I can’t believe Sidney, my oldest, will be 5 this month! Years ago when he was first born I started getting tons of requests to include more baby recipes here on the blog. Here’s the thing though: most of what we served Sidney is what we would eat ourselves!
I remember when we would make him my famous chicken soup recipe we would just drain the broth, and we’d often just add salt to the dishes later. He also LOVED my minestrone soup, basically any curry recipe of mine, my peanut butter banana oatmeal cups (without the chocolate chips!) and of course, my chickpea flour banana bread.
This amazing baby pancake recipe is one I made for Sidney when he was around 7 months old, and I continued to make them for Viggo and Lachlen. They’re baby friendly and toddler friendly, but most importantly they’re delicious and nutritious for kids (and adults) of all ages. My boys prefer to devour them with a little peanut butter on top.
I hope you give these pancakes a try (no matter what your age) and let me know how you like them by leaving a comment & rating the recipe!

Everything you’ll need to make kid-friendly pancakes
When I say 4 ingredient pancakes I really mean it! You probably already have these simple ingredients in your kitchen to make these banana egg pancakes that are perfect for babies, toddlers, kiddos and even adults. They’re healthy, nutritious and so much fun to make. Plus, there are easy ways to customize them to your little one’s needs.
- Banana: you’ll just need one medium ripe banana in this recipe. Be sure to use one with lots of brown spots to perfectly sweeten the pancakes and make them soft enough for your little one.
- Eggs: these baby banana pancakes also have two eggs for the perfect boost of protein. I do not recommend flax eggs or any other sub, sorry!
- Flour: I love using coconut flour in these pancakes to keep them grain & gluten free while adding healthy fats, but I’ve also made them with oat flour, almond flour, whole wheat flour and all purpose flour. See my notes in the recipe itself.
- Milk: feel free to use any milk you’d like. We prefer dairy free but regular milk or even breastmilk will work just as well.

What makes these banana pancakes perfect for kids and babies?
I absolutely love making these kid-friendly banana pancakes for my kiddos because they pack a huge nutritional punch with super simple ingredients. These baby pancakes:
- Have no added sugars. We love giving our kids breakfasts and treats that just have natural sugars from fruit, and these pancakes have the perfect amount of sweetness from the ripe banana. I spread with a thin layer of nut butter and dice into bite-sized pieces.
- Are gluten & grain free. Using a bit of coconut flour keeps these pancakes grain and gluten free, but I love the flavor it gives the pancakes, in addition to healthy fats and fiber!
- Have plenty of protein & fiber. These kid-friendly pancakes pack 15g of protein and 9g of fiber using just 4 simple ingredients! Perfect for growing babies and toddlers to keep them full and satisfied.
- Are packed with healthy fats. Coconut flour also provides a source of healthy fats that are great for your little one’s development. See below for more nutritional boosts!

Add a nutritional boost to these baby pancakes
As I mentioned, these pancakes are great for customizing to your child’s needs and preferences. Feel free to add a teaspoon or two of the following nutritional boosters to the batter of these pancakes:
- Hemp seeds: provide healthy fats, fatty acids and a boost of protein. They also contain high vitamin E, potassium, magnesium, calcium, iron and zinc.
- Chia seeds: are an excellent source of omega-3 fatty acids and contain fiber, iron and calcium, too!
- Flaxseed meal: great for digestion and include omega-3s and fiber.
These ingredients provide even more healthy fats and vitamins that are great for growing babies, toddlers and even adults.

Can I use a different flour in this recipe?
Yes! If you don’t have coconut flour on-hand or your baby, toddler or kiddo has a nut allergy, feel free to use all purpose, whole wheat, oat flour or even infant oat cereal in these banana pancakes.
A note on subbing flours: please note that if you swap flours you may not need to add any milk to the batter. This is because coconut flour is highly absorbent. The batter should be similar to pancake batter, if it’s too thick, add in a teaspoon at a time of milk of choice.

