{"title":"How to Make Waffles from Scratch","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/cooking/how-to-make-waffles","category":{"slug":"cooking","name":"Cooking"},"creator":{"name":"Natashas Kitchen","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-pC1xsFPzcrL09DaW4jlBA","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4QJcR_KcE4"},"tldr":"Make crisp, fluffy homemade waffles from scratch with one bowl. Eggs, sugar, oil, milk, flour, baking powder. The egg-whipping trick that makes them rise tall.","totalDurationSeconds":470,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Belgian waffle maker or classic four-square waffle press","electric hand mixer","large glass mixing bowl","small mixing bowl (for dry ingredients)","whisk","measuring cups (dry and liquid)","measuring spoons","silicone spatula","wire cooling rack","baking sheet (for warming in the oven)","freezer-safe zip-top bags (for meal prep)"],"materials":["large eggs","granulated sugar","light olive oil, canola, or vegetable oil","milk (any kind)","pure vanilla extract","all-purpose flour","baking powder","fine salt","fresh berries (for serving)","real maple syrup (for serving)","fresh blueberries, mini chocolate chips, or a lemon (optional mix-ins)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Whip the Eggs and Sugar","text":"Crack two large eggs into a big mixing bowl. They can go in straight from the fridge - this recipe doesn't need room-temperature ingredients, which is one less thing to plan.Add two tablespoons of granulated sugar. Take an electric hand mixer and beat the eggs and sugar together on high speed for a full three minutes. You're not just combining them - you're forcing air into the egg whites and yolks so they puff up pale and frothy. That trapped air is what makes the waffles rise tall in the iron without separating the whites."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Add the Oil, Milk, and Vanilla","text":"Pour half a cup of light olive oil right into the whipped egg mixture. Canola or any other neutral vegetable oil works just as well. Then pour in one and three-quarters cups of milk - whole, 2%, low-fat, even non-dairy will all work here. Add two teaspoons of pure vanilla extract last.Mix on low speed just to combine. You don't need to beat it again - the whipped eggs are already doing the lifting work. The mixture will look thin and pale yellow, which is exactly right."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Whisk the Dry Ingredients Separately","text":"In a small separate bowl, measure out two cups of all-purpose flour, four teaspoons of baking powder, and a quarter teaspoon of fine salt. Spoon the flour into the measuring cup and sweep it level with a knife - don't pack it down, or the waffles will come out dense.Whisk the dry ingredients together until evenly mixed. This step matters more than it looks. Baking powder clumps if it sits in the can, and a chunk of pure baking powder in one waffle tastes bitter and metallic. Thirty seconds with a whisk solves the problem."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Combine and Stop While Lumps Remain","text":"Tip the dry ingredients into the bowl of wet ingredients. Switch the mixer to its lowest speed and mix only until the flour disappears into the batter and the texture is fairly smooth - 20 to 30 seconds.You should still see small lumps. Leave them. Over-mixing develops the gluten in the flour, and gluten is what makes waffles tough and rubbery instead of tender. The lumps will smooth out on their own as the batter rests for a minute while the iron heats up."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Preheat the Waffle Iron","text":"Plug in your waffle iron and let it come up to temperature. Belgian-style irons make tall, deep-pocket waffles; classic four-square presses make thinner, crispier ones - the same batter works in both, so use whichever you own.Set the heat dial to about three and a half out of five if your iron has a range. That's the sweet spot for golden-brown crust without burning the surface. If the iron has a ready light or beep, wait for it before you start pouring batter."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Pour and Cook","text":"Spoon or pour enough batter onto the hot iron to just barely fill the bottom grid - the batter spreads as the lid closes, so a little less is better than a little more. Over-filling makes the batter ooze out the sides and burn against the hinge.Close the lid and let the timer or indicator light run its course. For most irons that's three to five minutes. You'll know it's done when the steam stops billowing out the sides and the waffle is deep golden through the vents."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Transfer and Keep Warm","text":"Lift the cooked waffle out with a fork or wooden tongs - skip metal forks if you have a nonstick iron. Move it onto a wire cooling rack rather than stacking on a plate, which traps steam and turns the crust soft.If you're cooking a full batch and want to serve everyone hot, slide the finished waffles onto a baking sheet and pop them into a 175 F oven. The low heat keeps them crisp and warm for 20 to 30 minutes without drying them out. Repeat with the rest of the batter."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Add Mix-Ins for Flavor Variations","text":"The base batter takes mix-ins beautifully if you want to dress it up. Fold a half cup of fresh blueberries gently into the batter and stir just to distribute. If you're using frozen blueberries, toss them in a teaspoon of flour first so they don't bleed purple streaks through the batter.Mini chocolate chips are the kid-favorite version - a half cup mixed in turns it into dessert for breakfast. The third option is the smartest one: zest half a lemon directly into the batter for a bright, fancy-tasting waffle that still goes with maple syrup."},{"number":9,"title":"Step 9: Freeze the Leftovers","text":"Cool any leftover waffles fully on the wire rack before bagging - warm waffles in a sealed bag steam each other into mush. Once cool, stack them in a freezer-safe zip-top bag with the air pressed out.From frozen they reheat in about two minutes in the toaster on a medium setting or three to four minutes in an air fryer at 350 F. No thawing needed, no microwave required, no sogginess. This is the move that turns a Saturday cook session into a week of fast school-morning breakfasts."},{"number":10,"title":"Step 10: Serve with Berries and Maple Syrup","text":"Stack three or four waffles on a plate. Pile the top with whatever fresh berries are in season - blueberries, blackberries, sliced strawberries, raspberries. Frozen berries work too if you let them thaw on a paper towel first so they don't pool juice.Finish with a slow pour of real maple syrup. Listen for the crunch when you cut in - that crisp shell against the airy middle is the whole point of homemade. For a savory version, swap the berries and syrup for sliced avocado and a poached egg with paprika, and the same waffle becomes lunch."}],"recipe":{"servings":"Makes 8 to 10 Belgian waffles","prepMinutes":10,"cookMinutes":20,"cuisine":"American","ingredients":[{"name":"large eggs","notes":"straight from the fridge - no need to bring to room temperature","amount":"2"},{"name":"granulated sugar","amount":"2 Tbsp"},{"name":"light olive oil, canola, or vegetable oil","notes":"any neutral oil works","amount":"1/2 cup"},{"name":"milk","notes":"any kind - whole, 2%, low-fat, or non-dairy","amount":"1 3/4 cups"},{"name":"pure vanilla extract","amount":"2 tsp"},{"name":"all-purpose flour","notes":"250 g; spoon into the cup and level off, don't pack","amount":"2 cups"},{"name":"baking powder","notes":"double-acting; check the date on the can","amount":"4 tsp"},{"name":"fine salt","amount":"1/4 tsp"},{"name":"fresh berries and real maple syrup","notes":"blueberries, strawberries, blackberries; warm syrup is even better","amount":"to serve"}]},"lastUpdated":"2026-05-21T13:56:14.773Z","published":"2026-05-20T14:17:21.261Z","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."}