pumpkin waffles
This pumpkin, it’s gonna get used.
And if each use were as delicious as that soup and now these waffles, I might even be tempted to roast that third pumpkin, still lingering all lonesome in the corner of the living room. Tell me, would there be mutiny if I used the remainder of NaBloPoMo (or as Alex affectionately called it just a little while ago, NaBloDishesMo) for pumpkin recipes? Pumpkin, 19 more ways?
Okay, okay, calm down. I was just joking. I wouldn’t do that. Eventually I’m going to have to give up on this bottomless vat of orange puree, but I hope we get a least one more batch of these for breakfast before I do. Not only were they incredibly delicious, when we returned to the apartment this evening, our late breakfast still perfumed the air. I wish finding uses for my excess was always this heavenly.
Pumpkin Waffles
Adapted from several sources
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/3 cup packed light brown sugar
2 1/4 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
4 large eggs, separated
2 cups well-shaken buttermilk
1 cup canned solid-pack pumpkin
3/4 stick (6 tablespoons) unsalted butter, melted
Vegetable oil for brushing waffle iron or cooking spray
Preheat oven to 250°F and preheat waffle iron. Sift together flour, brown sugar, baking powder and soda, salt, and spices. Whisk egg yolks in a large bowl with buttermilk, pumpkin, and butter until smooth. Whisk in dry ingredients just until combined.
In a mixing bowl with a whisk attachment, whisk the egg whites until they hold soft peaks (as in, far softer than the over-beaten whites you’ll see in my picture above). Folk them gently into the waffle batter, until just combined.
Brush waffle iron lightly with oil and spoon batter (about 2 cups for four 4-inch Belgian waffles) into waffle iron, spreading quickly. Cook according to manufacturer’s instructions.
Transfer waffles to rack in oven to keep warm and crisp. Make more waffles in same manner.














I was just thinking about how much I badly I wanted waffles for tomorrow morning and voila! you posted a delicious recipe for pumpkin waffles. Awesome! I also need to use up my buttermilk too so this will come in handy!
i’m going to use this as a start of a desert to bring to our pre-thanksgiving potluck next weekend. sounds delicious!
I am experiencing intense waffle envy, which I don’t think I’ve ever felt before. Also I think I just drooled on myself.
Boy did I need you this morning. But alas i went to Diner for breakfast and got, are you ready? An egg sandwich with beer battered fried green tomato’s with melt Vermont Cheddar. YUM!
Ok, back to sleep.
Ciao
You might be interested in this recipe, then…
Pumpkin Chocolate Almond Truffles with Amaretto
Ingredients:
1 c pumpkin puree
4 ounces bittersweet chocolate
3 Tbsp butter
1/4 c amaretto or other liqueur
2 egg yolks
1 c toasted almonds, ground
2 c powdered sugar
Cocoa powder
1. Spoon pumpkin puree onto double layer of paper towels, cover with another double layer of paper towels, and press gently to squeeze out excess liquid. Leave covered with paper towels until step 4.
2. Melt chocolate and butter in double boiler (or microwave: heat for 45 seconds and stir, heat again for another 45 seconds, stir gently until chocolate is completely melted and mixture is smooth). Let cool a few minutes.
3. Stir in liqueur and egg yolk. Whisk until smooth.
4. Add ground almonds, sugar, and pumpkin. Whisk or stir until smooth.
5. Cover loosely with plastic wrap, refrigerate at least one hour.
6. Pour some cocoa into a shallow bowl. Remove truffle mixture from fridge. Scoop with a mellon baller and roll into small balls, then roll them in cocoa. Put in wax-paper-lined airtight container. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
Made approx. 36 truffles.
That sounds so yummy….it has been so long since I had waffles, great idea to use pumpkin in it!
Alright… it’s official… you need to send me box of kleenex to sop up the drool that your recipes always cause.
pumpkin cupcakes are awesome, seriously; i put a recipe on 10.31. totally worth trying out to use up the puree.
