The Best Cornbread Recipe (2024)

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by Michelle
September 25, 2018 (updated Mar 18, 2020)

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4.64 (19 ratings)

This easy cornbread recipe is extremely moist, made with buttermilk and real corn, and it comes together in less than 10 minutes. It will become your go-to recipe to enjoy alongside ribs, chili, or any of your favorite meals!

The Best Cornbread Recipe (1)

Let’s talk cornbread.

If I go to a restaurant and open the menu and see cornbread listed somewhere, I feel like I’ve hit the jackpot. Bonus points if it’s served piping hot with some honey butter on the side. Theabsolute bestrestaurant cornbread I’ve ever had was at Copper Canyon Grill in Rockville, Maryland. I could have eaten the entire pan and made it my meal, but I restrained myself.

When I make cornbread at home, I always turn to this recipe, which has been my go-to for well over 10 years now. It’s an extremely quick recipe to prepare, comes out wonderfully moist every single time, and the leftovers stay fresh for days.

I’ve tried many others, and while there are tons of great cornbread recipes out there, I always come back to this one. It’s simply the best.

The Best Cornbread Recipe (2)

How To Make a Cornbread Recipe From Scratch

I know.

It’s super easy to grab a cornbread mix, add a couple of ingredients and toss it into the pan, but honestly? This is not much more involved and it tastes SO much better!

Let me show you how to make fabulous, old-fashioned cornbread without the mix…

The Best Cornbread Recipe (3)

If you keep a bag of corn in the freezer and buttermilk in the refrigerator, you will likely have everything you need to throw this together in less than 10 minutes.

All it takes is a bowl, a blender or food processor, and a spatula. That’s IT!

The Best Cornbread Recipe (4)

  • First, whisk together your dry ingredients in a large bowl.
  • Then, bust out your food processor or blender and give the corn and buttermilk a quick spin. Add the eggs and process a few seconds longer.
  • Add your blended corn mixture to the dry ingredients and stir together briefly, then add the melted butter (mmmm butter!) and stir until mostly combined. BIG TIP: Do not overmix! You just want to make sure the dry ingredients are moistened, but lumps are okay!
  • Spread it into a square pan and pop it into the oven. Done!

The Best Cornbread Recipe (5)

The Best Cornbread Recipe (6)

The resulting cornbread is crusty on the outside, moist on the inside and loaded with bits of real corn.

It is absolutely delicious all on its own, but I will also never turn down a smear of salted butter (or honey butter if you’re kicking things up a notch!).

If You Like This Cornbread Recipe, Try These:

  • Cornbread Muffins
  • Cornbread Casserole
  • Sweet Corn Spoon Bread
  • Sausage Cornbread Stuffing
  • Skillet Cornbread
  • Jalapeño Cheddar Cornbread

The Best Cornbread Recipe (7)

Four years ago: Crispy Potato Latkes
Five years ago: Applesauce Snack Cake with Oat-Nut Streusel
Six years ago: Cake Batter & Sprinkles Chocolate Bark
Nine years ago: Peach Crumb Bars

The Best Cornbread Recipe (8)

The Best Cornbread Recipe

Yield: 10 to 12 servings

Prep Time: 10 minutes mins

Cook Time: 25 minutes mins

Total Time: 45 minutes mins

This easy cornbread recipe is extremely moist, made with buttermilk and real corn, and it comes together in less than 10 minutes!

4.64 (19 ratings)

Print Pin Rate

Ingredients

  • cups (187.5 g) unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 1 cup (159 g) yellow cornmeal
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • ¼ teaspoon (0.25 teaspoon) baking soda
  • ¾ teaspoon (0.75 teaspoon) table salt
  • ¼ cup (55 g) light brown sugar
  • ¾ cup (123 g) frozen corn kernels, thawed
  • 1 cup (240 ml) buttermilk
  • 2 eggs
  • ½ cup (113.5 g) unsalted butter, melted and cooled slightly

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Spray an 8-inch square glass baking dish with non-stick cooking spray.

