Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (2024)

Published: · Modified: by Megan Porta · This post may contain affiliate links.

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These Swedish Pancakes are a breakfast staple. My husband’s grandmother often made this recipe and created tons of lasting memories by doing so. They are super easy to make (only a few ingredients needed!) and you can go simple or crazy with toppings!

Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (1)

Original post: October 2012 | Updated: December 2020

Why This Recipe Works

The original post for this recipe was written by my husband and instead of writing all new copy I want to keep his words. This recipe was his grandmother’s Swedish pancake recipe and he had a lot of really sweet things to say about the ‘cakes and his sweet grandma..

I call these Swedish pancakes because my awesome Grandma (who passed away a few years ago) is Swedish and made thousands of these for me and that’s what she called them, so that’s what they’ll always be to me.

My Grandma rocked. I have numerous childhood memories of vacations at her house in Norway, MI (the UP) and to this day my favorite foods come from her recipes. She was giving, caring and anyone who ever met her came away with a smile because of her genuine sweetness.

These pancakes were always eagerly anticipated whenever we were at Grandma’s or she was at our house. She would hover over the stove throwing out hot cakes to anyone and everyone until all bellies were crammed full. Good times.

How to Make Grandma’s Swedish Pancakes

STEP 1

Add the following ingredients to a blender or large mixing bowl:

  • Eggs
  • Milk
  • All-purpose flour
  • Granulated sugar
  • Vegetable oil
Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (2)

Blend/mix until combined. Melt 1 tablespoon of butter on a medium skillet (or spray with cooking spray) and set heat to medium-high.

STEP 2

Pour 1/4 cup of flour-sugar batter onto hot skillet, over the melted butter. Allow the pancake to cook for about a minute, or until the bottom side of the pancake begins to firm up. Using a spatula, flip the pancake. Cook for an additional minute, or to desired crispiness.

Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (3)

Recipe Notes

  • I’ve found that the easiest method for keeping the pan greased is generously coating it with cooking spray between each batch.
  • Make sure your pan is nice and hot before you add batter to it! Not doing this will result in a ball of inedible dough and wasted ingredients.
  • Once you’ve poured the 1/4 cup of batter onto your hot pan, give the pan a gentle turn to make sure the batter is covering bottom of pan. You’ll have a very thin layer of batter in the pan and this is exactly what you want.

What To Put on Swedish Pancakes

There are a hundred different ways to enjoy these cakes, but I’ll tell you a few of our favorites.

  • Roll each pancake up with a pat of butter in the center and drizzle maple syrup over the top.
  • Spread a bit of Nutella in the centers.
  • Enjoy flat (like regular pancakes) with butter and fresh berries.
  • Pour blueberry sauce over the top.
  • A smear of mixed berry jam would be delicious, too!
  • Our boys always love a generous drizzle of chocolate syrup over the top, too. Of course.

Substitute For Maple Syrup – 13 ideas!

Whether you can’t have maple syrup or just don’t have it on hand, you may find that you need a replacement. If you need a substitute for maple syrup, read on for some excellent alternatives!

Maple Syrup vs Agave

Maple syrup vs agave! Let’s compare these popular sweeteners so you know exactly what you are drizzling into your food. Which is the best choice for your next recipe?

Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (4)

Best Pancake Recipes

Other delicious pancake options:

  • Funfetti Strawberry Pancakes
  • Chocolate Chip Blueberry Buttermilk Pancakes
  • Blueberry Pancakes with Sprinkles
  • Flourless Pancakes – a gluten free option for those that love pancakes for breakfast as much as I do shared by Mama Gourmand

Delicious Breakfast Recipes

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  • You have just met your new go-toBlueberry Muffinsrecipe! These muffins turn out great every time, they are moist and totally packed with blueberries.
  • Breakfast Pizza– This recipe is a combo of two types of meals, making it the perfect breakfast, brunch or dinner fare. Pizza combined with eggs, spinach, bacon and goat cheese? Yes, please!
  • Skip the drive through and make your very own Skinny Latte!
  • I have been making (and perfecting) theBEST Breakfast Casserolefor YEARS and it is one of my all-time favorite breakfast foods. This is perhaps my favorite thing ever to make for brunches. It is a massive hit every single time!
  • Transform French Toast into aMixed Berry Croissant Breakfast Bake! The croissants add such a delicious buttery texture. Let it sit in the fridge overnight so it is ready to bake the next day!

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Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (5)

Grandma’s Swedish Pancakes Recipe

These Swedish Pancakes are a breakfast staple. They are super easy to make (only a few ingredients needed!) and you can go simple or crazy with toppings!

5 from 2 votes

Print Pin Rate

Course: Breakfast

Cuisine: American, Swedish

Servings: 4

Calories: 379kcal

Author: Megan Porta

Ingredients

  • 2 large eggs
  • 2 cups milk
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 3 tbsp granulated sugar
  • 3 tbsp vegetable oil
  • 1 tbsp butter

Instructions

  • Add eggs, milk, flour, sugar and oil to a blender or large mixing bowl. Blend/mix until combined. Melt butter on a medium skillet (or spray with cooking spray) and set heat to medium-high.

