe new?
Karen
Hey Smarti. Yup! It's new. That's part of what I was working on in January. Not nearly all of the recipes are completed, but I got a start on them. I ate pancakes tonight with bacon and now I think I'll have that every night for dinner, except I won't have pancakes, I'll make French Toast. And mini sizzlers. And the odd time I'll probably make stew or chili or tofu. Actually I probably won't have pancakes again for dinner until next Shrove Tuesday. ~ karen!
Sherylann Bright
Can’t wait to do this with my grandkids at our next family breakfast. I shared this with their mommas so they can try it. Thanks for sharing always learn cool stuff with you. Now off to get a squeeze bottle.....
Marilyn
I LOVE PANCAKE TUESDAY!!!!!
Karen
Seconds after publishing my post last night about Pancake Tuesday, I took out a roast to make stew tonight. What is wrong with me, lol? I'll save the roast for tomorrow. Pancakes tonight! ~ karen
Stephanie Jane
These look great fun!
We were just discussing whether (of course) to eat pancakes tonight and your post was in my Bloglovin email. It's fate!
Karen
Pancakes it is! ~ karen
Susan Guthrie
Pinterest is being a little bitchy this morning: Something went wrong Sorry! We blocked this link because it may lead to spam. I used your link to get there.