Learn how to make the perfect homemade sourdough waffles. Crispy golden brown on the outside and nice and fluffy on the inside, this sourdough waffle recipe will become a family favorite.
![Two stacks of waffles on a small plates with a slab of butter and maple syrup on top.](https://www.farmhouseonboone.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/sourdough-waffles_resize.jpg)
If you have been following along for a while, you know how much I love my sourdough starter. It has become an amazing, mature starter, and we make so many things from it. Some of our favorite things to make are sourdough bread, homemade sourdough pop tarts, sourdough lemon cake, and these sourdough waffles!
These delicious sourdough waffles are a lot like my sourdough pancakes, just with a few, very slight tweaks. They have the most amazing flavor, and our family loves them! They truly are the best waffles.
Serve them warm topped with blackberry syrup or lavender syrup and homemade butter (YUM). For a more classic flavor, try some pure maple syrup and whipped cream. After loading them with all the waffle toppings, pair them with some fresh fruit and eggs for the perfect hearty breakfast.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
Easy – These easy sourdough waffles are so easy to make and have less than ten ingredients. They are simple to pull together any day of the week, but also make for a very special breakfast.
Sourdough starter – These sourdough starter waffles are a great way to use up excess sourdough starter. One reason I love this recipe so much is that I can just wake up and make it without really planning ahead of time. It’s an easy sourdough discard recipe, and doesn’t need to be started the night before like most sourdough recipes.
Versatile – Everyone loves waffles, and you can make each waffle your own by letting your family pick and choose their favorite toppings. This makes for a perfect kid-friendly meal!
Ingredients for Sourdough Waffles
Sourdough starter – This can be active starter or sourdough starter discard. I prefer active starter, but discard will work. If using discard, make sure it is fresh and recently fed. Learn how to make your own starter here.
Oil – I used coconut oil (I like my waffles extra crispy, so I like to add the extra oil to give them that crispiness). You could also use melted butter.
Honey – I like to use unrefined sweeteners whenever possible. You could also substitute with maple syrup.
Vanilla – Yummy, warm delicious vanilla flavor. You can easily make your own vanilla extract at home.
Baking soda – Make sure there are no clumps. This is the leavening agent and as soon as the baking soda hits the starter you will see it.
A full ingredient list with exact amounts can be found in the recipe card below.
How to Make Sourdough Waffles
Step 1: Preheat waffle maker. In a large bowl, add sourdough starter, eggs, oil, salt, cinnamon, honey and vanilla. Mix well.
Step 2: Add baking soda and stir.
Step 3: Grease the waffle maker and spoon batter into it making sure not to overfill it. Cook it for 3-4 minutes on one side and flip. Cook for another 3-4 minutes on the other side.
Step 4: Open the waffle maker. If it is sticking at all or seems uncooked, cook for another minute or two and try again. Serve warm with your favorite toppings (see post for ideas).
Tips
- When using a cast iron waffle maker, be sure the iron is well seasoned and before cooking, is preheated on both sides and greased well before placing waffle batter into the hot waffle iron.
- When measuring out your ingredients, measure the oil first, and then measure out the honey in that same tablespoon so the residual oil makes the honey slide out nicely.
- Don’t open the waffle iron until it is done. If it starts to stick in the middle, close it back up quickly and cook it a little longer. You don’t want to flip the waffle maker too often, otherwise you lose that crispy texture on the outside and nice fluffy texture on the inside. Flip it only once.
Recipe FAQs
Yes, these freeze great! Double or triple the batch, make extra, and then freeze the rest. Lay them on a cookie sheet and freeze flat before placing them in a storage container so they don’t stick together. Or just place parchment paper between each one. Freeze up to 3 months. For shorter term storage, place in an airtight container in the refrigerator up to 2-3 days. You can reheat them in the toaster to keep them crispy.
Most likely you are not getting crisp sourdough waffles because the waffle maker was not preheated before adding the batter. Also, if you are stacking up the waffles as they cook, they tend to get soft from the steam of the other waffles.
To keep them crispy, add them to a baking sheet in a single layer and keep them in the oven on warm without stacking them. Finally, add oil. The oil in this recipe gives you an end result of crispy waffles.
The topping options for waffles are endless. They can be topped with assortment of syrup flavors (like blackberry syrup, lavender syrup, and maple syrup as mentioned above), fresh berries, bananas, whipped cream, peanut butter, almond butter, and chocolate chips. Use your imagination and get creative!
