Giant Sweet Skillet Puffy Corn Pancake with Beautiful Blackberry Sauce

Giant Sweet Skillet Puffy Corn Pancake with Beautiful Blackberry Sauce
Corn cakes in the United States reflect a deep history of cultural interaction. Rooted in Native American traditions, where maize was an important crop and a cornerstone of spiritual and community life, these simple cakes are a testament to resilience and adaptation. While these original recipes have evolved into regional variations like Southern hoecakes and johnnycakes through the centuries, it's important to recognize and acknowledge the profound legacy of the Native communities who first created them.
They're crispy on the outside and soft in the middle, with a sweet and fruity Beautiful Blackberry Sauce drizzled on top. Serve with a glass of refreshing Southern Blackberry Limeade.
Happy & Healthy Cooking,
Fun-Da-Mentals Kitchen Skills
- whisk :
to beat or stir ingredients vigorously with a fork or whisk to mix, blend, or incorporate air.
Equipment Checklist
- Small pot or saucepan
- Large frying pan or skillet
- Medium mixing bowl
- Large mixing bowl
- Dry measuring cups
- Measuring spoons
- Liquid measuring cup
- Wooden spoon
- Whisk
- Heat-resistant spatula or pancake turner
Ingredients
Giant Sweet Skillet Puffy Corn Pancake with Beautiful Blackberry Sauce
- Sauce:
- 1 C fresh or frozen blackberries
- 1/4 C granulated sugar
- 1/2 C water
- Pancake:
- 1 C all-purpose flour **(for GLUTEN ALLERGY sub gluten-free/nut-free all-purpose flour)**
- 1 C yellow cornmeal
- 2 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 2 C water
- 1/4 C granulated sugar
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 C frozen corn kernels
- 1/4 C vegetable oil **
- 2 eggs **(for EGG ALLERGY sub 2 T ground flaxseeds + 1/2 C water, whisked)**
Food Allergen Substitutions
Giant Sweet Skillet Puffy Corn Pancake with Beautiful Blackberry Sauce
- Gluten/Wheat: Substitute gluten-free/nut-free all-purpose flour.
- Soy: Substitute canola oil or other nut-free oil for vegetable oil.
- Egg: For 2 eggs, substitute 2 T ground flaxseeds + 1/2 C water.
Instructions
Giant Sweet Skillet Puffy Corn Pancake with Beautiful Blackberry Sauce
intro
Giant Sweet Skillet Puffy Corn Pancakes are on the menu today! Corn pancakes are made the same way as a typical pancake. The only difference is the inclusion of cornmeal and corn in a corn pancake. The cornmeal helps make the pancake batter closer to a cornbread batter. The resulting corn pancake will be light and fluffy, like cornbread fresh from the oven. Drizzle the corncakes with the Beautiful Blackberry Sauce! Enjoy!
measure + simmer
We'll make the blackberry sauce first! Measure and pour 1 cup blackberries, 1/4 cup sugar, and 1/2 cup water into a small pot over medium heat. Stir with a wooden spoon, squishing the blackberries as you stir. Simmer the sauce on medium-low for 5 to 8 minutes or until the sauce is the right consistency for drizzling.
scrumptious science
Sugar is a molecule made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms, but it is so much more when cooking with it! Sugar is soluble in water, meaning it dissolves or, even better, it can be heated to create caramel. Caramelization occurs when sugar molecules break down at high heat to create a rich brown color and expand the flavor profile from simply sweet sugar to bitter, sweet, and savory caramel. This is an amazing process because sugar is inside so many of the foods we eat! Next time you cook using sugar or foods with sugar in them, observe how it browns to see the reaction for yourself!
measure + mix
Next, we'll make the pancake batter! In a medium mixing bowl, measure 1 cup flour, 1 cup yellow cornmeal, 2 teaspoons baking powder, and 1 teaspoon baking soda. Whisk to combine.
measure + mix
In a large mixing bowl, measure 2 cups water, 1/4 cup sugar, 1/2 teaspoon salt, 1 cup frozen corn, 1/4 cup vegetable oil, and crack in 2 eggs. Whisk to combine. Then, pour the dry ingredients into the wet ingredients bowl. Whisk until a thick batter forms.
superstar food spotlight
Corn is a grass, not a vegetable! It's part of the Poaceae family, the same family as wheat, rice, and bamboo. Corn can grow in different colors. While most people are familiar with yellow corn, it can actually come in a variety of colors, including red, blue, purple, and even black! The colorful varieties are often used for decorative purposes or to make products like blue corn chips. The kernels can "Pop!" Corn is the only grain that "pops" when heated. The water inside the kernels turns to steam, and the pressure causes them to burst open. This happens because popcorn kernels have a hard outer shell that traps steam until it builds up enough pressure to pop! Corn can grow really tall. The world record for the tallest corn plant is about 45 feet (13.7 meters), which is taller than most trees!
pour + bake
Heat a large frying pan over medium heat. Pour 1/4 cup of the batter into the pan. Cook for roughly 3 minutes on each side. You know it’s time to flip your corn pancake when you see bubbles form on the top. Repeat this step until all the batter is cooked into pancakes. You can probably cook 3 to 4 at a time.
drizzle + devour
Serve a delicious Giant Sweet Skillet Puffy Corn Pancake to each person at your table, then drizzle the warm Beautiful Blackberry Sauce over the top of the pancakes! Eat (devour) and enjoy!

