How To Make Sourdough
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Sourdough Discard Pancakes: The Easiest 10-Minute Recipe to Use Up Your Discard — Fluffy, Tangy, No Special Equipment Needed | How to Make Sourdough Discard Pancakes That Your Whole Family Will Love | Quick Sourdough Pancake Recipe for Beginners — Sourdough Discard Pancakes Recipe Card — How to Make Sourdough Discard Pancakes Step by Step — How to Know Your Pancakes Are Ready

March 2, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

Last updated: March 2, 2026

Quick answer: Sourdough discard pancakes use 1 cup of unfed sourdough starter mixed with flour, egg, sugar, baking soda, and melted butter. Ten minutes active time. Cook 3 minutes per side on a griddle or pan. The discard adds a subtle tang and extra tenderness that regular pancakes can’t match. No special equipment needed.

Jump to Recipe

Here’s the thing: if you’re throwing away sourdough discard, you’re throwing away the best pancake batter you’ve ever had.

Sourdough discard pancakes are the fastest, lowest-effort recipe in the entire discard category. Ten minutes of active work. A bowl, a whisk, a pan. That’s the whole equipment list.

Here’s what makes them better than regular pancakes: the discard adds a subtle tang that cuts through the sweetness. It adds tenderness from the fermentation. And it uses up that cup of starter you’d otherwise pour down the drain.

I make these at least twice a week. Sometimes three times. My kids ask for them by name now. This works in real kitchens, not just perfect conditions.

You don’t need your starter to be active or at peak. You don’t even need to plan ahead. If you have discard in your fridge, you have pancakes 20 minutes from now.


Sourdough Discard Pancakes Recipe Card

Prep Time: 10 minutes Cook Time: 20 minutes Total Time: 30 minutes Yield: 12 pancakes Difficulty: Beginner

Ingredients

  • 1 cup (227g) sourdough discard (straight from the fridge is fine)
  • 1 cup (120g) all-purpose flour
  • 1 large egg
  • 2 tablespoons sugar
  • 2 tablespoons melted butter (or neutral oil)
  • 1/2 cup milk (any kind works)
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt

Instructions

  1. Whisk the wet ingredients. Combine your sourdough discard, egg, melted butter, and milk in a large bowl. Stir until smooth.
  2. Add the dry ingredients. Add the flour, sugar, salt, and baking soda. Stir until everything is combined. A few small lumps are fine. Don’t overmix.
  3. Heat your pan. Set a griddle or large skillet to medium heat. Add a small amount of butter or oil.
  4. Pour and cook. Pour about 1/4 cup of batter per pancake. Cook until you see bubbles forming on the surface and the edges look set, about 3 minutes.
  5. Flip and finish. Flip once. Cook another 2-3 minutes until golden brown on both sides.
  6. Serve immediately. Stack, top with butter and maple syrup, and eat while warm.

Notes

  • Discard temperature: Cold discard from the fridge works perfectly. No need to bring it to room temperature first.
  • Baking soda is essential. It reacts with the acidity in the discard to create lift. Don’t substitute baking powder here.
  • Milk thickness: If the batter looks too thick, add a splash more milk. If it’s too thin, add a tablespoon of flour. Every discard is different.

Discard isn’t waste

— it’s an ingredient. Once you see it that way, your whole sourdough practice changes. I’ve tested discard in everything from pancakes to pizza dough across 2,973+ loaves.”

How to Make Sourdough Discard Pancakes Step by Step

Why Your Sourdough Discard Makes Better Pancakes

Here’s what matters: most pancake recipes you’ve tried taste fine. These taste noticeably different.

Here’s the thing: your sourdough discard brings two things regular batter can’t replicate. First, you get a mild tang that balances the sweetness of your syrup. Second, you get a tender crumb from the fermentation that already happened in your starter jar.

You’re not wasting anything. You’re upgrading your breakfast.

If you’re new to sourdough and still building your starter, check out the complete guide to making sourdough starter. Once your starter is established, you’ll have discard every time you feed it.

