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This gluten free pancake recipe is light, tender, and fluffy – just like the classic kind. Want extra-fluffy, diner-style pancakes? Use the buttermilk version made with eggs, real buttermilk, and a bit of melted butter for unbeatable height and flavor.
We begin with a shelf-stable dry gluten free Bisquick-style mix. Add in two options for pancake style, thicker or thinner, and this pancakes recipe is really the only one you need!

“These turned out really nice, fluffy and tender. I haven’t had pancakes in over 10-years, now I can again, thank you!”
Why this is the best pancakes recipe
- Fluffy & tender – Just the texture you expect from a perfect pancake stack.
- No rush to cook – Minimal (or no) xanthan gum means the batter stays pourable.
- Fast from-scratch option – Prep the dry mix now, add milk and eggs when you're ready.
- Versatile base – Use the mix for pancakes, bakes, or anywhere you’d use Bisquick, like our gluten free breakfast casserole.
- Choose your version – standard, relatively thin classic pancakes made with milk, or diner-style pancakes made with buttermilk or an easy substitute. Double the dry mix recipe, measure out 235 grams of dry mix in 2 mixing bowls, and make both types of pancakes!

Key ingredients explained
- Gluten free flour – Use a high-quality gum-free blend for the best texture. You can make one from superfine rice flour, potato starch, and tapioca starch—or use Nicole's Best. You can also use Bob's Red Mill 1-to-1 gluten free blend, which contains much less gum than most brands. Blends with too much xanthan gum, like Better Batter's classic blend and King Arthur Flour's Measure For Measure, can make the batter difficult to pour and the pancakes gummy.
- Xanthan gum (optional) – A tiny amount helps prevent flat pancakes and frilly edges, but you can leave it out.
- Baking powder & baking soda – These leaveners give pancakes their lift and golden color.
- Salt – Brightens all the other flavors.
- Granulated sugar – Adds a touch of sweetness and keeps the crumb soft.
- Milk – Any kind works to bring the mixture together and add moisture, but skip nonfat milk—fat helps keep the pancakes tender.
- 💡 For extra-fluffy pancakes, use real buttermilk instead and reduce the amount slightly. See the recipe card for details.
- Eggs – Provide structure to hold the pancakes together as they cool, and lightness to give them dimension.
- Melted butter (buttermilk version only) – Adds richness, tenderness and flavor when making the diner-style variation.
Expert tips
Avoid blends with too much xanthan gum
Most pre-mixed gluten free flour blends like Better Batter can contain too much gum, which makes the batter overly thick and the pancakes gummy. Bob's Red Mill 1-to-1 has too little gum for most purposes, but here it's just right.
With higher concentrations of xanthan gum, the pancake batter would continue to thicken as it stands, and you'd have to work very quickly or continually whisk in more milk to the batter to keep it pourable.
Use just a touch of xanthan gum
Adding ¼ teaspoon to your gum-free blend creates a smooth, non-runny batter and pancakes that hold their shape without feathering at the edges. If you leave out the gum, you'll need less moisture. In the standard version, reduce the milk to by 1/4 cup to 1 cup (8 fluid ounces); in the buttermilk version, reduce liquid by 2 tablespoons to 7 fluid ounces.
Choose a nonstick pan
The ideal surface for creating evenly browned pancakes is a lightly greased nonstick pan. If your surface isn’t nonstick, you'll need more oil or butter, and the pancakes will fry instead of cooking evenly.


How to make gluten free pancakes
1. Whisk the dry ingredients – In a large bowl, whisk together the flour blend, baking powder, baking soda, salt, sugar, and xanthan gum (if using). Whisk well the make sure that each ingredient is evenly distributed throughout the batter, with no clumping of leaveners to create uneven pancakes.
2. Mix the wet ingredients – In a separate bowl or measuring cup, whisk together the milk and egg to ensure that the egg is beaten thoroughly for a smooth batter.
Making the buttermilk version?
- Use 1 cup buttermilk in place of regular milk
- Add 2 eggs instead of 1
- Stir in 2 tablespoons melted butter
3. Combine and mix – Pour the wet ingredients into the dry and whisk until smooth. The batter will thicken slightly as it rests, but it should settle and not continue to thicken as you pour, unlike if we had used a flour blend with too much xanthan gum.




