{"title":"How to Make the Best Waffles (7 Steps)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/cooking/how-to-make-the-best-waffles","category":{"slug":"cooking","name":"Cooking"},"creator":{"name":"Preppy Kitchen","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTvYEid8tmg0jqGPDkehc_Q","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iR64hfkGQeU"},"tldr":"Make crispy, fluffy homemade waffles in 7 steps. Eight pantry ingredients, one waffle iron, and a freezer-friendly recipe that beats any frozen waffle.","totalDurationSeconds":259,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["waffle iron","large mixing bowl","medium mixing bowl","whisk","liquid measuring cup","dry measuring cups","measuring spoons","wire cooling rack","ladle or 1/3-cup measure"],"materials":["all-purpose flour","baking powder","granulated sugar","salt","whole milk","large eggs","unsalted butter","vanilla extract","maple syrup","fresh berries"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Preheat the Waffle Iron and Melt the Butter","text":"Plug in the waffle iron and turn it on first. A hot iron is the single biggest factor in a crisp waffle - everything else falls apart if the iron is barely warm when the batter goes in. Set it to medium or whatever your manual recommends and let it come up to temperature while you mix the batter.Melt 1/2 cup (113g) of unsalted butter in the microwave in a small dish or a liquid measuring cup. Forty-five seconds at half power usually does it, stirring once. Using a liquid measuring cup means one less dish to wash later - the butter goes straight from there into the wet bowl."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Whisk the Dry Ingredients in a Large Bowl","text":"Grab your largest mixing bowl - the wet ingredients are coming in here later, so go big. Add 2 1/4 cups (270g) all-purpose flour, 3/4 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon baking powder, and 1/4 cup (50g) granulated sugar.Whisk it all together until the color looks even and there are no streaks of one ingredient. This takes maybe twenty seconds. Set the bowl aside while you handle the wet ingredients. Pre-whisking the dry stuff matters - it distributes the baking powder so every waffle rises evenly instead of having one corner that's fluffy and one that's flat."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Whisk the Wet Ingredients in a Medium Bowl","text":"In a medium bowl, crack 2 large eggs. Room temperature is best because they incorporate the butter better, but morning eggs out of the fridge work fine too. Add 2 teaspoons of good vanilla extract - the vanilla is more noticeable in waffles than you'd expect, so use the real stuff if you have it.Pour in the melted butter and 2 cups of whole milk. Whisk everything together until it looks smooth and pale yellow with no streaks of pure egg white. The order really doesn't matter here - dump it all in and whisk. Twenty seconds and you're done."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Combine Wet and Dry - Stop Early","text":"Pour the wet mixture into the bowl of dry ingredients. Whisk gently with a folding motion - just enough strokes to bring the batter together. The moment you don't see dry flour streaks, stop. A few small lumps are fine and will smooth out as they cook.This is the most important step in the whole recipe. Overmixing develops gluten, and developed gluten gives you tough, chewy, dense waffles instead of tender ones. Pancake people learn this lesson the hard way; you don't have to. Twenty gentle strokes, max."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Ladle the Batter into the Hot Iron","text":"Open the preheated waffle iron and pour about 1/3 cup of batter into the center of each section. A 1/3-cup measure or a 4-ounce ladle is the right size for a standard American waffle iron. Belgian-style irons with deeper grids need noticeably more - check whatever the manual says or eyeball it the first time.Close the lid firmly and don't peek for at least the first minute. Opening it early splits the waffle in half because the top hasn't set yet. Patience."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Watch the Steam - It Tells You When the Waffle Is Done","text":"As the waffle cooks, lots of steam pours out of the seam of the iron. That's the water in the batter cooking off. When that steam slows to a wisp or stops entirely, the waffle is ready - golden, crisp on the outside, fluffy inside. On most irons that takes three to four minutes. Newer irons have a timer or an indicator light that does this for you.If your iron is the kind that beeps or shows a ready light, trust it the first time. If it doesn't, peek at the four-minute mark and look for deep golden color, not pale tan. Pale waffles are undercooked and will be soft instead of crispy."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Cool on a Wire Rack, Serve with the Works","text":"Transfer each finished waffle straight to a wire cooling rack instead of stacking them on a plate. Stacking traps steam between the waffles and softens the crisp edges you just worked to get. A few minutes on the rack and they stay shatter-crisp on the outside.Serve with real maple syrup, a pat of butter, fresh berries, whipped cream, or a drizzle of honey - whatever your house likes. Any waffles you don't eat get bagged up and frozen for up to two months. Pop a frozen waffle straight into the toaster on the high setting and you have an instant breakfast that beats any frozen-box version."}],"recipe":{"servings":"Makes 6 to 8 waffles","prepMinutes":10,"cookMinutes":20,"cuisine":"American","ingredients":[{"name":"all-purpose flour","notes":"270 grams if weighing","amount":"2 1/4 cups"},{"name":"baking powder","amount":"1 tbsp"},{"name":"granulated sugar","notes":"50 grams","amount":"1/4 cup"},{"name":"salt","amount":"3/4 tsp"},{"name":"whole milk","amount":"2 cups"},{"name":"large eggs","notes":"room temperature is best but not required","amount":"2"},{"name":"unsalted butter","notes":"113 grams, melted and slightly cooled","amount":"1/2 cup"},{"name":"vanilla extract","amount":"2 tsp"},{"name":"maple syrup","notes":"real maple syrup is worth it","amount":"to serve"},{"name":"fresh berries","notes":"optional - strawberries, blueberries, or raspberries","amount":"to serve"}]},"lastUpdated":"2026-05-24T16:36:01.752Z","published":"2026-05-24T16:35:46.386Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}