I’m pretty sure you can freeze pumpkin puree…so maybe one week this winter can be Pumpkin Week on the blog or something?
Those look so good! I know my mom reads this every day so…. Mom, make these for me!!
I love pumpkin waffles. Time to break out a can of pumpkin.
I also love your site. Honestly, I spend a long time drooling over the photos before I get around to reading the text!
Personally, I’d be more than happy to have the rest of the month being pumpkin. All pumpkin, all the time! Yay!!!
Pumpkin…waffles? Swoon! I think I know what I’m having for breakfast on saturday!
I love the idea of using pumpkin in so many different ways, both sweet and savory – the waffles look fantastic!
Deb, do you have an email address that I can write to you privately? I have a couple of questions regarding your blog that are not related to food.
Bring on the pumpkins – I, for one, would be very happy with all pumpkin all November :)
I know this feeling of not being able to throw away food. When I was a kid, I used to not like Thanksgiving, because it meant that my mother was going to use up the extra pumpkin in pumpkin pancakes with apple syrup. While it was too strong to say I hated them, there was something about the consistency that I didn’t like (they never fully cooked in the middle), and the apple syrup just didn’t work for me. To this day I have no idea why I didn’t like them — I like pumpkin, pancakes, and apples — but that was one thing I could skip.
They did smell wonderful, though. These waffles look good.
What say you to the possibility of using acorn squash rather than pumpkins? At the end of the day, it’s all squash, right? And I have two acorn squashes hanging out in my fridge that I can’t bear to throw out despite the fact that they’re getting into a-little-past-prime territory.
I can’t throw away food either — which becomes a problem when the other person in your household isn’t a fan of leftovers… But I just can’t bring myself to waste food! And when you can throw together yummy recipes like this, why would you??
I love pumpkin pancakes and waffles. I, uh, usually order them *covers mouth* IHOP in the fall. I saw the pictures and the title and was willing to throw myself on the floor, begging you to make them for me.
Oh, if you could – whilst you still have the puree – PUMPKIN CHEESECAKE!?!
We don’t have a waffle iron, so is there a way to morph this into pumpkin pancakes? I hear from Alton Brown that waffle batter is not at all the same as pancake batter, so I can’t bring myself to drop this recipe on a griddle with a clean conscience.
I too roasted and pureed pumpkins for the first time this season. And I agree with you – not worth it. My husband, basing his opinion on pumpkin bread alone, claims he can taste the difference.
I ended up using the last of mine (darn) last night cooking up pumpkin soup. I have a pancake recipe I swear by & it would have been interesting to add some pumpkin to it. And Chocolate. My husband also thinks everything tastes better with chocolate.
Thanks for the idea!
the best part of this was the pic of the waffles – showing that you don’t overflow your machine EVERY FRIGGIN TIME like i do. you just let those edges do their thing and everything is beautiful… so great! what an awakening!!!
i’m posting today about a pumpkin cake that also called for well shaken buttermilk. wassup with that? anyway i shook it well. yes i did…
If I’m feeling lazy and am using Bisquick (blech!), then I usually use more egg in the mix for waffles, so maybe if you play around with the egg content, the pancake thing may work. I tried this a couple of years ago with canned pumpkin puree and they were great- try with a berry sauce instead of maple syrup.
Deb,
My family used to freeze butternut squash all of the time. I’m sure you can do the same with pumpkin.
Also, my husband used your pizza dough and sauce recipe this weekend. Super tasty. It never rose though. Not sure why. (I purposely removed myself from the kitchen for the cooking so I can’t hazard a guess.)
Oh my….I’m delurking to say that yes, I think I’m going to have to get a waffle maker. I love your blog, Deb and the pictures…you’re a great photographer. I have my eye on a Canon Powershot G9 for Christmas. :-)
Your waffles look awesome! These would be great for a Holiday brunch. I can also see them with a little ice cream and caramel sauce on top. Uh oh, I can feel my blood sugar rising already!
oh dear lord. these look heavenly! now you have me wondering if it’s possible to make pumpkin pizzelles and put a scoop of vanilla bean gelato in the middle.
