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Home Sweet

JB’s Crêpes

By JB Alexandre
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Published14 Nov '25 Updated17 Nov '25
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Crêpes are one of the easiest and most loved French dishes. It’s one of the first things I learned how to cook as a kid and every time I make them, it always reminds me of home. Everybody loves them whether you serve them simply or dressed up!

Crêpes

Nagi's Notes

Nagi's avatar

I thought my crêpes were fine… right up until JB made his and I discovered what really great crêpes are supposed to taste like. These are crêpes so great you will be happy eating them plain – though no one turns down a little whipped cream and berries! Not even crêpes I had in Paris were as good as JB’s. Hope you love them!

Crêpes Nagi JB

Crêpes

After my cheese soufflé, it was so nice to see how many of you made it and loved it. Thanks to everyone who let me know what they thought.

Today I’m sharing something a lot simpler – crêpes. Making crêpes is part of French life. Simple, cosy, and always fun to share. We even have a day of crêpes called “Chandeleur” on 2 February!

Like many kids in France, this was one of my favourite things growing up. The smell, the sizzling butter, waiting for the first crêpe to come out of the pan. One of those simple little joys in life. Every time I make them now, it brings all those childhood memories rushing back.

Crêpes

Crêpes

Ingredients

Here are the ingredients you need to make crêpes. Today, we’re focusing on sweet crêpes, but don’t worry, savoury crêpes are coming soon too! We love them just as much, think ham, cheese, mushrooms, and all that good stuff.

Crêpes
  • Flour – Plain flour / all-purpose flour, sifted to keep the batter lump-free.

  • Sugar – Just a little bit because the French don’t like their crêpes too sweet.

  • Eggs – 3 large ones which are 55g/2 ounces each. No need to bring them to room temperature, fridge cold is fine.

  • Milk – The liquid to thin the batter. Full fat is best but low fat, lactose free and non-dairy will work too.

  • Water – A bit of an unusual ingredient in crêpes but it lightens the mixture, so they don’t feel heavy. Chef’s tip!!!

  • Oil – Usually butter is used in the batter but I prefer oil because it makes the crêpes softer.

  • Butter – To use in the pan for cooking. It brings that golden edge and lovely buttery flavour when cooking. And because it’s French of course!

Crêpes

How to make Crêpes

Making crêpes is simple once you know a few little tricks. Don’t be worried about flipping crêpes, they are less fragile than you think. You’ve got this!

1. Making the batter

How to make crêpes
  1. Sift flour into a large mixing bowl. Add sugar and salt, then whisk to combine. 

  2. Make a well in the centre and add the eggs. Whisk gently and only mix in a bit of the flour. You can’t blend all the flour with just the eggs yet, so just mix in enough to make a thick paste.

How to make crêpes
  1. Gradually add the milk, whisking between each addition. It will let the batter turn silky and lump-free. It should feel smooth and light, almost like pouring cream.

  2. Whisk in the water and oil until shiny and lump-free. The water lightens the batter, it will help having thin crêpes but still flexible, while the oil keeps them soft and prevents sticking.

How to make crêpes
  1. Rest for 1 hour covered, on the counter at room temperature. The batter will thicken a little as it rests, this resting step relaxes the gluten, the flour absorbs the liquid, so the crêpes cook up soft and never rubbery.

  2. After resting, the batter should be smooth, a bit thicker, and perfectly pourable.

2. Cook the crêpes

How to make crêpes
  1. Heat a 24cm / 9.5″ non-stick crêpe pan over medium-high heat (medium if your stove runs hot). If you don’t have one, any good non-stick pan will work, just adjust how much batter you pour in depending on the size, so it spreads nicely without being too thick or thin.

  2. Melt about ½ tsp butter, then wipe it off with a paper towel, you just want a little butter left for flavour, no visible pools. If you leave too much butter, it will stop the batter from spreading evenly. The butter gives flavour and a touch of crispness around the edges.

How to make crêpes
  1. Pour the batter: using a ladle, scoop up ¼ cup of batter, lift the pan off the heat, ladle most of the batter into the centre, and immediately swirl the pan so the batter coats the surface in a thin, even layer. Still while swirling, use the rest of the batter to fill up the empty spots before it sets. Tilting quickly gives you uniform crêpes. It’s a small trick that helps make the crêpe perfectly round and even, without thick patches or gaps.

  2. Cook for 45 seconds to 1 minute until the underside turns pale golden with light brown speckles.

How to make crêpes
  1. Flip using a long, thin spatula. Slide it gently under the crêpe without tearing the surface, lift and flip. Cook the second side for about 30 seconds. A long, narrow spatula works best for flipping crêpes because it slides under the thin crêpe without tearing it. Egg flips are too short and wide, and not a great tool for this purpose. If you don’t have one, even a wooden spoon handle or a clean ruler work better. And don’t fear the flip! Crêpes are flexible, they don’t break! 😊

  2. Slide onto a plate and repeat, adding a small bit of butter each time. Stack the crêpes as you go, they’ll stay warm and soft. Serve with your preferred fillings or toppings!

