Dutch Pancakes, The Best In Amsterdam | PANCAKES Amsterdam (2025)

PANCAKESAmsterdam

not just your usual pancake

Strolling through Amsterdam and getting a bit hungry? We have the perfect solution: Dutch pancakes! They can be eaten as a snack or as a main course during lunch or dinner. A Dutch pancake is good at any time of the day. Come in, relax and browse our menu with a lot of choices and variations.

Dutch pancakes are traditional and worldwide famous, and there is a reason for that. They come with a topping of your choice or just plain. And it is the topping that makes the pancakes in a pancake restaurant so special. There are the traditional toppings, savoury and mouth-watering, and there are the sweet toppings, for those who have a sweet tooth.

Dutch pancakes available at four locations
PANCAKES Amsterdam hassix locations where you can enjoy the Dutch pancakes, all on top spots in Amsterdam centre, near sites tourist like to visit. So, you don’t have to go far to sit down for a top-notch quality pancake. You will find specialised pancake restaurants (we call them pannenkoekenhuizen = pancake houses) in practically any town or city in the Netherlands and Belgium. Not only for the tourists; the locals as well like to go out and eat in a pancake restaurant. In fact, many a birthday party is celebrated there, both for kids and adults.

It is not only the fact that a large pancake is budget-friendly. It is the fact that there are so many varieties to choose from, that everybody in any party is happy to find something to their liking. Furthermore, pancake houses are typically homely, friendly places where the staff does not mind when the kids are running around or are a bit noisy. Try that in any other restaurant…

XL-plates
You have pancakes that Americans typically eat at breakfast. They are a lot smaller than their Dutch counterparts and spongier. The Dutch pancake is large (you need XL plates for them) and very thin. Many people roll them up, topping and all before they cut them into pieces or eat them from their hand. The Dutch pancake is allmost as thin as the French crêpe. The French know some toppings: with powdered sugar, Nutella, syrup, or jam. And plain, of course. That’s where the Dutch are only warming up…

Apart from these toppings, the Dutch have other sweet toppings like cherries with ice-cream, ice-cream stand alone, strawberries (with or without cream and/or ice-cream), chocolate and sometimes honey. The savoury ones include apple, apple/bacon, banana, ham/cheese, bacon/cheese, cheese, goat cheese, camembert, smoked chicken, to name a few. Of course, every pannenkoekenhuis has its speciality or variety, or a pancake of the week/month. Want to see whats on the menu of PANCAKES Amsterdam, enjoy over30 different pancakes.

Create your own Dutch pancake
PANCAKES Amsterdam takes it one step further. Apart from their own creative pancakes you can create your very own pancake with the following ingredients or add one ingredient (or more) to the ones listed on the menu. What could you make with these toppings: whipped cream / strawberry jam / ice cream / raisins / chocolate sauce / maple syrup / raspberry sauce / blueberry sauce / mushroom / onion / spinach / paprika / zucchini / tomato / apple / banana / bacon / ham / Dutch cheese / camembert / goat cheese / pesto / almonds / candied ginger / crème fraiche / guacamole / smoked chicken / strawberries / smoked salmon?

I am sure there is something to your liking here!
Do Dutch people only eat pancakes at pancake restaurants? Nope! The Dutch eat pancakes at home as well. And the kids love to help mom or dad making them. Eating pancakes at home is also a real family thing! Just like going out to a pancakes restaurant. Making pancakes really is a ‘piece of cake’, excuse the comparison. All you need is flour, milk, eggs, a pinch of salt and the toppings you want to add. Not seldom the fruit bowl or fridge is plundered to make ‘specialties of the house’. You can take any variety of flour and replace milk by soya milk.

Stack your Dutch pancakes
After you have put all the ingredients together, you mix them all and beat them into a nice, liquid batter. Then the fun can start! You fry a ladle of the mixture in a frying pan with butter or oil in it. Flip the pancake after the edges start browning. If you are an expert, you flip the pancake without any utensil to assist you. You can choose to make a stack of pancakes and then start eating them or take turns at the stove. Be prepared; the firsthoem made Dutch pancake is always a misfit but tastes good anyway. Probably the frying pan is not in the mood yet to do the job.

Just like pancake restaurants have an informal and cosy character, eating pancakes at home is also an informal matter. And cosy, very cosy. Don’t be surprised when the youngest kid ate just one too many… kids tend to do that and yet live through the night, fortunately.

Want to enjoy Dutch pancakes?
We invite you to have an excellent pancake breakfast, lunch or diner at one of our6 locations, four situated in the centre of Amsterdam.
For groups we advise you to make areservation, so you definitely have a nice place.

Dutch Pancakes, The Best In Amsterdam | PANCAKES Amsterdam (1)
Dutch Pancakes, The Best In Amsterdam | PANCAKES Amsterdam (2025)

FAQs

Dutch Pancakes, The Best In Amsterdam | PANCAKES Amsterdam? ›

The Dutch pancake is large (you need XL plates for them) and very thin. Many people roll them up, topping and all before they cut them into pieces or eat them from their hand. The Dutch pancake is allmost as thin as the French crêpe. The French know some toppings: with powdered sugar, Nutella, syrup, or jam.