Yummy! We had these for breakfast this morning and it was just the thing to cheer up our day. I substituted 1/4 cup quinoa flour, 1 cup whole wheat flour, and 1 cup white flour for the 2 1/4 cup white flour. Delicious! My 9 month old couldn’t get enough of them. Thanks for the morning treat!
I’m having the same pumpkin issues. I felt so virtuous and pleased with myself when I roasted and pureed my pumpkins, but now I’m looking for ways to use it up. So far I’ve done pumpkin muffins and madeleines and I’m thinking pumpkin ice cream next. I wish I had a waffle maker, because these are beautiful. I love how pumpkin makes things so golden.
Deb,
Oh, please roast that other pumpkin and spend the next few days posting pumplin recipes! My husband can’t get enough pumpkin right now and I’d love to have more ideas. Thanks!
Just a suggestion: the puree freezes well. Freeze the leftovers and make something else with it when you are not so pumpkin-overwhelmed.
those look delicious! i’m not much of a waffle-eater, but they certainly are pretty enough. and if you’re looking for another use for pumpkin, this month’s Bon Appetit has a recipe for pumpkin marscapone pie that i think i’m going to try soon.
Oh thank god you were joking… I like pumpkin and all but sheesh! haha… One of the things I love about your blog is the massive variety in the things you cook, so please don’t change that! :-)
I liked your comment about sometimes throwing away elaborate dishes that you’ve made and just can’t find the desire to eat again – I have felt that same way about some things I’ve made. Woops, it just fell right down the garbage disposal!
keep the pumpkin recipes coming, Deb!! I too am on a pumpkin-recipe-baking-kick, due to leftover pumpkin that needs to be used – these waffles of yours are STUNNING!!
whoa
these look wicked tasty
thnx for passing along the info!
Pumpkin Waffles! I was just researching for a recipe. and Lo and Behold.
I had a can of pumpkin puree that I decided to use in pumpkin bread. I added toasted pecans and chocolate chips. It is delicious.
I don’t like to throw away food either and it happens in our house more often than it should. I need to figure out a better way…to start, buy less food, maybe.
Now all I need is a waffle iron!
I cant seem to find canned pureed pumpkin in my part of the world… but boy do I love pumpkins!!! Maybe you can send some of your leftover puree this way? :p Love your blog. :)
Just when I’d convinced myself that I really could live without a waffle iron!
Mmmm. Getting out the waffle iron is always the way to my guy’s heart. Another possibility — my favorite diner in Vermont serves pumpkin-pecan pancakes at this time of year, with, of course, 100% Vermont maple syrup. I can’t think it would be too hard to find a recipe, or even to invent one. Ditto for the other thing I had in Vermont, several years ago, at one of those candy-filled tourist traps: pumpkin fudge. I can’t tell you how delicious THAT was.
ACK! All week I have wanted waffles and I kept telling myself I didn’t NEED waffles. These pictures tell me that I do in fact NEED waffles.
i read this recipe yesterday morning and didn’t realise how deeply it penetrated my soul until this morning when i came back and was thoroughly enjoying the mushroom polenta posting and scrolled down just enough to see the golden, glowing waffle picture which triggered the memory that last night i dreamt i made these waffles. i am going out today to buy a waffle iron. pumpkin isn’t in season in sydney but i’m going to see if i can rustle some up and i’m having these for breakfast on saturday. your site is just wonderful.
thanks
jill
Ooooh….pumpkin waffles….what a great idea..I love it when a fragrant breakfast greets you home at the end of the day, I can almost smell these now, I am definitely making these pronto!
Made these last night: heavenly! They taste great with apple butter.
Pumpkin mousse–it’s FABULOUS.
Wow do those look good! And they will surely help me out with my pumpkin challenge!
Any ideas about modifying this to make pancakes?
These look absolutely amazing. I can’t wait to try them!