Your 10-Minute Process

Here’s the truth about sourdough discard pancakes: the hardest part is remembering you have discard in your fridge.

You scoop out 1 cup. You crack an egg. You melt some butter.

Dump in flour, sugar, salt, baking soda. Stir.

Here’s why this works: that’s your batter. No resting time required. No overnight planning. No temperature checks on your part.

The baking soda does the heavy lifting for you. It reacts with the natural acidity in your discard and creates all the bubbles you need. Those bubbles form fast, so you want to cook these within a few minutes of mixing.

I tested this recipe on mornings when I had seven people waiting for breakfast in a 27×30 inch kitchen. It held up every single time. Built for your interruptions, not ideal conditions.

What Your Pan Temperature Tells You

Medium heat on your stove is your target. But “medium” varies wildly between stoves.

Here’s how you know you’re at the right temperature: flick a drop of water on your pan. If it sizzles and evaporates in about 2 seconds, you’re good. If it sits there, your pan is too cool. If it vanishes instantly, you’re too hot.

Too hot and your outside burns before the inside cooks through. Too cool and your pancakes spread flat and turn gummy. You want golden, not charred.

The flip signal: When you see bubbles forming across the entire surface and the edges start looking matte instead of shiny, you flip. Don’t flip before the bubbles form. Don’t wait until they pop and deflate.

You Can Use Discard Straight From the Fridge

The truth is, some recipes tell you to bring your discard to room temperature first. You don’t need to do that here.

Your cold discard works. Your room temperature discard works. Discard that’s been in your fridge for two weeks works.

The baking soda doesn’t care about your discard’s temperature. It cares about the acidity, and your discard has plenty of that no matter how long it’s been sitting.

I’ve used discard that’s been in the fridge for 10 days. Pancakes came out fine. A little more sour, which I actually preferred.

Your kitchen isn’t the problem. The advice you’ve been following is.

The one thing you need to check: make sure your discard smells sour but not rotten. Sour like yogurt is good. Mold or bright pink/orange color means you toss it and start fresh.


How to Know Your Pancakes Are Ready

Visual Cues That Replace Your Timers

You don’t need a stopwatch for pancakes. You need your eyes.

Ready to flip: You’ll see bubbles covering the surface. The edges lose their wet shine and look slightly dry. The bottom is golden when you lift an edge with your spatula.

Done on the second side: When you press the center lightly, the pancake feels firm. It springs back instead of leaving an indent. Lift an edge to check the color yourself.

Overcooked signs: Dark brown or black spots mean your heat is too high. Dense, flat pancakes that don’t puff up mean your baking soda has lost its potency. If that happens, you need to grab a fresh box.


When Things Don’t Go as Planned

Your pancakes are flat and dense

Real talk: your baking soda is probably old. Baking soda loses potency over time, especially if the box has been open for months. Here’s how you test it: drop a teaspoon into vinegar.

Here’s what matters: if it fizzes aggressively, you’re fine. If it barely reacts, you need to replace it. Also, don’t overmix your batter.

Stir until combined and stop.

Your pancakes are too sour

Your discard has been in your fridge a long time. That’s not a problem for your safety, but it does increase the tang. Add an extra teaspoon of sugar to your batter to balance the sourness.

Look, or use fresher discard next time you make these. Discard from the same day you feed is the mildest.

Your middle is raw when the outside is done

Your heat is too high. Your outside browns before the inside cooks through. Drop your burner to medium-low and give each side an extra minute. You’ll also find that slightly thinner pancakes cook more evenly.

Your batter is too thick or too thin

Every discard you use will be different. A thicker, more established starter produces thicker discard. A younger, more liquid starter produces thinner discard. You adjust with milk (thinner) or flour (thicker) a tablespoon at a time until your batter drops slowly from a spoon.


Variations

Blueberry Sourdough Discard Pancakes

Fold in 1/2 cup fresh or frozen blueberries after mixing the batter. Don’t stir them in aggressively. Frozen berries work well because they hold their shape on the griddle.