How to make baby friendly pancakes
- Mash your banana. Be sure to use a banana that’s nice and ripe with lots of brown spots on the peel. Mash it in a medium bowl.
- Add your eggs. Crack two eggs into the bowl with the mashed banana and whisk with a fork until well combined. It’s okay if there are some lumps of banana.
- Add flour & milk. Next, add in coconut flour and milk and mix to combine. The batter should be similar to traditional pancake batter; if it’s way too thick, you may need to add in more milk, however it’s important you only start with a teaspoon at a time.
- Cook your pancakes. Lightly coat a nonstick pan or nonstick griddle with butter, coconut oil, vegan butter or olive oil and place over medium heat. Once the pan is hot, add 1 heaping tablespoon of the batter to the griddle for each pancake and cook for 2-3 minutes until pancakes slightly puff up and you see a few bubbles along the edges.
- Flip & serve. Flip the cakes and cook until golden brown on the underside. If you find that pancakes are browning too quickly then you need to lower the heat. I normally start on medium heat, then decrease to medium low later so that my pancakes don’t burn. Wipe the skillet clean and repeat. Feel free to serve as is or spread with a thin layer of nut butter or yogurt!

Can I use these pancakes for baby led weaning?
Absolutely! Baby led weaning is a style of feeding babies and infants where they can practice feeding themselves solid foods. Because these baby pancakes are soft, your baby can experiment eating them with their hands, practice with forks, and can even enjoy them before their teeth come in. Just pay attention to how you cut them for your baby’s age. If you want to make the pancakes softer, then make sure the banana you use is incredibly ripe and you might want to add slightly more milk.
Healthy banana pancakes for all ages
Good news: these banana egg pancakes aren’t just for babies and kids! They actually make a delicious and nutritious breakfast for kids and adults of all ages. Once your kiddo is a bit older, this recipe is a great activity for you two to make together! The boys and I love cooking these up in the morning. Feel free to add a few mini chocolate chips for a fun breakfast treat.

Freezer-friendly baby pancakes
These baby and toddler-friendly banana pancakes are also easy to freeze for later, making them the perfect breakfast for mamas to prep.
- Place the pancakes on a baking sheet so they aren’t touching and place in the freezer for 30 minutes (this is called a flash freeze)
- Then place them in freezer safe containers and freeze for up to 3 months.
- Once ready to reheat, simply add pancakes to a plate and microwave for 30-60 seconds or until warm.

Tools you’ll need
Get more of my kitchen essentials here.
More kid-friendly pancake recipes to try
- Outrageously Fluffy Vegan Pancakes
- The Best Almond Flour Pancakes
- Fluffy Yogurt Pancakes (high protein, gluten free)
- Healthy Banana Oatmeal Pancakes (made right in the blender!)
- Carrot Cake Pancakes (gluten free + dairy free!)
Get all of our pancake & waffle recipes here!
I hope you and your little ones love these 4-ingredient banana egg pancakes! If you make them be sure to leave a comment & a rating so I know how you liked them. Enjoy, xo!
Ambitious Kitchen
Cookbook
125 Ridiculously Good For You, Sometimes Indulgent, and Absolutely Never Boring Recipes for Every Meal of the Day
Kid-Friendly 4-Ingredient Banana Pancakes

Ingredients
- 1 medium ripe banana (best with brown spots)
- 2 eggs
- 2 tablespoons coconut flour*
- 1 tablespoon milk of choice (we use dairy free milk)
- **Please see notes for additional nutritional boosters
Instructions
- In a medium bowl, mash your banana. It’s really best if your banana is nice and ripe with brown spots on the peel!
- Crack two eggs into the bowl with the mashed banana and whisk with a fork until well combined. It’s okay if there are lumps of banana. Next, add in coconut flour and milk and mix to combine. Batter should be similar to traditional pancake batter; if it’s way too thick, you may need to add in more milk, however it’s important you only start with a teaspoon at a time.
- Lightly coat a nonstick pan or nonstick griddle with butter, coconut oil, vegan butter or olive oil and place over medium heat. Once the pan is hot, add 1 heaping tablespoon of the batter to the griddle for each pancake and cook for 2-3 minutes until pancakes slightly puff up, are golden underneath and you see a few bubbles along the edges.
- Flip cakes and cook until golden brown on the underside. If you find that pancakes are browning too quickly then you need to lower the heat. I normally start on medium heat, then decrease to medium low later so that my pancakes don't burn. If at any point your griddle starts smoking or if your pancakes are burning, it means your pan is too hot.
- Wipe the skillet clean and repeat with more oil/butter and remaining batter. Makes 9 mini pancakes total. Serves 1. Feel free to serve as is or spread with nut butter or yogurt! Please serve to your baby/toddler in sizes that are appropriate for their eating abilities.
Recipe Notes
Nutrition
Recipe by: Monique Volz // Ambitious Kitchen | Photography by: Eat Love Eats
This post was originally published on March 11th, 2021, and republished on January 6th, 2025.