If you’re still looking for some more uses for pumpkin puree, I’ve made some awesome pumpkin mini muffins a few times that I’m sure Alex would love (they have chocolate).
I’m tempted by the waffles though. But I think I might make the pumpkin butter instead.
we are officially addicted to these. made a double batch and froze what we couldn’t eat for brunch. they warm up perfectly in a toaster oven for breakfast “to go”.
the success of this recipe prompted me to make the tiramisu cake for for a gathering tonight… thank you!
I love pumpkin waffles. There’s nothing better. My favorite recipe for them is here – http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/member/views/PUMPKIN-WAFFLES-ULTIMATE-PUMPKIN-1270615 – but I’m going to keep playing with yours, too!
I made these for my husband and three year old son this morning. They were the best waffles any of us had ever tasted. My son ate two of them, licked his plate, and then asked me for more! Never again will he be satisfied with plain Egos.
Side note: Milk required
I just made these for breakfast, and they were really good. Nice and crisp on the outside, tender inside. Not too much work either.
Thanks for a great recipe! I loved these!
you need to find a better way to make it easier to print out this web site. it a waste of paper to make all 17 pages print. thats just wrong this site is a joke.
Uuuh, okay. There is a link to a printer-friendly format (“Print”) at the base of each entry, before the comments begin. For this entry, the link brings you to this page.
Nice Jane.
Deb I am so excited to make these this morning, and comments have been SO helpful! I am going to try to make them and freeze the leftovers for quick frozen waffles the rest of the week. Thanks!
Great waffles! Delicious. I have to agree with the other poster, Justinian, about the pumpkin waffle recipe on epicurious – http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/member/views/PUMPKIN-WAFFLES-ULTIMATE-PUMPKIN-1270615 – which is extremely awesome, as well.
I think I must’ve done something wrong. My husband and I tried this but even after we sprayed our nonstick waffle iron, it still stuck. We eneded up with a crazy mess. Now a good tasting mess, but not quite the pretty waffles we were hoping for. Any suggestions?
Wow…this is just like the recipe I just read on Epicurious.com. Except separating the egg whites.
For those of you who have given up making waffles because they stick. First clean and dry your waffle iron plates to make sure you have removed all old butter, oil, stuck waffle bits, etc. Now spray your waffle iron with Pam high heat cooking spray, the kind used for cooking with woks. I have a 30 year old GE waffle maker that I got from my father-in-law. Nothing sticks to it now! I even use the reversable plates and make killer grilled cheese and grilled ruben sandwiches. The cheese slides right off with a damp towel. It’s best to wipe it down while still warm, something about the steam created by the damp paper towel loosens even burn’t cheese. I recommend using an oven glove as the steam given off can be very hot! Happy waffling!!!
Just made these but as pancakes because my Scooby Doo waffle iron makes teeny waffles and I would have been cooking them all day instead of eating them! Another huge hit! I used 1/2 c. wheat flour and sprinkled a few with pecans. Topped mine with applesauce and chantilly cream…hubby and I are stuffed but happy! And the kitten enjoyed licking pumpkin off the can lid. Silly girl.
These were so wonderful, my kids throughly enjoyed them. All three of them, which doesn’t always happen:) I posted it on my Home and Garden blog, not the recipe, I referred them back here. Thanks so much!!
Delicious! I just tried this recipe – breakfast for dinner, my favourite!. Didn’t change a thing.
we were all out of AP flour used KA white whole wheat and they came out a little fragile (tore easily) but otherwise super tasty! you could hardly tell there was whole wheat in there, yum. Great w/ warm cinnamon honey on top and breakfast soysages on the side. thanks for the recipe!
Nice photos! It brings to life the Gourmet magazine (via Epicurious) recipe from which you adapted these. But like the original recipe, they come out too wet. And the use of buttermilk vs. regular milk just makes the wetness/gumminess more of a problem.
@goodiegumdrops — I agree, they were very moist (I just made them for the first time today) at first, but once I starting leaving them on the waffle iron a bit longer, that helped. But, in both cases, these waffles were a huge hit with my wife, my three-year-old and my one-year-old. Great recipe.
