These Fluffy Japanese Soufflé Pancakes are the kind of breakfast that stops you mid-bite. The edges are lightly golden, the centers are warm and pillowy, and every single forkful feels like it melts before you even chew. I first tried fluffy Japanese pancakes at a tiny café tucked into a busy street, and I remember thinking, "I have to figure out how to make these at home." Turns out, with just a handful of simple ingredients and a little patience, you absolutely can. These come together with a meringue-folded batter and a low-and-slow steam cook that puffs them up beautifully, no special café equipment needed.

If you love cozy weekend breakfast ideas, you might also enjoy my Turkey Sausage, German Potato Pancakes, Cottage Cheese Egg Bake, Vegan Sourdough Discard Breakfast, or these fun Cowboy Breakfast Sliders on the side.
Why You'll Love These Fluffy Japanese Soufflé Pancakes
These fluffy Japanese pancakes earn their place as a weekend staple for a few very good reasons.
They're genuinely impressive without requiring professional skills. The technique is careful but not complicated, and once you understand the meringue step, everything else follows naturally. They're also made with ingredients most home kitchens already have: eggs, a little flour, milk, vanilla, and sugar. No specialty imports, no hard-to-find tools.
The texture is unlike any other pancake. Regular pancakes are good, but fluffy Japanese soufflé pancakes have this airy, custard-soft interior that regular batter simply can't produce. The low heat and steam method is the key, and it genuinely works every time once you get the hang of it.
They also photograph beautifully, which is a bonus if you love sharing breakfast moments. Topped with whipped cream, fresh berries, and a dusting of powdered sugar, a stack of fluffy Japanese pancakes looks like something from a café menu.
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Ingredients
Here's everything you need for this fluffy Japanese soufflé pancake recipe, plus a little note on why each ingredient matters.
For the Soufflé Pancakes:
- 2 large eggs (50 g each, without shell): The foundation of these fluffy Japanese pancakes. The yolks build the base batter, and the whites become the meringue that gives the pancakes their height.
- 1½ tablespoon whole milk: Adds a little moisture and richness to the yolk batter without weighing it down.
- ¼ teaspoon pure vanilla extract: A small touch that rounds out the flavor and adds warmth.
- ¼ cup cake flour: Cake flour has a lower protein content than all-purpose, which keeps these soufflé pancakes extra tender and soft.
- ½ teaspoon baking powder: Gives a gentle lift alongside the meringue for that iconic tall, fluffy result.
- 2 tablespoon sugar: Sweetens the batter just enough and helps stabilize the meringue.
- 1 tablespoon neutral oil: For greasing the pan so the pancakes cook evenly and release cleanly.
- 2 tablespoon water: Added to the pan for steaming, which is what helps the fluffy Japanese soufflé pancakes cook through without deflating.
For the Fresh Whipped Cream (optional):
- ½ cup heavy whipping cream: Whips up into a light, billowy topping that pairs perfectly with the soft pancakes.
- 1½ tablespoon sugar: Sweetens the cream just gently.
For Toppings:
- 1 tablespoon confectioners' sugar: A fine dusting on top adds a beautiful finishing touch.
- Fresh berries: Strawberries, blueberries, or raspberries add color, brightness, and a little tartness.
- Maple syrup: Classic, rich, and the perfect drizzle for fluffy Japanese pancakes.
See recipe card for quantities.
Instructions
Making fluffy Japanese soufflé pancakes is all about patience and gentle handling. Follow these steps carefully and you'll have the most beautiful, tall, cloud-like pancakes of your life.
Weigh and prep your ingredients: For best results, weigh everything before you start. If using measuring cups, fluff your flour first, spoon it in, and level it off. Precision matters more here than with regular pancakes.
Preheat your pan: Set a 12-inch nonstick frying pan over the lowest heat setting and let it warm gently. You're aiming for around 300°F (150°C). Low and slow is the whole secret to fluffy Japanese soufflé pancakes.
Make the whipped cream: Fill a large bowl halfway with ice water and set a medium bowl on top. Add the heavy cream and sugar, then whip on high speed until medium-firm peaks form, meaning the tips curl slightly when you lift the beater. Cover and refrigerate until serving.

Separate the eggs and chill the whites: Separate your egg yolks and whites into two clean bowls. Pop the egg whites in the freezer for about 15 minutes. Cold whites whip up to a more stable, stiff meringue, and that stability is everything for fluffy Japanese pancakes.
Mix the yolk batter: Whisk the egg yolks, milk, and vanilla together until the mixture looks pale, slightly thick, and frothy. Then sift in the cake flour and baking powder, and fold everything together gently by hand until just combined. Don't overmix, you want it smooth but not worked.
Beat the meringue: Pull your egg whites from the freezer. Beat on medium speed until frothy and opaque, then begin adding the sugar gradually, one-third at a time, while increasing to high speed. Keep beating until stiff peaks form. The tips should stand straight up or curl only slightly. This meringue is what turns ordinary batter into genuinely fluffy Japanese soufflé pancakes.
Fold the meringue into the batter: Add one-third of the meringue into the yolk batter and fold gently to lighten it. Add half of the remaining meringue and fold again. Then transfer the yolk mixture into the bowl with the last of the meringue and fold until just smooth. Be slow and deliberate here; you want to keep as much air as possible.
Cook the pancakes: Lightly grease your preheated pan with neutral oil. Scoop the batter into tall mounds for 3 pancakes, using a generous scoop for each. Stack a second scoop on top of each mound right away. Pour 1 tablespoon of water into the pan around (not on) the pancakes, cover immediately with the lid, and cook for 6 to 7 minutes.

