Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik
Saving pancake batter for tomorrow sounds smart—but it's exactly why your day-two pancakes never taste right. Here's the smarter move.
There are two kinds of pancake mornings in my house. The first is the slow, idyllic (in theory) weekend breakfast, where my kids and I leisurely whisk together flour, eggs, and milk while making what can only be described as an eggy Jackson Pollock on my countertops. I bark "Don't touch the hot pan!" at least eight times before anyone even flips a pancake. It's chaotic but charming— if you squint hard enough.
And then there are the other mornings—the ones where my children wake up demanding pancakes now. On those days, I need instant gratification: a way to conjure fluffy pancakes without starting from scratch.
For those need-pancakes-now mornings, I've started planning ahead—not by mixing batter the night before, but by finally figuring out what to do with the leftover batter from the last batch. Because somehow, there's always just enough batter left behind to feel guilty about throwing it out.
The Common Problem: Leftover Pancake Batter
If you make pancakes regularly, you're often left with a mostly empty mixing bowl streaked with a few pancakes' worth of batter. You think, I'll just cover it and use it tomorrow. I've been there, convincing myself I'll be that person who reheats the pan and makes a second round of pancakes tomorrow morning. But science (and experience) say otherwise. Raw pancake batter does not keep well.
The first issue is the life of the leavening once it's mixed into the batter. Most batters rely on baking powder or baking soda, both of which start reacting the moment liquid hits the dry ingredients. Baking soda reacts immediately with any acidic ingredient in the batter—such as buttermilk or yogurt—creating bubbles of carbon dioxide on contact. Baking powder, which contains its own acid, gives you a two-stage reaction: a little lift when it's mixed, and a second burst once it hits heat. That chemical reaction—bubbles of carbon dioxide inflating your pancakes—starts the clock the moment wet meets dry. By the next day, your batter's gone flat because the leavening has already done its job. The gas bubbles that once made it airy have escaped, and the chemical reaction that created them can't happen again. With no fresh lift left, the batter turns heavy and thick.
Then there's the food safety issue. Pancake batter contains raw eggs, and once those eggs are cracked and mixed, the mixture is considered a perishable "raw egg mixture." According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), egg-containing foods should be refrigerated promptly—within two hours of mixing—and kept at or below 40°F. Even when properly chilled, the FDA advises using raw egg mixtures within a day or two, since bacterial growth can occur over time—especially if the fridge temperature fluctuates, which it can if you simply open the door or stash something hot in it. So technically, the USDA says refrigerated raw egg mixtures can be stored safely for up to about 48 hours, so keeping pancake batter overnight isn’t a food-safety crisis. But it does leave you on a very tight timeline, and by then the batter’s already lost most of its lift anyway.
The Solution and Why It Works
The better move is to cook all the batter now, even if you don't plan to eat all the pancakes you make immediately. Then, freeze the pancakes. This way, you preserve the texture, avoid any concerns about storing raw eggs, and set yourself up for a few fast, golden pancakes whenever needed. And if you are a planner, you can do this intentionally—making an extra batch when you have the time so you always have a stack ready for the next pancake emergency.
The method couldn't be more straightforward:
- Make and cook all your pancakes as usual.
- Let any you are not planning to serve immediately cool completely on a wire rack to prevent sogginess.
- Stack them with parchment, wax paper, or foil between each pancake (so they don't fuse together).
- Wrap tightly in plastic wrap or slide into a zipper-lock or reusable freezer bag, pressing out as much air as possible.
- Stash in the freezer for up to 2 months.
You now have your own personal stash of freezer pancakes. Cooking off the batter locks in the pancake's rise and structure while it's still aerated. Freezing halts moisture loss, and reheating rehydrates the crumb.
How to Reheat Pancakes Without Ruining Them
The goal is to bring back that just-cooked fluffiness and warmth without drying the pancakes out or making them tough. Luckily, there are two great options:
Option 1: Oven Reheat
Preheat the oven to 325°F. Place the frozen pancakes in a single layer on a rimmed baking sheet and heat for about 5 minutes, or until warmed through. This keeps them tender and lightly crisp on the edges. This is an excellent reheating method for serving a crowd at brunch.
Option 2: Microwave Reheat
If you're just heating a few pancakes, wrap them in a damp paper towel and microwave at full power for 30 to 60 seconds, flipping halfway through. The towel's moisture steams them perfectly, keeping them soft and fluffy rather than rubbery. I often reheat pancakes this way on busy mornings.
The Golden (Syrup) Rule
No matter how you store or reheat them, finish your pancakes the right way: with plenty of good butter and real maple syrup. You did the work, whether it was a peaceful family morning or a pancake emergency. Either way, you deserve a plate of warm, fluffy pancakes—and zero guilt about wasted batter.