That was the BEST waffles I have ever eaten. Thanks. I have never heard of folding in the egg whites like that, but my mom said that my grandmother used to do it. I don’t think I will ever enjoy waffles again unless I eat these!
Absolutely scrumptious. No problems with being too moist or falling apart. I always use my waffle iron on the highest setting, maybe this helped. I’ve stocked the freezer with extras!
Made them. LOVED THEM. Blogged about them. Have some sitting in my freezer waiting to be toasted for the rest of the week. Mmmmm.
I made these yesterday. Absolutely fabulous! These are the best freaking waffles.
I can’t wait to make these for my Thanksgiving brunch! Do you have any suggestions as to what to top them with? I thought I read somewhere of an apple butter recipe? I’m a newbie so any help is greatly appreciated!
Great recipe, thanks again Deb! Made them Saturday & they were fabulous with maple syrup. I did end up doubling the spices after tasting the first waffle–am a big fan of pumpkin pie spices and with double the spice they still weren’t overly strong. Great leftover warmed up in the toaster as well :-)
Made these this morning for a whole slew of family and they came out spectacularly! I used regular milk instead of buttermilk and pumpkin pie spice in place of the cloves and nutmeg (just using what I had on hand).
Deb, seriously, I’ve tried so many of your recipes that I thought at first glance were “out of my league” but they’ve all come out wonderfully. I trust your instructions so much that I made these for the first time with my in laws over expecting breakfast and with no back up plan. THANK YOU for making me look like I know what I’m doing in the kitchen :)
Made these for my sister over the weekend. We made a double batch because the recipe is basically for half a can of pumpkin and half the buttermilk we got. Luckily, they are yummy because I have 16 waffles in my fridge. We used both my waffle makers to get some speed. I usually like waffles more but I think pumpkin pancakes may be better than waffles….. but these are very good.
This was the recipe that made me an SK fan in the Fall of 2008. I adore these waffles. We have them for Sunday breakfast or a weeknight dinner at least 2-3 times a month. I’ve made them for my family as well as the in-laws. They are truly amazing. I use the VillaWare waffle iron from Williams-Sonoma on the 6th heat setting. PERFECT. A long owed thank you!!
I’m a little late to the pumpkin waffle party, as I just recently stumbled across your site while searching for a roasted potato recipe; I love it and spent hours looking through your archives and making lists of recipes to try! I was wondering what your thoughts would be on substituting mashed sweet potatoes for the pumpkin. A while back I was eating a sweet potato, and sweet-tooth me realized there was no brown sugar after my potato was cooked, so drizzled some maple syrup instead; and it was delightful, and inspired me to create some sweet potato pancakes; however I could not find a recipe and decided to wing it. While it was not a terrible disaster, it was rather disappointing as the sweet potato flavor did not really come through and the texture left something to be desired. I was also wondering like some other posters if waffle batter might be converted to pancake batter easily? Just wanted to say again how much I love your blog and have thoroughly enjoyed the few recipes I have had a chance to make (your key lime cheesecake was a huge hit especially since it was only my second cheesecake making experience; and I used the idea of your mustard roasted potatoes to roast some of the tastiest potatoes I have ever eaten) Thanks!
Could this recipe become gluten free by putting in quinoa flour for the regular flour and can I put in lactaid milk for regular milk? I saw a recipe of chocolate
waffles with only quinoa flour. It’s under Quinoa Cocoa Waffles on google.com.
Katie — I have not tried to make these gluten free but should you give it a spin, let us know how it goes. I am sure others will want to try the same! Thanks.
these are delish! i’ve made them now several times (as pancakes also) and they’re always perfect. i never have buttermilk on hand, but substitute 1 cup yogurt 1 cup of milk and they’re divine! thank you so much for the recipe. i’m a big fan.
not quite what i expected. unfortunately, i was a little disappointed…well, alot disappointed. i was so looking forward to these waffles. though the waffle was crispy and amber brown on the outside, the inside was doughy. i believe the issue is that this recipe is not intended for an eight inch Belgium waffle makers? i welcome any suggestions on how to get it right; i added 1/3 c. batter the iron, and then 1/2c. on the second try. there was still no difference.