Crêpes

How to serve Crêpes

The French enjoy crêpes for breakfast, lunch, as an afternoon snack or even for dinner, which was always my favourite time. They are delicious any way you serve them, rolled or folded with toppings. My mother used to make them for me rolled up with icing sugar which is the most common way crêpes are served at home in France. The simpler the better!

Crêpes

Here are some favourite toppings for crêpes:

  • Sugar and Lemon – Classic and simple, sprinkle sugar, squeeze fresh lemon juice.

  • Berries & Cream – Fresh berries and whipped cream (Chantilly), dusted with icing sugar (+ optional chocolate sauce – use the one in the churros recipe)! As pictured in the post.

  • Jam or Preserves – Apricot, raspberry, or strawberry jam spread thinly.

  • Nutella & Banana – The universal favourite. But not Nagi, being the banana hater she is..

  • Chestnut Cream (Crème de marrons) – Popular in France.

  • Maple Syrup & (more!) Butter – A simple but great combo.

  • Vanilla Ice Cream & Chocolate Sauce – Served warm with a scoop melting inside.

Crêpes

Voilà, fresh crêpes ready to enjoy. Don’t stress, soon you’ll be mastering the pan flip like you’ve worked in a crêperie all your life!. And if one sticks to the ceiling, just call it “art nouveau”. 😄 I truly hope it brings as much happiness to you that it does to me!

Bon appétit! – JB 👨🏻‍🍳

FAQ – Crêpes

I haven’t tested this with gluten flour yet. When I do, I will come back and update the post.

It’s a personal recipe I’ve adjusted over time to work perfectly in any home kitchen. I’ve tried a few variations, but in the end, I always came back to the original version.

You can make the batter a day ahead and keep it in the fridge overnight. Take it out about an hour before cooking so it can come back to room temperature. Then give it a good whisk, it will have thickened a bit more than after the usual 1 hour rest, so add a splash of milk or water to bring it back to a smooth, pourable consistency.

You can cook the crêpes ahead of time. Let them cool, then stack with a small piece of baking paper between each one so they don’t stick. Wrap well or put in a container and keep in the fridge for 2 to 3 days. To reheat, warm them in a pan or microwave for a few seconds until soft and warm.

It’s a recipe I’ve had for quite a while, and I’ve made small tweaks over time, so it works perfectly for any home cook. Nagi made it twice before we published it, part of our little routine of testing each other’s recipes. Funny thing though… the recipe makes 15, but she kept ending up with barely 10. I’m not sure what happened to the rest. But it’s only the two of us working at the office and I know I didn’t do it.

Nagi helped me with the photoshoot, I still find photos a bit tricky to get just right, just like with my last two recipes. Herron, our video editor, also helped with the video shoot. I’m getting more confident though, and I should be ready to start filming videos on my own very soon.

Watch how to make it

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Crêpes

JB’s Crêpes

Author: Chef JB (RecipeTin)
Prep: 10 minutes mins
Cook: 25 minutes mins
Resting time: 1 hour hr
Total: 1 hour hr 35 minutes mins
Dessert, Snack
French
5 from 16 votes
Servings15 Crêpes
Tap or hover to scale
Print
Recipe above video. Crêpes are one of the easiest and most loved French dishes. It's one of the first things I learned how to cook as a kid and every time I make them, it always reminds me of home. Everybody loves them whether you serve them simply or dressed up!

Ingredients

  • 1 2/3 cups plain flour / all-purpose flour , sifted
  • 3 tbsp caster sugar / superfine sugar , regular white sugar is fine too
  • 1/4 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt
  • 3 large eggs , (55g/2oz each in shell) – fridge cold is fine
  • 2 cups full fat milk , but works with lite milk too
  • 1/3 cup water (Note 1)
  • 2 tbsp vegetable oil or other neutral flavoured oil (Note 1)
  • 45 g (3 tbsp) unsalted butter , cut into small cubes (for cooking)

Topping suggestions

  • Icing sugar then rolled – simple French home style
  • Berries, whipped cream, melted chocolate or Nutella, icing sugar – as pictured in the post
  • More suggestions listed in the post – see above
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

Abbreviated recipe

  • Whisk flour, sugar and salt. Add eggs then milk, water, oil and whisk into a smooth batter. Cover and rest for an hour. Cook in a lightly buttered non-stick pan, swirling ¼ cup batter to cover the surface. Cook for 1 minute. Flip, cook for 30 seconds, remove once golden and stack as you go.

