Sweet and Moist Northern-Style Cornbread Recipe

For those who like their cornbread a little bit sweeter.

By
Joshua Bousel
a photo of Joshua Bousel, a Contributing Writer at Serious Eats
Joshua Bousel is a Serious Eats old-timer, having started sharing his passion for grilling and barbecue recipes on the site back in 2008. He continues to develop grilling and barbecue recipes on his own site, The Meatwave, out of his home base of Durham, North Carolina.
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Updated August 29, 2018
A basket of cornbread cut into cubes, with one cube lying on the table, served with butter.
Sweet and cakey Northern-style cornbread with a crisp, Southern-influenced crust. . Joshua Bousel

Why It Works

  • Preheating the pan and coating it with butter creates a dark crust with a light, nutty flavor.
  • Using sour cream along with buttermilk increases the mild tanginess and overall flavor of the bread.
  • Adding a little oil to the batter results in a more cake-like moistness.

Back in college, I celebrated a cousin's birthday at the low-cost rotisserie chicken 'n' ribs joint Dallas BBQ. Don't let the name fool you, you won't find old-fashioned wood-burning pits out back at this New York-based institution—it was the "Texas-sized" frozen margaritas that were our main draw. As the meal came to an end, we requested a cake and candle (little more than an excuse for our inebriated group to sing "Happy Birthday" as loudly and off-key as possible). The waiter promptly returned with a slice of cornbread, topped with whipped cream and a sole lit candle. We all kind of laughed at the "cake," but as we ate it, it didn't feel so out of place.

Their cornbread was sweet, moist, tender, and springy—very much like a cake after all. The namesake corn flavor was there, but not in a way that made a dollop of whipped cream feel out of place. Actually, as a Northerner, it was the type of cornbread I grew up on.

In my early days of barbecuing, I thought I needed to go for authenticity and started experimenting with Southern-style cornbread for my cookouts. But those denser, drier, and more intensely corn-flavored loaves never sat quite right with me. So I abandoned them pretty quickly and instead fully embraced the Northern-style cornbread that I know and love, in all of its sugary glory.

Corny Beginnings

I have a trusty cornbread recipe that I've relied on for years. But while consistent, it's far from the best, and lacks the flavor and lightness that define my ideal cornbread. I finally decided it was time to aim a little higher and really perfect it.

Combining wet and dry ingredients with a whisk for cornbread.

Serious Eats / Joshua Bousel

I started with the basic makings of a Northern-style cornbread. A 50/50 mix of yellow cornmeal and flour gave it the right flavor, color, and consistency; buttermilk added a nice tang; baking powder and soda created lift; and eggs were required for structure. I put my first recipe together by combining the dry ingredients in one bowl—cornmeal, flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and about a quarter cup of sugar—and the wet ingredients in the other—buttermilk, eggs, and melted butter.

Preheating a cast iron skillet in the oven for cornbread.

Serious Eat/ Joshua Bousel

Meanwhile, I had a 10-inch cast iron pan preheating in a 425°F (220°C) oven, to capture the part of Southern-style cornbread that's really great: the crust. An almost crackling, deeply browned, flavorful crust is definitely key to my ideal cornbread, and a cast iron skillet is a traditional, and attractive, way to achieve this.

Melting butter in a cast iron skillet to help get a good crust on cornbread.

Serious Eats / Joshua Bousel

Once the pan was as hot as it was going to get, I combined the wet ingredients with the dry, removed the skillet from the oven, and dropped in a tablespoon of butter. The butter quickly melted and browned as I swirled it around; once the pan was well coated in butter, I poured in the batter.

Uncooked cornbread batter in a cast iron skillet; its edge has been slightly set.

Serious Eats / Joshua Bousel

In the short time between adding the batter and returning the pan to the oven, the edges of the cornbread had already begun to set, which was exactly what I wanted to see.

It took about 20 minutes in the hot oven for the cornbread to fully cook—I tested doneness by inserting a skewer into the middle and checking to see if it came out clean. I let it cool in the pan for five minutes to give it some time to firm up, and then used an offset spatula to lift it out of the pan and onto a wire rack. I let it rest another 10 minutes, during which the crust cooled nicely while the bread itself stayed pretty hot.

A close up of a slice of Northern-style cornbread.

Serious Eats / Joshua Bousel

The result was a good cornbread, but not a great one. First, it didn't rise enough. It was moist, but not as tender as I'd hoped. It also lacked the signature sweetness I was looking for, while the corn flavor was very prominent. The crust was perfect though—crisp with a little nutty flavor from the browned butter.

Let Me Eat Cake

A close up of uncooked cornbread batter in a cast iron skillet.

Serious Eats / Joshua Bousel

The first attempt just wasn't cakey enough, so I went full-on cake for my next test. I upped the sugar to half a cup and swapped the all-purpose flour for cake flour, which I hoped would give it a more tender crumb. I also switched from buttermilk to sour cream—a trick I've been using with my biscuits. The higher acidity of sour cream adds a tangier flavor, and helps the baking soda achieve an even greater rise. Its extra fat content serves to keep things moist and tender. I also wondered if the denseness of the earlier bread may have been caused by the cooking method, so I started this one off in a cool, greased skillet, more like a cake.