What is special about Dutch pancakes? ›

The Dutch pancake is large (you need XL plates for them) and very thin. Many people roll them up, topping and all before they cut them into pieces or eat them from their hand. The Dutch pancake is allmost as thin as the French crêpe. The French know some toppings: with powdered sugar, Nutella, syrup, or jam.

What is the difference between Dutch pancakes and regular pancakes? ›

What's the difference between a Dutch pancake and an American pancake? A Dutch pancake is usually larger and much thinner than the thick and fluffy American pancakes. If you order a Dutch pancake at PANCAKES Amsterdam, you will get a delicious thin pancake with a diameter of 32 centimeters.

What is the smallest pancake restaurant in Amsterdam? ›

You can find Upstairs Pancakes in a typical Amsterdam house dated back till 1539, in the centre of Amsterdam. Established in 1962, it is the smallest restaurant in Europe with only 4 tables. By climbing a very steep staircase, you reach the restaurant on the second floor.

Are Dutch baby pancakes from the Netherlands? ›

Unlike other types of pancakes, Dutch babies are baked in the oven instead of fried on the stove. They also don't contain leaving ingredients, such as baking powder or baking soda. Despite its name, the Dutch baby is technically an American invention — though it is derived from a traditional German recipe.

What does pancake mean in Dutch? ›

pannenkoek. a savoury pancake. (Translation of pancake from the PASSWORD English–Dutch Dictionary © 2022 K Dictionaries Ltd)

Why is my Dutch pancake flat? ›

The recipe doesn't contain any chemical leavening as the milk and eggs create steam that causes the Dutch Baby to rise. If the pancake was a little flat it is most likely that either the oven or the skillet (or other pan) was not hot enough.

Why is a Dutch baby called that? ›

While these pancakes are derived from the German pancake dish, it is said that the name Dutch baby was coined by one of Victor Manca's daughters, where "Dutch" perhaps was her corruption of the German autonym deutsch. Manca's Cafe claimed that it owned the trademark for Dutch babies in 1942.

What are pancakes called in Europe? ›

France, Belgium, Italy, Portugal, and Switzerland

Crêpes, popular in France, Belgium, Switzerland and Portugal, are made from flour, milk, and eggs. They are thin pancakes and are served with a sweet (fruit, ice cream, jam, chocolate spread, powdered sugar) or savoury filling (cheese, ham, seafood, spinach).

Which restaurant is completely pink in Amsterdam? ›

An amazing, fully pink 1000m2 surface! MaMa Kelly Amsterdam has a classy design, with charm, and some glamour. The charm comes from the custom designed details in the interior: the carousel-bar, coffee-bar, bannisters, lighting, fabric-walls, brass houses, the secret bar, and even the toilets were custom made.

What is the waffle thing in Amsterdam? ›

A stroopwafel (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈstroːpˌʋaːfəl]; lit. 'syrup waffle') is a thin, round waffle made from two layers of sweet baked dough held together by syrup filling.

What are the street food pancakes in Amsterdam? ›

Poffertjes are a traditional Dutch treat. Resembling small, fluffy pancakes, they are made with yeast and buckwheat flour. They have a light, spongy texture. Typically, poffertjes are a sweet treat, served with powdered sugar and butter.

What do Dutch people call pancakes? ›

I've grown up with Dutch pancakes called 'Pannenkoeken' in Dutch. In the Netherlands pancakes are often eaten for dinner. But they're also easily eaten for breakfast and lunch as well.

What do they eat for breakfast in the Netherlands? ›

There isn't a big difference between what the Dutch eat for breakfast or lunch. As a basis we mostly eat bread, crackers or biscuits (beschuit). Popular toppings on bread and crackers are cheese, chocolate sprinkles, peanut butter, meat, jam and chocolate spread.

Why is my Dutch baby so eggy? ›

If you would like the inside of the finished dish to be a little less "egg-y" then cut the number of eggs down to 3, and many many reviewers also found that just 3 Tablespoons of butter worked better for them.

What is the difference between Dutch and French pancakes? ›

French Crepes and Dutch Pancakes are built with 3 basic ingredients: flour, milk and eggs. The only difference between the two are that a French Crepe is considerably thinner as its batter uses twice as much milk. Dutch Pancakes are often mistaken for the more commonly known 'pancake', called Dutch Babies.

Why are they called Dutch baby pancakes? ›

While these pancakes are derived from the German pancake dish, it is said that the name Dutch baby was coined by one of Victor Manca's daughters, where "Dutch" perhaps was her corruption of the German autonym deutsch. Manca's Cafe claimed that it owned the trademark for Dutch babies in 1942.

Why are poffertjes important to the Netherlands? ›

Legend has it that poffertjes may even be divine in origin. Also known as broedertjes, or 'little brothers', they are thought to have originated in a Dutch abbey, where they were created to use as a part of the communion host.

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