  • In a large bowl, whisk the flour, cornmeal, baking powder, baking soda and salt until combined; set aside.

  • In a food processor or blender, process the sugar, thawed corn kernels and buttermilk until combined, about 5 seconds. Add the eggs and process until well combined (corn lumps will remain), about 5 seconds longer.

  • Using a rubber spatula, make a well in the center of the dry ingredients; pour the wet ingredients into the well. Fold the dry ingredients into wet, giving the mixture only a few turns to barely combine; add the melted butter and continue folding until the dry ingredients are just moistened (do not overmix!).

  • Pour the batter into the prepared baking dish and smooth the surface with a rubber spatula. Bake until deep golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, 20 to 30 minutes. Cool on a wire rack for 10 minutes, then invert cornbread onto wire rack, turn right side up and continue to cool until just warm, about 10 minutes longer. Cut into squares and serve. Leftovers can be stored, covered, at room temperature for up to 3 days.

Notes

  • To freeze the baked cornbread, cool completely then wrap well in plastic wrap, then in aluminum foil, place in a ziploc freezer bag and freeze for up to 3 months. Allow to thaw in the refrigerator, then remove the foil and plastic wrap, wrap loosely in aluminum foil and reheat in 350-degree oven until warmed through, 20 to 30 minutes.

Nutritional values are based on one serving

Calories: 270kcal, Carbohydrates: 35g, Protein: 5g, Fat: 12g, Saturated Fat: 6g, Cholesterol: 59mg, Sodium: 244mg, Potassium: 229mg, Fiber: 2g, Sugar: 7g, Vitamin A: 400IU, Vitamin C: 0.7mg, Calcium: 77mg, Iron: 1.7mg

Did you make this recipe?

Leave a review below, then snap a picture and tag @thebrowneyedbaker on Instagram so I can see it!

Author: Michelle

Course: Bread

Cuisine: American

Update Notes: This recipe was originally published in September 2007. It was updated in July 2015 with new photos, then refreshed in September 2018 with more new photos and extensive recipe tips.

[photos byThe Almond Eater]

Originally published September 25, 2018 — (last updated March 18, 2020)

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58 Comments on “The Best Cornbread Recipe”

  1. Sue H Reply

    Thank you for sharing these recipes – delish! My only criticism is you show the recipe with BOTH US and metric measurements (big thank you) BUT when you go to print it you have to choose between them. WHY? I measure my dry ingredients but do like to measure wet stuff with a measuring cup. Not totally there yet. Please give us both when printing.

    Thanks!

  2. Melissa Sweet Reply

    What about just canned corn since I have no frozen or creamed.

  3. Itziar Reply

    Hi! Which flour would you use to substitute so it can be gluten free?

  4. Jessie Holt Reply

    Hi, I may have over mixed in this… what will happen? Dense cornbread??

  5. Robin Reply

    You are and have been one of my supreme favorite chefs on line
    Your recipes are fab and you make them so easy to make with your teaching
    Techniques. Plus…they taste so good !!!! Thank you for sharing !!

  6. Jen Burchill Reply

    This recipe is delicious. I followed the recipe exactly, except I thoroughly processed the corn per personal preference. Thank you for such a wonderful recipe!

  7. Tracey Walsh Reply

    Made this yesterday along with your Italian wedding soup. This is a great recipe-moist cornbread with great flavor. Will definitely use this recipe again.

  8. Donna Reply

    I made the corn bread tonight. It came out good, although I think I may have undercooked it a bit.
    The next time I make it, I thought about putting either jalapeños in it, or maybe some pepper jack cheese for a little kick. If I did put in the cheese, how much would you recommend ?
    Thanks !

    • Michelle Reply

      Hi Donna, I would probably use 3-4 ounces!

  9. Judy Reply

    Why dirty the food processor? Use creamed corn instead, you still get pieces of corn and the cream mixture produces a really moist bread. Also, I only use 1 Tbsp. of sugar, the corn is already sweet.