These were the BEST waffles!!!! Yes, it took some time to get it all together but the end result was great, everyone loved them! Simply delish!
Deb: Just made these on Saturday-delicious. Could the batter be made the night before?
Oh my, these were fantastic. Worth the extra work (and I used fresh pumpkin because it’s all I had), really, really worth it.
I forgot to put the 6 T of butter in the waffles and they came out just fine. A lot healthier too! I used a regular waffle iron with 1 cup mix per waffle cooked for 3 min each. Didn’t stick, although waffles were not very crispy on outside. Might be because of missed butter. Loved them.
I was looking for the perfect pumpkin waffle recipe and I can’t wait to try this one. One problem, I don’t have buttermilk. What else can I use? Is it ok to just use milk?
You can make your own faux-buttermilk!
Quick tip: if you make Smitten’s pumpkin bread pudding on, say, a Thursday night, while watching 30 Rock, you’ll have just enough pumpkin left over from one can to whip these waffles up on a Saturday morning. Provided, of course, that you’re as devoted to pumpkin (and butter) as we are.
Also, yes, I made my own buttermilk (and swapped in 1/2 cup of whole wheat flour, for kicks) and they were absolutely delicious.
My husband says Aaaaaaaaaaamazing!
I just got done making these for my mom for mother’s day. She loved them, and requested them for next year. As always, you did wonderfully with this recipe. Thank you so much!
Those are the best waffles I have ever eaten in my life. I chopped up walnuts and put them in batter. I put real syrup,not imitation, over them. Out of this world, good!!!! Five stars is not enough!! Amazing!!
just made these and they turned out great… thanks!
Super fluffy and super yummy.
I substituted buttermilk with curdled almond milk, and it turned out well.
Thanks!
My family and I LOVE this recipe! It is delicious any time of year. Last weekend, I substituted soy milk (curdled with lemon juice) for the milk. I also used 1 cup white flour, 1/2 cup spelt flour, 1/2 cup almond flour, and 1/2 cup cornmeal. They were just as delicious and magically became “multigrain” as well.
I really enjoy this blog. Thanks for posting such easy, delicious, dishes. I have never made anything from this blog that didn’t become an instant favorite…
I will need to double the recipe next time-out of this world!!!!!!!
i do agree with the comments about them being slightly, “wet”…damp, maybe. i’d like to fix that if i could. BUT….marvelous even damp.
LOVED these! Made them this morning after searching on pinterest for a yummy pumpkin waffle recipe … am freezing the leftovers for quick snacks for the kids!
I just made a gluten free version subbing equal parts Bob Red Mills AP GF flour (I am not GF but jujst keep as package in the cupboard) and they turned out wonderful. Fluffly moist…. perfect. I would recomend this variation for a GF alternative. Solid recipe Deb!
Google led me here, when I was looking for a breakfast recipe to use some leftover pumpkin. Let me just say, sometimes recipes like this SOUND good, but don’t really deliver. This was all that and an extra helping. My (picky!) four year old had three helpings. And an hour later, she wandered back into the kitchen and asked if there were any more waffles. It’s a good thing this makes a big batch!
These are the absolute best pumpkin waffles! I have made these 3 times and plan to make them again this morning. The recipe makes a lot of waffles. I just saw the review about skipping the butter so I may try that this morning. A wonderful fall treat! Yum!
Oh so good! Just made these! Threw some chocolate chips in a few – some crystalized ginger in a few too. I like the latter, but my boyfriend thought they were weird. Delicious! Thanks for helping me use up my extra pureĆ©!
Just made these and they are delicious! Thanks for the great recipe!
My husband is not really a breakfast bread sort of a person. He wants fresh fruit or a smoothie, or something light each day. This is probably the first time I’ve ever made a baked good for breakfast that he didn’t complain about.Meaning: he really really liked it. And you’re right…the house still smells delicious!