Yes. They contain healthy fermented grains and whole food ingredients. They are a great way to keep tummies full and fuel the day and are the best sourdough waffles!
There are so many things you can make with leftover sourdough starter discard: waffles, pancakes, pizza, biscuits, muffins, and much more. Check out 35+ sourdough discard recipes on my blog.
More Sourdough Recipes from the Farmhouse
- Sourdough Pumpkin Coffee Cake
- Sourdough Blueberry Pancakes
- Sourdough Chocolate Chip Bread
- Quick Sourdough Discard Cinnamon Rolls
- Easy Sourdough Discard Hamburger Buns
If you try this recipe and love it, I would love it if you could come back and give it 5 stars! Tag me on Instagram @farmhouseonboone.
Sourdough Waffles
Video
Ingredients
- 2 cups active sourdough starter
- 2 eggs
- 1/4 cup + 1 tablespoon oil, I used coconut oil
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- 2 tablespoons honey
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
Instructions
- Preheat cast iron waffle maker.
- In a large bowl, add fed sourdough starter, eggs, oil, salt, cinnamon, honey and vanilla. Mix well.
- Add baking soda and stir.
- Grease the waffle maker and add a bit of batter to it making sure not to overfill it.
- Cook it for 3-4 minutes on one side and flip. Cook for another 3-4 minutes on the other side.
- Open it. If it is sticking at all or seems uncooked, cook for another minute or two and try again.
Notes
- When using a cast iron waffle maker, be sure the waffle iron is preheated on both sides and greased before placing waffle mix in it.
- Don’t overfill it; it will spill over the sides. In my waffle maker, it takes about a cup of waffle batter for one perfect waffle without spilling over.
- Don’t open it until is done. It will start to stick in the middle, close it back up quickly and cook it a little longer.
- Active sourdough starter means the starter was fed with flour and water and let sit at room temperature long enough for it to be nicely fermented and bubbly. Around 4-12 hours.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
This was the first sour dough recipe I tried. They were good waffles. The recipe seems like a nice go-to base recipe that can be easily altered for whatever (like pumpkin spice, or blueberries, etc) or used as is.
The most amazing waffles ever! So crispy on outside and airy on inside! Flavor is wonderful. We top them off with fresh berries and syrup!
I’m anxious to try these. I’ve found some decent gluten-free waffle recipes but sourdough is so much better and wheat is ok if it’s long fermented. Can the batter be made the night before to long ferment? Would the baking soda then get stirred in in the morning? Thank you for sharing your recipe!
Can you use discord for this recipe? Do you need to adjust the amount at all?
Yes, you can! No need to adjust the amounts.
The yummiest and easiest recipe!
Do you think I could swap honey with bananas?
I’ve not personally tried it, but I’m sure you could!
Very good!
I thought it was a little fragile when I took it out of the waffle maker, but after sitting just 1-2 min, it became crispier and holded its shape better. It is light and taste very good. I used coconut oil and it added a delicious flavor.
Thanks!
Made these this morning for my family and they all said they were the best waffles they’ve had! All your recipes are so wonderful and I’m always excited to try a new one!
Next one the list are your sour dough tortillas!😀
We are temporarily living in a Home2Suites due to tornado/straight line winds that destroyed two trees, dropped one on our car and one in master bedroom/bathroom while raining for like 12 hours! So you know grab essentials and pack what you really need. Ethel (my mother sourdough starter) came with us to the hotel. I gave Ethel to my daughter, and saved a couple tablespoons of discard, which is pretty active and happy! Prayers help :o) – so I now have 24 waffles in the freezer. Good recipe, thank you! I’ve made similar recipes as yours. Good quality! I have a little Dash mini waffle maker. In a few days I will make us some crepes or tortillas. I can’t be home, but making some of our food every day, makes it feel more like home.
praying for you
Okay, this was AMAZING! I don’t think I’ll be able to order waffles at a restaurant ever again because nothing compares to the tangy flavor of these!
I did fudge the recipe a bit because I didn’t have enough active starter, so I gambled and used some discard. It was a couple of days old and room temperature. This resulted in a “cracker waffle” as my 2 year old called it. (Still delicious, but not the right texture.)
I remedied this by adding 1 cup of flour and a splash of water until it looked like typical waffle batter consistency. This resulted in PERFECT waffles! I don’t think I would have needed to add water if I hadn’t made 1 waffle already. I’m excited to try this recipe again with fed starter!