Saturday mornings in my house used to mean one of two things — either a box of cereal eaten quietly in front of the television or a long stretch at the stove making pancakes one at a time while everyone hovered around asking if theirs was ready yet. Neither of those options was particularly satisfying and neither felt like the kind of breakfast that made the weekend feel special.
This blueberry pancake casserole changed that completely. The concept is almost too simple — you make a pancake batter, pour it into a baking dish, scatter fresh blueberries across the top and let the oven do all the work.
What comes out is something that has all the warmth and comfort of a stack of blueberry pancakes but feeds everyone at the same time without you having to flip a single thing or watch anyone's individual portion on a hot griddle.
The twelve minutes in the title is real. That is genuinely how long the active prep takes — mix the batter, grease the dish, add the blueberries, slide it into the oven.
Then you have thirty minutes to drink your coffee, wake up properly and let the smell of a warm blueberry breakfast bake fill your kitchen. This is weekend breakfast done right and once you have made it you will wonder why you ever stood at a stove flipping pancakes when this was always an option.
Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Grease an 8x8 inch square baking dish or a similar sized oval baking dish thoroughly with butter or cooking spray making sure to coat the sides as well as the bottom. A well-greased dish is important for getting clean portions that lift out easily. Set aside.
In a large mixing bowl combine the pancake mix, milk, eggs, granulated sugar, vanilla extract, melted butter and ground cinnamon. Whisk together until just combined — do not overmix. Some small lumps in the batter are completely fine and expected. Overmixing pancake batter develops gluten and makes the finished casserole tough and dense rather than fluffy and tender. Stop as soon as you no longer see dry flour streaks.
Gently fold about one cup of the blueberries into the batter using a rubber spatula. Reserve the remaining half cup for pressing on top of the casserole before baking. Folding some blueberries into the batter ensures jammy blueberry pockets throughout every layer of the casserole rather than just on the surface.
Pour the blueberry batter into the prepared baking dish and spread it into an even layer with a spatula. Scatter the reserved blueberries evenly across the entire top surface of the batter pressing them down very gently so they sit just at the surface. These top blueberries will burst and caramelize slightly during baking and create that stunning golden and purple surface that makes this casserole look so beautiful.
Bake at 350°F for 25–30 minutes until the surface is deep golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean or with just a few moist crumbs. The edges should be pulling slightly away from the sides of the dish and the surface should look golden and set rather than wet or jiggly. Start checking at the 25-minute mark — ovens vary and you want to pull it as soon as it is done rather than letting it overbake and dry out.
Remove from the oven and let the casserole rest for 5 minutes before cutting. This rest time allows the interior to finish setting up completely which makes it easier to cut clean portions. Dust with powdered sugar right before serving for an elegant finish. Cut into squares or rectangles and serve warm directly from the baking dish with maple syrup and any other desired toppings on the side.
Cover the casserole tightly with plastic wrap or foil and store at room temperature for up to 1 day. The surface softens slightly as it sits but the flavor remains excellent. Do not leave it uncovered as the top will dry out quickly.
Store covered in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. Individual slices can be stored in airtight containers for easy grab-and-go weekday breakfasts. The casserole firms up considerably when cold which makes it even easier to slice cleanly for reheating.
Reheat individual slices in the microwave for 45–60 seconds until warmed through. For a better texture reheat in the oven at 325°F for about 8–10 minutes or in an air fryer at 325°F for 3–4 minutes which revives some of that golden exterior texture. Add a fresh dusting of powdered sugar and a drizzle of maple syrup after reheating.
This casserole freezes very well for up to 2 months. Let it cool completely then cut into individual portions, wrap each one tightly in plastic wrap and place in a freezer-safe bag. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator or at room temperature for about an hour. Reheat in the oven at 325°F for 12–15 minutes from thawed or in the microwave in 45-second bursts. A fresh drizzle of maple syrup after reheating brings it back to life completely.
This blueberry pancake casserole is one of those recipes that I genuinely love for how much happiness it delivers relative to how little effort it requires.
Twelve minutes of prep for a warm, golden, blueberry-loaded breakfast that feeds the whole family and fills the kitchen with the kind of smell that makes everyone wander in from wherever they were and ask what is cooking. That is the definition of a worthwhile recipe.
What I love most about it is how it removes all the friction from making a special breakfast. No station at the stove, no timing individual portions, no cold pancakes waiting while the rest bake.
Just one dish going into the oven and everyone sitting down to something genuinely good at the same time. That is the kind of cooking that makes mornings feel the way mornings should feel.
Make this one on your next weekend morning and let me know how it went. Drop a comment below with your favorite toppings or tag me on Pinterest — I always love seeing your breakfast tables. Happy cooking. :)
— Kip
This 12-minute blueberry pancake casserole is the breakfast recipe that changes the way you think about weekend mornings. Instead of standing at the stove flipping individual pancakes for forty minutes while everyone else sits at the table, you mix up a simple pancake batter, pour it into a baking dish, scatter fresh blueberries across the top and slide it into the oven. Twelve minutes later you pull out something golden, fluffy and absolutely beautiful — a pancake casserole that feeds the whole family at once with zero flipping required. It has that same soft, tender pancake texture you love with jammy blueberry pockets throughout and a slightly caramelized golden top that looks genuinely impressive for how little effort it demands. This is the breakfast recipe your weekends have been waiting for.