I made these for Thanksgiving brunch. Doubled the recipe because I didn’t think it would make enough, but that was a (delicious) mistake, now I can freeze some :)
The only change I made was to add some nutmeg. Excellent recipe.
Deb, this recipe is almost word-for-word the recipe Gourmet published in 2000. Aside from a couple small changes … the ingredients, their order, the quantities, and the directions match basically identically. Not very cool to steal others’ work, when you’re a prominent blogger. (frowny face)
Stealing would be passing off someone else’s work as my own — full credit is loudly given, as the recipe was wonderful and needed little change. The word “adapted” is used to give people a head’s up that the recipe is not exactly the same due to minor changes.
OMG baking is SO dependant on the ingredients, order and quantities. Chill Adam, artists interpretation. . . .
Amazing with pulled pork!
just made these with leftover frozen pumpkin — they were amazing and my two little boys devoured them. thanks so much.
what can I sub for the buttermilk? I like to make vegan breakfast when I can and these just sound so yummy. esp. cuase i love pumpkin so mucj!
My husband made these last night and we had them for dinner w/ some whipped cream he made up… I could have sworn I was eating pumpkin pie! They are amazing!
These sound great! How many waffles does it make?
Yum! I had a pie pumpkin from my CSA to use up, and this recipe made for a wonderful Sunday brunch. Thank you for always having such consistently delicious recipes. Yours is always the first blog I check when I need a recipe for a specific ingredient, or when I’m in the mood for something specific (hello, oatmeal cookies!)
I can always count on you for a good pumpkin or buttermilk recipe…but to incorporate both in one…you’re amazing!
I heard about this website last week from my mom’s friend and I’m soo glad I did! This morning I made this recipe for pumpkin waffles for my husband and I and they were out of this world! On top I added some sauteed apples (2 apples cooked iin a tad of butter, some brown sugar and cinnamon) and a squirt of whipped cream. I’m new to this whole cooking thing since we recently bought our first home, but this recipe was easy to follow, iinexpensive to make and really impressed him! THANK YOU! I can’t wait to try other recipes on here!
OMG! These are now my go to waffles. I only used it because it called for 1 cup of pumpkin, but they are amazing! And, they made so many that I will have plenty of them in the freezer for quick breakfasts. I didn’t have buttermilk or lemon juice/vinegar but I tried them anyway and I’m happy I did because they are my new flavorite! :D Oh, and I also added nutmeg because it is, in my opinion, a must in anything involving pumpkin.
These are wonderfully delicious! You might want to note that they make a bizillion if you use a regular waffle iron, instead of a Belgian waffle iron.
These were indeed the ultimate pumpkin waffles. I made these tonight, following the recipe to a “T”, and they were so tasty. No one spice overpowered and the flavor was spot on! Thank you for doing all the hard work in creating this recipe and then posting it so the rest of us don’t have to go through that and can jump to the end result which is a truly great recipe.
So good! Only had 1 cup buttermilk so I used 1 cup milk with it. Added some freshly grated nutmeg – perfect pumpkin waffles, thank you!! My sick 18-month old requested “vaffle” – so happy i could oblige him!
I made these! They are perfect. This recipe is a keeper!!
My 2 year old decided to pour the just-separated whites in with the rest of the egg mixture. Rather than throwing it out I kept going. Much to my surprise they were still light and fluffy like last time. We used white whole wheat flour for all of the flour, pumpkin pie spice for the spices, and runny homemade yogurt for the buttermilk. They were still delicious. Last time we made them following the recipe. Outstanding! Thanks for sharing.
These waffles are our family favorite. I just made them for the fourth time and based on our preferences, we increased all the spices a bit, using heaping measures. A dash or two of almond extract is nice too. I always use whole wheat for at least half of the flour and it still gives fluffy waffles. This makes a ton using a regular waffle iron, so for our family of three, I get to freeze at least 6-7 waffles for busy mornings…bonus!!