My kids love these- so easy to make & reheat all week!
Absolutely! We meal prep these for breakfast all the time 🙂
can fresh blueberries be added to the batter?
Absolutely!
There is no way you used coconut flour in this recipe.
Half a cup of milk later and it is still very caky batter that does not cook life pancakes.
we make these all the time in our house and that’s what we use 🙂 you can also use oat flour if you prefer, just increase by a few tablespoons!
Inaccurate measurements was like soup. Added about 8tbsp of flour
So strange – I’ve never had that happen to me before and 8 tablespoons of coconut flour would be extremely absorbent. Was your banana really large?
These didnt work for us. They were glorified eggs, nothing like pancakes for us unfortunately.
Sorry to hear that! Did they cook up like regular pancakes? Or was something off with the texture?
The best banana pancake recipe! I used all purpose flour and didn’t need any milk for it but this is the only recipe that didn’t turn out mushy in the middle. Will definitely use this every time thank you!!
Perfect! Glad these were delicious!
My daughter and I loved this recipe! I didn’t end up needing to add any milk since the batter seemed the right consistency without it. I did add a splash of vanilla extract though! The pancakes were sweet enough to eat plain.
Perfect! Glad they were a hit!
So many good nutrients,fibres and proteins. It was a perfects quick and easy breakfast to make!
Absolutely! One of our favorite breakfasts 🙂
I’m about to try this recipe but jeeeepers get to the recipe
Feel free to click the “jump to recipe” button if you’d like to skip the tips and tricks in the blog post!
I used to make these years ago and probably wrote a 5-star review back then too. I recently rediscovered this recipe though, and it is my current snack obsession. So quick and easy with the perfect amount of sweetness. Banana bread vibes in a matter of minutes!
Love the idea of these as a snack!
These pancakes were delicious, made them with coconut flour so the gluten intolerant members of my family could enjoy them too, they tasted great, but while cooking them they were very fragile and broke very easily.
Did you make them mini (as pictured) or larger? And did your batter seem overly thin? I’m glad they were still delicious!
I made this for my 10 month old and 3 year year old. Unfortunately they were not a fan of them only because my toddler doesn’t like bananas yet she eats bananas. Yes we are in that phase right now. I enjoyed them though! And I’ll make them for myself haha
Oh I know that phase well haha – hopefully she’ll come around to them! I always sneak bites of these off of my kiddos plate, too 🙂
Adding the second egg made it seem less like a pancake and more like a sweet scrambled egg. Texture wise, not terrible, just not what I was expecting
These did not turn out at all. Straight into the trash. I’ve made various “baby pancake” recipes, and they’re never exactly like real pancakes, but these were inedible unfortunately
So sorry to hear that! I’d love to help troubleshoot – can you let me know what was off about them?
I made this recipe twice:
1. With normal flour and regular milk
Tastes amazing, freezes well and makes exactly 9 x 5cm pancakes.
2. With coconut flour (brand: McKenzie’s) and regular milk
Definitely needed extra milk (approx 2 tablespoons) to get a pancake consistency. It was more bland than using normal flour, possibly cos there was just so much more milk. Quantity made was 6 x 5cm pancakes, but they were much thicker.
Definitely
This one’s very flexible! Glad you found a method that works out well 🙂
If you’ve got toddler then you’ll know life can be hectic. When you google a recipe for banana pancakes you don’t except to get Lord of the Rings style explanations when all you wanted from google was a simple recipe with quantities and etc. I stuck with it and it was only
halfway through making that I realised no quantities of flour milk etc so abandoned this website. Well intentioned I am sure but just not practical.
Hi! Sorry to hear that you had this experience. The blog post is meant to explain the ingredients in more depth and answer any questions people may have about the recipe. The full recipe with quantities, etc. is written concisely at the bottom of the post – feel free to click “Jump to Recipe” at the top and it will bring you right there in case you want to skip the extra tips.
Nope. Hated this and so did my kids.
So sorry to hear that! I’d love to help troubleshoot. Can you let me know what went wrong? Texture? Taste?
Perfect simple and quick recipe for my 20month old. Added 2tbs chia and ground flax (maybe a bit too much chia on my part) but it turned out good. Added blueberries to half of them. Maybe the recipe tastes a bit eggy.
Do you think it would work well if I used just one egg? Thanks!
Glad they were a hit! I’d recommend sticking with 2 eggs so that the pancakes hold together well.