Make the batter

  • Sift flour into a large mixing bowl. Add sugar and salt, then whisk to combine.
  • Make a well in the centre and add the eggs. Whisk gently and only mix in a bit of the flour. You can’t blend all the flour with just the eggs yet, so just mix in enough to make a thick paste.
  • Gradually add the milk, whisking between each addition to create a smooth batter with no lumps.
  • Whisk in the water and oil until the batter is glossy and pourable. When you dip a spoon in, it should coat the back lightly. Not too thick, not too runny. (Note 1)
  • Cover and rest for 1 hour at room temperature. (Note 2)

Cook the crêpes

  • Heat a 24cm / 9.5" non-stick crêpe pan over medium-high heat (medium if your stove runs hot). If you don’t have one, any good non-stick pan will work, just adjust how much batter you pour in depending on the size, so it spreads nicely without being too thick or thin.
  • Melt about 1/2 tsp butter, then wipe it off with a paper towel, you want just a little of butter left, no visible pools. (Note 3)
  • Pour the batter – Using a ladle, scoop up ¼ cup of batter, lift the pan off the heat, ladle most of the batter into the centre, and immediately swirl the pan so the batter coats the surface in a thin, even layer. Still while swirling, use the rest of the batter to fill up the empty spots before it sets. Tilting quickly gives you uniform crêpes.
  • Cook for 45 seconds to 1 minute until the underside is lightly golden and flip using a long spatula and cook the other side for about 30 seconds. (Note 4 & 5)
  • Slide onto a plate, then repeat, adding butter each time.

To serve

  • Stack your crêpes as you go, they’ll stay soft and flexible. Serve warm either rolled burrito style with the ends tucked in to hold everything or folded into quarters with your favourite topping! (see ingredients)

Recipe Notes:

1. Water and Oil – Adding a bit of water makes the crêpe batter lighter and helps it spread thinly in the pan, while the oil keeps the crêpes soft and stops them from sticking. Together, they make crêpes that are smooth, flexible, and easy to roll or fold without tearing. 
2. Resting – Let the batter rest for about an hour before cooking. This gives the flour time to soak up the liquid and makes the batter a bit thicker and smoother. It also relaxes the gluten, so your crêpes turn out soft and easy to fold instead of chewy. If the batter feels too thick after resting, whisk in a splash of milk or water until it’s smooth and easy to pour.
3. Butter in the pan – You don’t want too much butter in the pan, just a light film. Too much butter will stop the batter from spreading evenly. 
4. Spatula – A long, narrow spatula is the best tool for flipping crêpes because it slips under the thin crêpe without tearing it. Egg flips are too short and wide, so they don’t work as well. If you don’t have one, even a wooden spoon handle or a clean ruler does a better job. And don’t stress about the flip, crêpes are flexible and won’t break!
5. Crêpe – A good crêpe should be thin, soft, flexible with light golden spots underneath and crisp edges. It should bend easily without cracking and feel tender when you bite into it.
Chef tips
The first crêpe – It’s your “test crêpe.” It tells you if your pan is too hot, too cold, or if the batter needs a splash more milk. We all know the first one is always for the cook!
Leftovers and Storage – There really shouldn’t be any leftovers, they’re that good! But if you do have a few, let them cool completely, then stack them with a small piece of baking paper between each crêpe to stop them from sticking. Wrap tightly in plastic wrap on a plate or place in an airtight container and keep them in the fridge for up to 2–3 days. When you’re ready to enjoy them again, reheat gently in a pan or microwave for a few seconds until warm and soft.
Nutrition per crepe, excluding toppings. This factors in wiping off most of the butter in the pan.

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 115cal (6%)Carbohydrates: 15g (5%)Protein: 4g (8%)Fat: 5g (8%)Saturated Fat: 2g (13%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 1gTrans Fat: 0.05gCholesterol: 39mg (13%)Sodium: 64mg (3%)Potassium: 76mg (2%)Fiber: 0.4g (2%)Sugar: 4g (4%)Vitamin A: 125IU (3%)Calcium: 47mg (5%)Iron: 1mg (6%)
Keywords: crepe, crepe recipe, Crêpes, french pancakes, how to make crepes
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

Life Of Dozer

Walk? Non, non… Crêpes? Oui, oui!!!

Dozer crêpes
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155 Comments

  1. Lindsey says

    November 14, 2025 at 5:06 pm

    5 stars
    These look amazing, going to try tonight. I really appreciated watching the video to the technique on how you so skillfully whisk and achieve a silky smooth batter with just a whisk! I had always just plonked it all in and hoped for the best!