  • Pour 1/4 cup of batter onto hot skillet. Allow the pancake to cook for approximately thirty seconds to one minute, or until the bottom side of the pancake begins to firm up.

  • Using a spatula, flip the pancake. Cook for an additional minute, or to desired crispiness. Serve warm with butter and syrup.

Notes

  • I’ve found that the easiest method for keeping the pan greased is generously coating it with cooking spray between each batch.
  • Make sure your pan is nice and hot before you add batter to it! Not doing this will result in a ball of inedible dough and wasted ingredients.
  • Once you’ve poured the 1/4 cup of batter onto your hot pan, give the pan a gentle turn to make sure the batter is covering bottom of pan. You’ll have a very thin layer of batter in the pan and this is exactly what you want.

Nutrition

Calories: 379kcal | Carbohydrates: 39g | Protein: 11g | Fat: 20g | Saturated Fat: 14g | Cholesterol: 125mg | Sodium: 118mg | Potassium: 234mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 15g | Vitamin A: 438IU | Calcium: 158mg | Iron: 2mg

Did you make this recipe?If you loved this recipe, please rate the recipe and leave a comment below!

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (6)Casey

    Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (7)
    This is a great recipe-make sure like she says that the pan is hot! The butter will be browned, no problem. There was a diner I ate at as a kid that had amazing thinner chewy pancakes. They weren’t super eggy and they were not crepes. I’ve been trying so hard to recreate and I used this recipe but added an extra T of sugar, 1 tsp vanilla, 1/4-1/2C extra flour and 1/4-1/2 tsp baking powder. Thank you it’s so close! Just have to narrow those ranges cause I changed as I went!

    Reply

    • Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (8)Megan Porta

      Thanks for sharing that! Glad you tried it out!

      Reply

    • Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (10)Megan Porta

      Try them! So good. Thank you for commenting!

      Reply

  2. Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (11)margaret

    The recipe is not for swedish pancakes but some type of cookie. Would like to see the pancake recipe.

    Reply

    • Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (12)Megan Porta

      I hope it’s showing up ok now, Margaret!
      Megan

      Reply

  3. Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (13)Alejandra esquivel

    this recipe is great the only thing is that pretty much you are making crepes.. only difference is butter instead of oil… tares great ?

    Reply

  4. Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (14)Bethany

    The recipe is still some sort of brownie. I would love the Swedish pancake recipe.

    Reply

    • Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (15)Megan Porta

      Hi Bethany! The recipe is coming up fine on my end. When you click on the PRINT RECIPE button toward the bottom of the post, a brownie recipe is coming up? Shoot me an email and I’ll send you back the recipe if that’s not working for you. Sorry about that!
      Megan

      Reply

  5. Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (16)Emily

    Would love this recipe and the picture is for the Swedish pancakes, but the recipe appears to be for some kind of brownie with cream cheese and twix bars.

    Reply

    • Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (17)Megan Porta

      Hi Emily! I’ll make the fix! Thanks for the heads up.
      Megan

      Reply

  6. Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (18)Jo

    Hey, your recipe box is wonky. It’s not the right recipe for the Swedish cakes. It says to add twix and chocolate chips.

    Reply

    • Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (19)Megan Porta

      Hi Jo! Where are you seeing the twix and chocolate chips pop up for this recipe?
      Megan

      Reply

  7. Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (20)Susan

    I'm making these right now for my parents'. SO GOOD! They remind me of my Mom's crepes, just a little thicker and sweeter. I took Fendi's idea and added the vanilla, mmm!!

    Reply

  8. Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (21)Fendi

    Making these right now! So delicious :d I added a little bit more sugar & some vanilla extract. They are all crispy & chewy 🙂 Thank you!!!

    Reply

  9. Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (22)Monicap

    Loving that dan did this post! John is the pancake maker at our house and these are surely on his list.
    Miss you guys! Love to all of you!

    Reply

  10. Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (23)Laura

    LOL Loved this post!

    Reply

  11. Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (24)Parsley Sage

    Hey hey! Welcome to the wonderful world of food blogging, Dan! You done good! These look ace and Grandma Linnea sounds like da bomb!

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Grandma's Swedish Pancakes Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between Swedish pancakes and regular pancakes? ›

How are Swedish pancakes different from regular pancakes? The main difference is that Swedish pancakes are thinner and less fluffy. Regular pancakes are fluffy thanks to baking powder or baking soda giving them lift; Swedish pancakes, while thin, have a dense, egg-heavy batter with no baking powder or baking soda.

