Marion Cunningham’s Lemon Pancakes
Updated May 1, 2025

- Total Time
- 25 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 3eggs, separated
- ¼cup all-purpose flour
- ¾cup cottage cheese
- ¼cup (half a stick) butter, melted, plus more butter for greasing skillet
- 2tablespoons sugar
- ¼teaspoon salt
- 1tablespoon grated lemon zest
Preparation
- Step 1
In a bowl, stir together the egg yolks, flour, cottage cheese, butter, sugar, salt and lemon zest until well mixed. In the bowl of a stand mixer, beat the egg whites until they hold stiff peaks.
- Step 2
With large spoon or spatula, fold whites into yolk mixture, stirring gently until there are no yellow or white streaks.
- Step 3
Heat skillet or griddle over medium heat. Grease lightly and spoon out about three large tablespoons of batter for each pancake. Cook slowly for about 1½ minutes, then turn pancake over and cook for about 30 seconds. Keep pancakes warm in 250-degree oven until ready to serve.
Private Notes
Comments
Use ricotta in lieu of cottage cheese. Beat egg whites with immersion blender. Marinate equal amounts of strawberries, raspberries and blueberries with I T. sugar and 1 T. honey and I T. triple sec overnight. Spoon over pancakes with a dollop of sour cream.
I have Marion Cunningham's cookbook from which this recipe comes. Have had it since it was first published in 1987. This is the exact recipe. The Breakfast Book is a wonderful one, mine shows use and now use will be revived because I'd forgotten how wonderful it is. And to my surprise, I have a first edition of the book. Only book nerds would probably appreciate this. :-)
Can ricotta be substituted for cottage cheese? If yes, does it matter if it's low fat? I guess same question about cottage cheese. Thanks.
Would adding cream of tarter to the egg white have any negative effects on the recipe? I always have a hard time folding whipped egg whites into other things without deflating it and I find cream of tarter usually helpful.
I almost didn’t separate the eggs and whip up the whites, but I’m glad I did. The final flavor and texture made it all worth it.
I substituted a ripe banana for the butter and used extra butter for cooking - couldn't even taste the banana and they were super fluffy. I'd use more zest next time though.