List of pancakes

This is a list of notable pancakes. A pancake is a flat cake, often thin and round, prepared from a starch-based batter and cooked on a hot surface such as a griddle or frying pan. In Britain, pancakes are often unleavened, and resemble a crêpe. In North America, a raising agent is used (typically baking powder). The North American pancake is similar to a Scotch pancake or drop scone.
Pancakes








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- Æbleskiver – Danish traditional batter cakes[1]
 - Akok – Traditional Malaysian snack
 - Apam balik – Asian pancake
 - Appam – Fermented rice pancake from South India and Sri Lanka
 - Arepas – Ground maize flatbread - fluffy pancakes from Colombia
 - Baghrir – Pancake dish in Maghrebi cuisine
 - Bánh cuốn – Vietnamese stuffed rice noodles
 - Bánh rế – Vietnamese sweet potato pancake
 - Bánh xèo – Vietnamese stuffed pancake
 - Bein mont – Traditional Burmese snack
 - Blini – Eastern European pancake
 - Borlengo – Italian thin flatbread
 - Boûkète – Belgian pancake
 - Boxty – Traditional Irish potato pancake
 - Burgo – Indonesian rice pancake
 - Cachapa – Corn pancake from Venezuela
 - Chalboribbang – South Korean confection
 - Chataamari – Newar cuisine
 - Chinese pancake – Chinese flatbread
 - Cholermus – Traditional dish from Switzerland
 - Cong you bing – Chinese savory flatbread
 - Crempog – Welsh pancake served for celebrations
 - Crêpe – Thin pancake in French cuisine 
- Crêpe bretonne – Northwestern French dessert
 - Crêpe Suzette – French citrus and pancake dessert
 - Palatschinken – Type of pancake
 
 - Crumpet – Small unsweetened griddle bread
 - Dadar gulung – Indonesian coconut pancake
 - Danbing – Taiwanese egg crêpe
 - Daral – Filipino dessert crêpe
 - David Eyre's pancake – Pancake originating from the United States[2]
 - Dorayaki – Japanese confection
 - Dosa – Thin crepe originating from South India
 - Dutch baby pancake – Pancake originating from the United States[3]
 - Egg waffle – Hong Kong dish
 - Farinata – Chickpea pancake
 - Ficelle picarde – French stuffed pancake
 - Filloa – Thin round cake made of eggs, milk, and flour
 - Flädle – Pancake ribbons added to soup
 - Fläskpannkaka – Swedish oven-made pancake
 - Funkaso
 - Galette – French flat cake or pancake
 - Gundel pancake – Hungarian pancake
 - Guokui – Chinese flatbread
 - Gyabrag – Pancake in Tibetan cuisine[4]
 - Harcha
 - Hirayachi – Japanese savory pancake
 - Hortobágyi palacsinta – Hungarian crêpes stuffed with meat
 - Hotteok – Korean-Chinese filled pancake dish
 - Injera – Fermented flatbread from Ethiopia and Eritrea
 - Jemput-jemput – Malaysian and Indonesian fritter
 - Jeon – Korean pan-fried dish 
- Bindaetteok – Korean fried mung bean pancake
 - Gamjajeon – Korean potato dish
 - Hwajeon – Korean pan-fried rice cake
 - Kimchijeon – Kimchi pancake
 - Meat jun – Korean-Hawaiian fusion dish
 - Memiljeon – Korean buckwheat pancake
 - Pajeon – Korean pan-fried scallion dish
 
 - Jianbing – Chinese street food - Chinese pancake
 - Johnnycake – American cornmeal flatbread
 - Kaiserschmarrn – Sweet pancake dish
 - Kalathappam – Indian dessert
 - Khanom bueang – Thai pancake
 - Khanom krok – Thai dessert cooked in a mortar pan – Thai coconut-rice pancake
 - Kouign-amann – Breton pastry
 - Kue ape – Indonesian type of pancake
 - Kue cubit – Indonesian traditional cake
 - Kue cucur – Indonesian traditional snack
 - Laobing – Chinese flatbread
 - Latke – Jewish potato pancake dish
 - Masala dosa – Variant of South Indian food dosa
 - Malawach – Yemenite Jewish flatbread
 - Memela – Masa cake in Mexican cuisine
 - Milcao – Chilean potato pancake
 - Mofletta – Maghrebi Jewish pancake
 - Mont lin maya – Crisp, round savory pancake
 - Msemen – North African traditional flatbread
 - Munini-imo – Pancake made with fermented potato flour
 - Murtabak – Stuffed pancake with various fillings
 - Neyyappam – South Indian snack
 - Okonomiyaki – Japanese savory pancake
 - Oladyi – Small, thick pancakes or fritters common in East Slavic cuisine
 - Palatschinke – Type of pancake
 - Pan bati – Aruban bread
 - Pannenkoek – Pancake originating from the Netherlands
 - Paniyaram – Indian dish
 - Panyalam – Traditional Filipino fried rice pancake
 - Pashti – Indian flatbread
 - Pathiri – Indian food
 - Pek nga – Traditional Malaysian pancake
 - Pesaha Appam – Indian rice cake
 - Pesarattu – Type of Indian bread
 - Pikelet – Thick Australian pancake
 - Pinyaram – Minangkabau traditional cake
 - Ploye – Brayon flatbread (modern-day Canada)
 - Poffertjes – Traditional Dutch batter treat
 - Potato pancake – Shallow-fried pancakes of grated or ground potato
 - Qatayef – Pancake dumplings
 - Quarkkäulchen – German potato pancake dish
 - Racuchy – Polish sweet dish
 - Rava dosa – Thin crepe originating from South India
 - Roti canai – Southeast Asian Indian-influenced flatbread dish
 - Roti prata – Southeast Asian Indian-influenced flatbread dish
 - Roti Jala – Southeast Asian pancake
 - Salukara – Pancake from Filipino cuisine
 - Scallion pancake – Chinese savory flatbread – also referred to as spring onion pancake
 - Scovardă – Romanian pastry
 - Sel roti – Nepalese sweet rice bread
 - Serabi – Indonesian type of pancake
 - Spring pancake – Chinese dish
 - Staffordshire oatcake – Savoury pancake from England
 - Suncake – Taiwanese flaky cakes filled with maltose
 - Surnoli – Sweet Indian pancake
 - Swedish pancake – Thin round cake made of eggs, milk, and flour
 - Syrniki – Fried quark pancakes from Eastern European cuisine
 - Tattie scone – Scottish potato dish
 - Thalipeeth – Indian flatbread
 - Tortilla – Thin, flat, unleavened bread originally made from corn
 - Tlacoyo – Mexican dish
 - Touton – Newfoundland pancake
 - Uttapam – Type of dosa from South India
 - Wheel Pie – Taiwanese pastry dessert
 
See also
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pancakes.
- ^ Ojakangas, Beatrice A. Scandinavian Cooking. p. 224. ISBN 9781452905495. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
 - ^ Clark, Melissa (7 September 2010). In the Kitchen with A Good Appetite. ISBN 9781401323769. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
 - ^ Pappas, Lou Seibert (3 February 2005). Pancakes & Waffles. p. 27. ISBN 9780811845519. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
 - ^ Li, Tao; Jiang, Hongying (2003). Tibetan Customs. p. 36. ISBN 9787508502540. Retrieved 18 January 2015.