    Reply
    • Chef JB (RecipeTin) says

      November 14, 2025 at 9:59 pm

      Thank you for your comment Lindsey! Don’t forget to let me know how it went 🙂

      Reply
  2. Nancy Belz says

    November 14, 2025 at 4:41 pm

    Hi JB, thank you for the recipe! Where can I purchase the exact Sifter that you used? Thank you so much.

    Reply
    • Chef JB (RecipeTin) says

      November 14, 2025 at 9:58 pm

      You are welcome Nancy! You can purchase it online at any homeware or kitchenware store (like Vic Basement or Kitchen Warehouse, if you are based in Australia).

      Reply
  3. Chris says

    November 14, 2025 at 4:39 pm

    I’ve never seen a more detailed recipe.
    Chapeau et Merci

    Reply
    • Chef JB (RecipeTin) says

      November 14, 2025 at 9:55 pm

      Merci Chris! I really appreciate that!

      Reply
  4. Line R says

    November 14, 2025 at 4:35 pm

    I use the same receipe, though instead of water I use lager beer (inhereted from my grandmom). Adults as kids at our home in Denmark love that little extra taste from the beer.

    Reply
    • Chef JB (RecipeTin) says

      November 14, 2025 at 9:55 pm

      Hi Line, yes beer is a staple for crêpes batter in some regions of France too. It brings that kind of lovely flavour boost!

      Reply
  5. Diane Towns says

    November 14, 2025 at 4:30 pm

    Hi I have both your cook books and love trying out the recipes
    I did pork belly and it was perfect

    Reply
    • Chef JB (RecipeTin) says

      November 14, 2025 at 9:52 pm

      Thank you for your kind message Diane 🙂

      Reply
  6. Lisa says

    November 14, 2025 at 4:30 pm

    This looks delicious JB
    Never thought of putting oil and water in the batter. Looking forward to giving it a go!
    And you’re right Ann, I also have a much smaller crepe pan – makes more and easier to flip!

    Reply
    • Chef JB (RecipeTin) says

      November 14, 2025 at 9:52 pm

      Thanks Lisa, the water and oil addition will take your crêpes to another level!

      Reply
  7. Eha Carr says

    November 14, 2025 at 4:27 pm

    5 stars
    You remind me of being a small kid on Sunday morning in Northern Europe – being told ‘you’ll burn your nose if you stick it closer into the pan!’. I’d stand on a little stool next to the stove and tell Mom to ‘hurry it up’! She managed them lovely and thin and I’d love them just with sugar and lemon, perhaps berries 🙂 ! Dozer – do hope they took the hat off and the fruit away and let you have a go Australian-style and you had the whole lot . . . hmph > wish I had been there 🙂 ! (Thanks JB!)

    Reply
    • Chef JB (RecipeTin) says

      November 14, 2025 at 9:50 pm

      Somehow crêpes bring back childhood memories for a lot of us and I’m you were not an exception to the rule Eha! thank you for sharing this lovely story 🙂

      Reply
  8. Dajana says

    November 14, 2025 at 4:26 pm

    I have a crepe recipe I use already (made them tonight in fact!) but I’m keen to give JB’s a go. Crepes—known as palacinke in the former Jugoslavija—were a ubiquitous part of my childhood. Our family loves ours slathered in rosehip jam.

    Reply
    • Ildi says

      November 14, 2025 at 5:49 pm

      I am Hungarian and love crepes too. They are called palacsinta. My mother made the best ones. We loved them with jam, or Milo which melted slightly inside and tasted beautifully chocolaty and slightly crunchy from the Milo. Mmmm delicious.

      Reply
    • Chef JB (RecipeTin) says

      November 14, 2025 at 9:48 pm

      Hi Dajana, sound like you’ve had your recipe for a long time and I love this! I’m also glad you are gonna give mine a go 🙂

      Reply
    • Nind says

      November 15, 2025 at 9:26 am

      Da, palačinke, volim ih and in my country it’s called panekuk, bravo JB, this is universal and again merci also for the tips of using long spatula!!

      Reply
  9. Ann says

    November 14, 2025 at 4:16 pm

    Will definitely be trying JB’s recipe. I have had a cast iron crêpe pan for over 30 years but it is much smaller than 24cm – should just be able to make more crêpes, right?

    Reply
    • Chef JB (RecipeTin) says

      November 14, 2025 at 9:47 pm

      That’s correct Ann, lucky you!! And I’m very impressed you were able to hold on to that pan for so long!

      Reply
      • Ann says

        November 15, 2025 at 12:15 pm

        5 stars
        Probably closer to 40 years now that I think about it, since I bought that crêpe pan when I worked in Nouméa – there was a marvellous cookware shop on the Rue Jules Ferry.

        Reply
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