What makes pancakes fluffy and helps them rise? ›

Pancakes and waffles typically both contain baking soda, which causes them to rise. As soon as the baking soda is combined with the wet ingredients (which contain an acidic ingredient, like often buttermilk), it starts producing carbon dioxide gas bubbles that cause the batter to rise.

Why are my pancakes rubbery not fluffy? ›

Over-mixing pancake batter develops the gluten that will make the pancakes rubbery and tough. For light, fluffy pancakes, you want to mix just until the batter comes together—it's okay if there are still some lumps of flour. Fat (melted butter) makes the pancakes rich and moist.

What is Swedish pancakes made of? ›

The batter for Swedish pancakes contains a higher ratio of milk, butter, and eggs to flour, resulting in something that's lighter and fluffier than crêpes. Swedish pancakes are also traditionally served with jam (lingonberry or strawberry) and whipped cream, although these days, anything goes.

Why are restaurant pancakes so fluffy? ›

The secret to fluffy restaurant style pancakes? Buttermilk! The acid in the buttermilk reacts to the leavening agents in the pancake batter, creating air bubbles that make the pancakes tall and fluffy. It's a simple switch that makes all the difference.

Why are Dutch pancakes so good? ›

Dutch pancakes are traditional and worldwide famous, and there is a reason for that. They come with a topping of your choice or just plain. And it is the topping that makes the pancakes in a pancake restaurant so special.

What is the trick to making pancakes fluffy? ›

For fluffier pancakes, use buttermilk. The acidity of buttermilk helps to tenderize the gluten in the flour, which results in fluffier pancakes. If you don't have buttermilk, whole milk will give the pancakes a richer flavor, while skim milk will give them a lighter and fluffier feel.

Does adding more baking powder make pancakes fluffier? ›

Don't be tempted to add more than the recipe suggests, as too much baking powder will make pancakes taste soapy. Alternatively, you could use self-raising flour, which will add to the amount of raising agent in the recipe and potentially make your pancakes fluffier.

What is the scientific secret of fluffy pancakes? ›

When cooked, the chemical leaveners (the baking powder and baking soda) in the pancakes created large air bubbles. The loose gluten network captured the air bubbles and maintained the each pancake's shape while still keeping it fluffy with air.

What does adding an extra egg to pancakes do? ›

Eggs are a crucial ingredient. They provide the cakes with the structure to hold light bubbles. Eggs also give the batter additional, richer flavor from the yolk fat. If you add too many eggs, you'll have “pancakes” that look more like custard or crepes.

What do Swedes eat for breakfast? ›

Many eat porridge ( mostly oatmeal), typically with milk and jam, applemash, fruit or berries. Many eat yoghurt ( either natural or flavored) or fil ( Cultured buttermilk), with cereal, fruit, berries or jam. Many eat sandwiches, with a variety of toppings; cheese, eggs and various cold cuts are all common.

What is the difference between crepe and Ploye? ›

Unlike pancakes or crepes, a ploye is not turned when cooking, because it is only cooked on one side. They are traditionally served with savory foods, such as creton pâté or fricot, a kind of broth - generally chicken. Ployes can also be served sweetened with molasses, sugar, butter or maple syrup.

What is the Norwegian blood pancake? ›

Blodplättar (in Swedish; blodpannekaker in Norwegian, veriohukainen, verilätty or verilettu in Finnish; verikäkk in Estonian), or blood pancakes in English are a dish served in Finland, Estonia, Sweden and Norway made of whipped blood (typically reindeer blood), water or pilsner, flour and eggs.

What are three types of pancakes? ›

15 Types of Pancake Recipes from Across the Globe
  • French Crêpes. French crêpes are well known in the UK and are officially made in a crêpe pan to form a thin pancake. ...
  • American-Style Pancakes. ...
  • Scotch Pancakes. ...
  • Indonesian Serabi. ...
  • Russian Blinis. ...
  • Moroccan Msem*n. ...
  • Danish Aebleskiver. ...
  • Irish Boxty.

What is the difference between Dutch pancakes and regular pancakes? ›

What's the difference between a Dutch pancake and an American pancake? A Dutch pancake is usually larger and much thinner than the thick and fluffy American pancakes. If you order a Dutch pancake at PANCAKES Amsterdam, you will get a delicious thin pancake with a diameter of 32 centimeters.

What's the difference between American and Scottish pancakes? ›

Also called Drop Scones, Scotch pancakes are enjoyed for breakfast and as a snack in the United Kingdom. The main difference between Scotch and American pancakes is that the Scotch version is simpler. Ingredients include self-rising flour, salt, caster sugar, and eggs. Caster sugar provides a more caramelized taste.

What is a traditional Swedish breakfast? ›

Quite a few Swedes eat a hearty breakfast consisting of oat porridge (rather like the Scots!) and open sandwiches, i.e., slices of bread with margarine and a slice of cheese, ham or salami on top. Many people eat rye crispbread for breakfast (as well as at lunch and at dinner). A boiled egg often features as well.

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