4. Preheat your pan – Heat a nonstick griddle or skillet over medium heat and lightly grease it.
5. Portion and cook – Scoop about 1/4 cup of batter for each pancake.
For the buttermilk version, pour the batter straight down—don’t spread it—to help the pancakes rise tall and fluffy.
6. Flip and finish – Flip and cook the second side until golden brown. Serve warm.





Ingredient substitutions
Dairy free – Replace cow’s milk with your favorite unsweetened, unflavored non-dairy milk from a carton (not canned). Unsweetened almond milk works especially well. For buttermilk, use half (4 fluid ounces) plain nondairy yogurt and half (4 fluid ounces) nondairy milk, by volume.
Egg free – Try a chia egg, “Just Egg” brand (refrigerated), or Bob’s Red Mill egg replacer. You'll need two egg equivalents for the buttermilk version.
FAQs
Check your baking powder and baking soda—they may be expired. These leaveners are what give pancakes their rise.
Your pan is probably too hot. Try reducing the heat slightly and watch for smoking oil or butter as a sign it's overheating.
If your pan isn’t nonstick or isn’t hot enough, pancakes can stick. Use a well-heated nonstick skillet, and grease it lightly even if it’s nonstick.
Not quite—waffles need a lighter, crispier batter. Try my gluten free waffles recipe instead.
Gluten Free Pancake Recipe

Ingredients
For the dry mix
- 1 ½ cups (210 g) gum-free gluten free flour blend, (140 grams superfine white rice flour + 45 grams potato starch + 25 grams tapioca starch/flour)
- ¼ teaspoon xanthan gum, optional (See Recipe Notes)
- 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
- ¼ teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon kosher salt
- 2 tablespoons (24 g) granulated sugar
For standard pancakes
- 1 (50 g out of shell) egg, at room temperature, beaten
- 1 ¼ cups (10 fluid ounces) milk, at room temperature (See Recipe Notes)
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract, (optional)
For buttermilk pancakes (extra fluffy)
- 2 (100 g out of shell) eggs, at room temperature, beaten
- 1 cup (8 fluid ounces) buttermilk, at room temperature
- 2 tablespoons (28 g) unsalted butter, melted and cooled
Instructions
To make standard pancakes
- In a large bowl, whisk together the flour blend, xanthan gum (if using), baking powder, baking soda, salt, and sugar.
- In a separate bowl or measuring cup, whisk together the egg, milk, and optional vanilla.
- Pour the wet ingredients into the dry, and whisk until smooth. Let the batter sit briefly to thicken slightly.
- Heat a griddle to medium-high or large nonstick omelet pan over medium heat, and grease it lightly.
- Pour or ladle as many pancakes onto the hot griddle or pan as you can fit without crowding, each about 1/4 cup of the batter.
- Allow to cook until bubbles break through the surface of the pancakes and the edges have begun to cook, about 2 minutes.
- Flip and continue to cook for another minute, or until the underside is browned.
- Remove from the griddle or pan and repeat with the remaining batter, greasing the surface lightly before adding each batch. Serve warm.
To make buttermilk pancakes
- In a large bowl, whisk together the flour blend, xanthan gum (if using), baking powder, baking soda, salt, and sugar.
- In a separate bowl or measuring cup, whisk together the eggs, buttermilk, and melted butter.
- Pour the wet ingredients into the dry, and whisk until smooth. Let the batter sit briefly to thicken slightly.
- Heat a griddle to medium-high or large nonstick omelet pan over medium heat, and grease it lightly.
- Scoop about 1/4 cup of batter per pancake. Pour the batter straight down onto the pan—don’t spread it—to help the pancakes rise tall and fluffy.
- Allow to cook until bubbles break through the surface of the pancakes and the edges have begun to cook, about 3 minutes.
- Flip and continue to cook for another minute, or until the underside is browned.
- Remove from the griddle or pan and repeat with the remaining batter, greasing the surface lightly before adding each batch. Serve warm.
Video
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Mix-ins & topping ideas
- Miniature semi-sweet chocolate chips mixed in or sprinkled on top as the first side cooks
- Thinly sliced ripe bananas on top or just a few chopped ripe bananas mixed in gently; for banana oatmeal pancakes with mashed banana in the batter, you need another recipe.
- Chopped fresh strawberries on top or mixed in gently
- Gluten free granola on top or mixed in to the batter
- My favorite: place pure maple syrup in a squeeze bottle, and swirl some on top while the first side is cooking
How to store, freeze & reheat pancakes
Short term – Let pancakes cool completely, then wrap in stacks of 2 or 3. Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 days.
Freezer friendly – Freeze wrapped stacks for up to 3 months. Defrost at room temperature, in the fridge overnight, or briefly in the microwave.
Reheating – Refresh in the toaster or warm oven until heated through. A light sprinkle of water before toasting helps restore moisture.
Dry mix storage – Keep a sealed container of the dry pancake mix in a cool, dark pantry for up to 3 months, or in the freezer for up to 6. Let it come to room temp before using.