As I watched this loaf bake, I saw it rise dramatically higher than the first, and felt I was on to a good thing. With lean, yeast-risen doughs like pizza or bread, high heat is essential for a good rise—it's what causes the interior bubbles to rapidly expand before the dough can set.

But with moist batters that rely on baking soda or baking powder for leavening, the opposite tack is the way to go: With a slower bake, you give the chemical leaveners more time to produce bubbles of gas. Meanwhile, you don't need to worry about the batter setting too quickly, as its high moisture content ensures that it'll stay soft and inflatable for far longer than a typical bread dough.

The color never reached as dark a yellow as other cornbreads I made in the past, but I wasn't sure if that was necessarily a bad thing.

An offset spatula lifting a test batch of too-tender cornbread from a skillet, but it breaks apart.

Serious Eats / Joshua Bousel

After the bread was done and rested, I went to lift it out of the pan, but it was so damn tender that it fell apart.

A close up of too tender cornbread.

Serious Eats / Joshua Bousel

It only took one bite for me to realize this was hardly a "bread"—what I'd made was most definitely corncake. The texture was super light and moist, the flavor sweet, mildly corny, and a little tangy. It was really, really good, but as I chomped down on a few broken pieces, I knew this simply couldn't qualify as cornbread. But I also felt that there was enough going for it that I was a whole lot closer to my ideal.

On Second Thought...

So I wanted my cornbread to have the lightness and moistness of the cake without it being so, well, cakey. First was the obvious reversion to all-purpose flour. I kept the sour cream, but reduced the amount and increased the buttermilk slightly. Finally, I decided to try adding a couple tablespoons of canola oil, since fat can help keep cakes nice and moist. I also had lost the great crust of the first cornbread, so I went back to using the preheated pan with browned butter, hoping that the alterations in ingredients would help compensate for any loss in rising.

An overhead view of perfectly golden brown cornbread in a cast iron skillet.

Serious Eats / Joshua Bousel

Everything looked promising: This one rose higher than the first, although not as much as the second. I got back the golden yellow color too, which made me happy. To keep this one intact, I turned it out onto a plate and then transferred it onto a wire rack.

A close up of a slice of Northern-style cornbread.

After letting the crust set up and cool, I dug in and was all too pleased with the results. The cornbread was light, tender, and moist—it perfectly straddled the line between cake and bread, without crossing it. It had a very nice, sweet corn flavor with an undercurrent of tanginess. And the crust was as good as ever, with a crispness and depth of flavor that sealed the deal.

I could have topped this with whipped cream and a birthday candle and it would have worked, but that would have robbed it of its true purpose: sitting next to a plate of ribs or pulled pork, where sweet corn flavor creates the perfect contrast to spicy, tangy smoked meats.

October 2014

Recipe Details

Sweet and Moist Northern-Style Cornbread Recipe

Active 10 mins
Total 40 mins
Serves 6 to 8 servings
Cook Mode (Keep screen awake)

Ingredients

  • 1 cup yellow cornmeal

  • 1 cup all-purpose flour

  • 1/2 cup sugar

  • 2 teaspoons baking powder

  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt

  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda

  • 3/4 cup sour cream

  • 1/2 cup buttermilk

  • 2 large eggs

  • 3 tablespoons melted butter, cooled slightly, plus 1 additional tablespoon for pan

  • 2 tablespoons canola oil

Directions

  1. Place a 10-inch cast iron skillet on middle rack in oven and preheat to 425°F (220°C). In a medium bowl, whisk together cornmeal, flour, sugar, baking powder, salt, and baking soda. In a separate medium bowl, whisk together sour cream, buttermilk, eggs, 3 tablespoons melted butter, and canola oil. Pour wet ingredients into bowl with dry ingredients and whisk until completely combined.

    Whisking together dry ingredients for corn bread.

    Serious Eats / Joshua Bousel

  2. Using pot holders, carefully remove hot skillet from oven. Place 1 tablespoon butter in skillet and swirl to completely melt and coat inside of pan. Pour in cornbread batter and place in oven. Bake until skewer inserted into middle of cornbread comes out clean, about 20 minutes. Let bread cool in pan for 5 minutes, then carefully turn out to wire rack and let cool an additional 10 minutes. Serve immediately. Reheat any leftover cornbread before serving again.

    A cast iron skillet with golden brown cornbread.

    Serious Eats

Special Equipment

10-inch cast iron skillet

Nutrition Facts (per serving)
309Calories
15gFat
38gCarbs
6gProtein
×
Nutrition Facts
Servings: 6 to 8
Amount per serving
Calories309
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 15g20%
Saturated Fat 7g33%
Cholesterol 75mg25%
Sodium 463mg20%
Total Carbohydrate 38g14%
Dietary Fiber 2g5%
Total Sugars 14g
Protein 6g
Vitamin C 0mg2%
Calcium 119mg9%
Iron 2mg9%
Potassium 130mg3%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)

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