Chocolate Chip Sourdough Pancakes

Add 1/3 cup chocolate chips to the batter. Or drop chips directly onto each pancake right after you pour the batter into the pan. Kids go wild for this version.

Cinnamon Vanilla Sourdough Pancakes

Add 1 teaspoon vanilla extract and 1 teaspoon cinnamon to the batter. These taste like cinnamon rolls in pancake form.


This Recipe Is Your Gateway to Zero-Waste Sourdough Baking

Honestly, now you’ve got a 10-minute recipe that uses your discard and makes a breakfast your whole family will actually eat. If you follow these steps, you’ll never throw away sourdough discard again.

But here’s what I’ve learned after baking 2,973+ loaves testing every variable. Knowing one discard recipe is a great start It doesn’t teach you the system. What happens when you want to bake actual sourdough bread?

When you’re staring at dough that looks nothing like the picture? When your bread baking timeline doesn’t match what the recipe says?

That’s what Bread ASAP is for. A focused beginner class that walks you through your first real sourdough loaf in 7-10 days. Video at every stage.

Real-time troubleshooting. No guessing.

The reality is, inside Bread ASAP:

  • Video walkthroughs of every stage so you see what properly fermented dough actually looks like
  • The schedule flexibility system so you bake around your life, not the other way around
  • Starter readiness section so you know exactly when your starter is ready to use
  • Real-time troubleshooting when something looks off
  • Direct access to ask questions
  • Your first loaf in 7-10 days, guaranteed

Stop guessing. Start baking. Get Bread ASAP for $47 with a 60-day guarantee. If it doesn’t work, you don’t pay.

Not ready for a class? Start with the starter itself. A Proven Starter ($19.99) ships dehydrated to your door.

Two feedings and you’re baking. Free US shipping. 60-day guarantee.


Frequently Asked Questions About Sourdough Discard Pancakes

Can I use sourdough discard straight from the fridge?

Yes. Cold discard works perfectly in this recipe. You don’t need to bring it to room temperature first. The baking soda reacts with the acidity in the discard regardless of temperature. I use fridge-cold discard every time and the pancakes turn out fluffy and tender.

How old can sourdough discard be for pancakes?

Discard that’s been in the fridge for up to two weeks works fine for pancakes. The older it gets, the more sour the flavor. If the discard smells strongly of acetone or alcohol, it’s still safe to use but will taste tangier. Add an extra teaspoon of sugar to balance it. Discard with visible mold should be thrown out.

Do I need to use sourdough discard for these pancakes?

You can use active, fed starter too. The pancakes will taste slightly less tangy and slightly more mild. The recipe works with either. Most bakers use discard because the whole point is using up what you’d otherwise throw away when you maintain your sourdough starter.

Can I make the batter ahead of time?

You can mix the batter and refrigerate it for up to 2 hours before cooking. Beyond that, the baking soda loses its lift and the pancakes will be flatter. For best results, mix and cook right away. If you want make-ahead pancakes, cook them fully and reheat in a toaster.

What’s the best way to keep sourdough pancakes warm while cooking a batch?

Set your oven to 200°F and place finished pancakes on a wire rack inside a sheet pan. The wire rack keeps the bottoms from getting soggy. This holds them warm for up to 20 minutes while you finish the rest of the batch.

Why are my sourdough pancakes better than regular pancakes?

The sourdough discard adds tang and tenderness that regular pancake batter can’t replicate. The fermentation has already broken down some of the starches and developed flavor compounds. The result is a more complex flavor, a softer interior, and a slight chewiness that pairs perfectly with maple syrup.


Go Make Breakfast

You’ve got the recipe. You’ve got the discard sitting in your fridge. Twenty minutes from now you could be eating the best pancakes you’ve ever made.

Looking for more ways to use your discard? Try sourdough discard crackers next. Three ingredients.

Crispier than anything you’ll find at the store. Or go all the way and make your first sourdough bread.

Happy baking — Roselle


What’s your favorite way to use sourdough discard? Tell me in the comments. I’m always looking for new ideas from real kitchens.


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