How to make a shelf-stable dry mix
The dry mix in this recipe makes 235 grams (about 1 ½ cups + 3 tablespoons by volume). Multiply it by 2, 3, or 4 to make a larger batch:
- Whisk all dry ingredients together thoroughly in a large bowl.
- Store in a sealed container in a cool, dry pantry for up to 3 months—or freeze for longer storage.
When you're ready to make pancakes, measure out 235 grams of the mix, add the wet ingredients for either version (standard or buttermilk), and cook as directed.
I intend to try it because I do all the cooking home since my wife is handicapped
Your recipes sound delicious.Thanks.
I’m so glad that you are able to find some recipes here on the blog that help you care for your wife and yourself, Rheal!
If you want a little more protein, add 1/4 cup almond meal for each 3/4 cup of your mix and 1/2 tsp baking powder. I add some
Maple flavoring to the mix, since regular mixes in Mexico have it. Thank you for all your recipes I have some
of your cook books and I use them all the time.
Make the pancakes with buttermilk indtead of milk and see how fluffy they’ll come out
I’m glad you found something that works for you, Norma. For others’ benefit, I really don’t recommend adding almond meal to a pancake mix. It’s heavy, very coarsely ground, and has almond skins in it. If you’d like a pancake with protein, I’d try my gluten free protein pancakes recipe.
What could I use in place of the potato starch? My husband is allergic to white potatoes. Arrowroot? More tapioca starch?
You can try replacing potato starch with arrowroot or even cornstarch, Stephanie. I wouldn’t use tapioca starch/flour, since that is unique starch.
If I make a big batch of the dry mix to keep in the pantry, how much of it do I then need for a single serve of the recipe?
Good question, Astin! 1 batch of the dry mix is about 1 1/2 cups + 3 tablespoons, by volume, and 235 grams by weight. I’d always recommend measuring by weight! I’ll add this information to the recipe and post, as well.
Have you tried to add any maple syrup to the pancake bite mix before baking? I’m wondering if the added moisture would require further changes?
Good question, Deb! I wouldn’t add it to the batter, since as you suspected the extra moisture would be a problem. But you could poke a few holes in the bites after they’re baked and pour a bit of syrup on top so they soak it up. The other thing I love to do (don’t know why I didn’t mention this in the post!) is to pour maple syrup in a squeeze bottle and add it to pancakes as they’re cooking, before the flip. So I let them cook until almost set on the underside, squeeze a thin spiral of syrup like a snail shape ?on the pancake, let cook another few seconds, and then flip. It bakes right in without affecting the integrity of the pancake and will make truly the best pancakes you’ve ever had!
I have made these a few times now-awesome. Will make again, as they were wolfed down by the whole family!! Will also go through the other pancake options as I spied another fab looking one. The best thing though? Knowing that these recipes will just “work” without having to worry-so I know I’m not wasting expensive ingredients!! That is just wonderful. (some of the ingredients in Aus are incredibly expensive!) Thank you Nicole! So looking forward to my recipe books arriving! Just ordered the latest & 2 others….feel like I’m waiting for Santa!!! :)
Today was my sisters B-Day so I made these for breakfast and added chocolate chips and everybody loved them. This is my favorite pancake recipe Nicole. thank you for creating one that works perfectly every time!
Excellent!!!! Best I’ve ever made
O & Happy Mother’s Day!
Great mix! Haven’t had pancakes in years, but woke up this Mother’s Day with a hankerin’ for them. Did not disappoint. Excellent recipe Nicole!