Hi! I'm Blackberry!
"I'm kind of sweet, kind of tart, and you can often find me growing along trails. If you pick me while you're out walking or hiking, wait until I'm ripe and watch out for thorns!"
History
- The blackberry is a plant and an edible fruit from the Rose family. The fruit is a collection of black drupelets. The fruit is juicy, sweet, and slightly tart.
- The blackberry's origin is unclear, however, they have been eaten for at least 2,500 years. The stomach contents of an Iron Age woman from about 500 BCE, found in a Danish bog, revealed she had recently eaten blackberries and millet (a cereal grain).
- Ancient and more recent cultures used parts of the blackberry plant and fruit for traditional medicine. The Greeks used them for gout and sore throats. The Romans made tea with the plant's leaves to cure illnesses. They were used in the 18th century to aid in digestion and stomach ailments. Indigenous Americans also found medicinal uses for blackberries.
- In the Middle Ages, blackberry wines and tonics were seen as more affordable than beer and mead (honey wine). In the 18th and 19th centuries, blackberry cordials, jellies, and jams became popular.
- The United States has been responsible for the development of some blackberry cultivars and hybrids. The loganberry is an example of a hybrid blackberry and raspberry, accidentally developed in 1881 by James Harvey Logan, a judge and horticulturalist from Santa Cruz, California.
- The marionberry is a blackberry cultivar released in 1956 as part of a USDA breeding program with Oregon State University. It was called "marionberry" after Marion County, Oregon, the county in which it was developed.
- The largest blackberry producer worldwide is Mexico. The state of Oregon is the top producer in the United States.
Anatomy
- The blackberry comes from the Rubus genus and Rosaceae family. Perennial flowering plants in the Rose family include blackberries, dewberries, and raspberries.
- The fruit grows on bramble bushes, thorny shrubs that are part of a thicket, or a dense group of bushes or shrubs. Thornless varieties have also been developed.
- Botanically, the blackberry is not a berry. Rubus or bramble fruits are aggregate fruits consisting of a collection of drupelets (small, individual drupes, a fleshy fruit with thin skin and a central stone or seed).
- One difference between a blackberry and a raspberry is that the blackberry's torus or core stays with the fruit when it is picked. The raspberry's core does not remain, which leaves a hollow core in the fruit when picked.
- One blackberry species, Rubus armeniacus or "Himalayan" blackberry, was introduced to North America by Luther Burbank in 1885 in Santa Rosa, California. He imported the seeds from India. It was cultivated throughout the US by 1915. However, it soon began to grow uncontrolled and is now considered an invasive species. It is often found growing around lakes and in parks.
How to Pick, Buy, & Eat
- Blackberries are ready to pick from June through August, depending on where you live. You can tell they are ripe when they are plump and black, not red or purple.
- In the southern US, they may be ready by early summer or June. In the Pacific Northwest, they ripen by late summer, usually August. In other parts of the country, blackberries are ripe sometime in between.
- Fresh blackberries are great as a snack whether you buy them from the store or pick them right off the plants! Blackberries are added to jams, jellies, and desserts, like pies, tarts, and crumbles. They can also be added to salads and made into sauces for meats.
Nutrition
- Blackberries are a rich source of manganese and vitamins C and K. They are high in fiber, low in sugar, and have very little fat.
- The fruit contains omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids. Compounds in blackberries may help prevent inflammation, heart disease, and some cancers.
History of Corn Cakes!

- Corn cakes originated with Native Americans. In New England, they were called "johnny cakes," and in the Southern United States, "hoecakes". These were first mentioned in writing in the 1700s. They were fried flatbreads or pancakes made out of cornmeal.
- George and Martha Washington enjoyed hoecakes with honey at their Mount Vernon home.
- The basic ingredients are cornmeal, water or milk, and salt. Modern corn cakes usually include those ingredients, plus eggs, butter, sugar, and baking soda. Creamed corn or corn kernels, herbs, and spices may also be added.
Let's Learn About Indigenous Americans!

- Indigenous Americans are related to people who populated the Americas before the arrival of European settlers in the late 15th century.
- Historians previously thought the Clovis people were the first to arrive and dwell in the Americas. They were paleolithic hunter-gatherers who crossed over the Beringian land bridge from Siberia to Alaska about 11,500 years ago, during the last ice age. However, archaeological evidence in Chile and Mexico indicates that humans reached the Americas earlier, sometime between 15,000 and 20,000 years ago.
- Many indigenous groups living in North and South America were hunter-gatherers, and others were farmers or fishers. Some lived in highly-developed cities, cultures, and empires, like the Aztecs and Incas. Others lived more nomadic lives, following the herds, like bison.
- Although indigenous populations decreased dramatically during European colonization and expansion, native people still live in many parts of the Americas. There are large numbers of indigenous inhabitants in Bolivia, Canada, Chile, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru, and the United States.
- Indigenous languages are still spoken in many of these countries. For example, Mexico recognizes 63 indigenous languages, with the Nahuatl language spoken by over one million people. In Peru, Quechua is spoken by almost 14 percent of the population.
- The indigenous peoples of Canada consist of the First Nations, Inuit, and Métis (mixed First Nations and European, mostly French). The previously-used terms of Indian and Eskimo are considered disrespectful and offensive.
- Native Americans in the United States make up a little over one percent of the country's population. In the 2020 census, almost 10 million people identified as fully or partially Native American or Native Alaskan.
- In 2021, Deb Haaland was named Secretary of the Interior, the first Native American to be part of the president's cabinet. As of 2022, eight indigenous Americans serve in the US Congress.
- Indigenous cuisine varies across North and South American countries, and the following are examples of foods from a few different regions.
- In the northern regions of Canada, Western food is expensive to import, so they rely on traditional "country" foods, like berries, fish, caribou, moose, geese, and seals.
- In the Eastern Woodlands, the Three Sisters (squash, corn, and beans), maple syrup, cornmeal, blueberries, cranberries, and nuts are prominent foods.
- In the Southwest, diets include corn, squash, beans, pine nuts, sunflower seeds, trout, turkey, and venison.