Add the final scoop: At the 2-minute mark, carefully lift the lid and add one more small scoop of batter on top of each pancake. Cover again and let the timer finish. This layering is what gives fluffy Japanese soufflé pancakes their impressive height.
Flip the pancakes: Gently slide an offset spatula under the first pancake, lift it slightly, and roll it over. Be patient here, they are delicate. Add the remaining 1 tablespoon of water, cover, and cook another 4 to 5 minutes until the bottoms are golden and the pancakes feel set.
Plate and top: Transfer the pancakes carefully to plates. Top with freshly whipped cream, a handful of berries, a dusting of confectioners' sugar, and a drizzle of maple syrup. Serve immediately while they're still tall and warm.
Substitutions
No cake flour? Make your own by replacing 2 tablespoons of all-purpose flour per cup with cornstarch. It closely mimics the soft texture that makes fluffy Japanese pancakes so tender.
No whole milk? Any milk works, though whole milk gives the richest result. Oat milk or almond milk can work in a pinch.
No heavy cream? Skip the whipped cream topping or use coconut cream for a dairy-free version. It whips up nicely when chilled.
No berries? Sliced banana, kiwi, or a drizzle of fruit compote all pair beautifully with fluffy Japanese soufflé pancakes.
Equipment
- Large nonstick frying pan with a lid (12-inch)
- Electric hand mixer or stand mixer with balloon whisk
- Hand whisk
- Offset spatula
- Mixing bowls
- Sifter
- Measuring cups and spoons
- Kitchen scale (strongly recommended)
Storage Tips
Fluffy Japanese soufflé pancakes are best eaten the moment they come off the pan. They naturally deflate a little as they cool, which is completely normal.
If you need to store leftovers, wrap them loosely and refrigerate for up to one day. Reheat gently in a covered pan over low heat with a splash of water to re-steam them. They won't be quite as tall the second time, but they'll still taste soft and delicious.
Freezing is not recommended, as the delicate meringue structure doesn't hold up well after thawing.
Expert Tips for Perfect Fluffy Japanese Pancakes
Work fast once the batter is ready. The meringue starts to deflate once it's folded in, so have your pan ready to go before you start mixing.
Cold egg whites are non-negotiable. The freezer step makes a real difference. Warm whites won't whip to the same stiff, stable meringue that holds up your fluffy Japanese soufflé pancakes.
Low heat is everything. If your pan is too hot, the outsides will set before the insides cook through. 300°F (150°C) and patience are your best tools.
Don't skip the steam. That tablespoon of water creates the steam environment that lets fluffy Japanese pancakes cook gently all the way through without drying out or deflating.
Fold slowly. Every fold that deflates the meringue is height you lose. Take your time and use a wide spatula to keep the batter as airy as possible.
FAQ
What are fluffy Japanese soufflé pancakes?
Fluffy Japanese soufflé pancakes are an extra-tall, cloud-like style of pancake made with a meringue-folded batter. They're cooked low and slow with steam, which gives them their iconic height and melt-in-your-mouth texture. They originated in Japanese cafés and became a worldwide trend for good reason.
How do you make pancakes extra fluffy?
The secret is folding whipped egg white meringue into the yolk batter. The trapped air in the meringue is what creates that light, airy structure. Cold egg whites, careful folding, and a low-heat steam cook are the three main keys to fluffy Japanese pancakes.
Why did my fluffy Japanese pancakes deflate?
The most common reasons are overmixing the meringue into the batter, cooking on too high a heat, or lifting the lid too often. Give the pancakes time to set under the lid, and fold the meringue as gently as possible.
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Pairing
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Cloud-Like Japanese Soufflé Pancakes
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Separate the egg yolks and whites into different bowls, then place the whites in the freezer for 15 minutes.
- Whisk the yolks with milk and vanilla extract until pale and frothy.
- Sift in cake flour and baking powder, gently folding to combine without overmixing.
- Beat the chilled egg whites until foamy, then gradually add sugar while whipping to stiff peaks.
- Gently fold one-third of the meringue into the yolk mixture by hand until incorporated.
- Add half of the remaining meringue and carefully fold to preserve airiness.
- Transfer the yolk mixture into the remaining meringue bowl and fold together until fully homogeneous.
- Preheat a nonstick pan over very low heat (around 300ºF / 150ºC) and lightly brush with oil.
- Scoop a tall mound of batter into the pan and stack a second scoop on top for each pancake.
- Add water to the pan, cover with lid, and cook for 6–7 minutes to create steam.
- At the 2-minute mark, add a final scoop on top of each pancake if needed, cover, and continue cooking.
- Using an offset spatula, gently flip each pancake with a rolling motion, add a splash of water, cover, and cook for another 4–5 minutes.
- Transfer cooked pancakes to plates and top with fresh berries, whipped cream, dust with confectioners’ sugar, and drizzle with maple syrup.













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