    • RM Reply

      I had a can of creamed corn sitting in the pantry so I gave this substitution a try. It does indeed produce a bread that is so moist that I kept baking the bread (for almost twice as long!) thinking it was underdone. I’ll have to try the regular recipe next as a comparison, but this substitution isn’t bad in a pinch.

  10. Martha in KS Reply

    If you ever ate at a Tippin’s restaurant, you’d remember their fluffy, sweet, scrumptious cornbread. The copycat recipe for it uses two boxes of Jiffy Cornbread Mix and on box of Jiffy Yellow Cake Mix. When combined per the box instructions, it makes a 9 x 13″ pan of cornbread. I make an 8″ pan using one box of Cornbread Mix & one half box of Cake Mix. You could add corn or cheese if you wanted to. You might give it a try.

  11. Michelle W. Reply

    I decided to make this cornbread for dinner tonight and I’m glad I did! It is really delicious. This will be my go to cornbread recipe from now on.

  12. Marie Zee Reply

    Hi Michelle _- Love the idea of not using a corn bread mix! If I wanted to incorporate this with those “Creamy Corn Casserole” recipes that require the corn bread mixes, do you know how I can do this? ~ Many thanks!!

    • Michelle Reply

      Hi Marie! I would have to do some experimenting to see if just using the dry ingredients would work, although I imagine it might!

  13. Madison Smith Reply

    Hi…Michelle…this cornbread looks soo yummy & delicious, this is one of my favorite recipe till now as well. i will trying to making this cornbread…..! Thanks for sharing….!

  14. Annie Reply

    Very popular at the New Years Day meal we had. Fluffy, moist, and tasty! Recipe is Easy to follow and forgiving, I messed up on one of the steps and it still came out tasting great. Hands down the best cornbread I’ve made.

  15. Marie Ceciliano Reply

    I made this exactly as posted. I didn’t like it because the cornmeal stayed hard even after cooking it. I also felt it needed to be a little sweeter.

  16. Hey, Michelle! Just popping in to let you know I’ve included your cornbread recipe in my mini round-up of cornbread recipes on Taste As You Go. :)

  17. Taylor B Reply

    HI!

    If I wanted to make this recipe without the corn kernels, should I sub in more flour or cornmeal or some other ingredient? Or just leave them out. Not sure how that would affect the volume or the baking time of the finished product.

    Thanks!

    • Michelle Reply

      Hi Taylor, I’ve never tried to omit all of the kernels, I’m not sure what type of substitution would be necessary, if any.

      • Cindy

        Hi Michelle and Taylor-
        I made this recipe last night and omitted the corn kernels because I didn’t have any. Everything else was left the same including the baking time. It turned out great! Moist and delicious. This is now my go to recipe for cornbread! Next time I will try it with the corn. Thanks Michelle!

      • Cheryl

        Thanks for letting us know how it is without corn kernels. Not something I keep in my freezer for nor do I have the food processor. So glad to know it still makes good cornbread.

  18. Kathy B Reply

    Have you ever tried a double batch in say a 9×15″pan? Thoughts?

    • Michelle Reply

      Hi Kathy, If you double, I would put it in a 9×13-inch pan. Enjoy!

  19. Maria S. Reply

    Excellent! I have had several fails with homemade cornbread. I can never get it to taste like what I’ve had in restaurants or in mixes (Trader Joe’s being our favorite!). This one rivals both in taste and texture. Thanks for the recipe!

  20. Spencer Stevenson Reply

    Nice images. Thanks for sharing the Cornbread recipe.

  21. Susanna Harlow Reply

    These photos are making me crave cornbread! :) I have tried various recipes through the years but don’t have one yet that I’m partial to. I am bookmarking this one to try soon; I have never seen brown sugar used in cornbread and am interested to see/taste how it will turn out! :)

  22. Lisa Reply

    I’m laughing…i live close to Rockville, MD. Never have been to the restaurant u mention, now I’m going to have to try it. Anything else you want to recommend here. We can’t find a decent Italian restaurant, but we are spoiled from growing up in Rochester NY

    • Michelle Reply

      Hi Lisa! My husband lived near there for about six years (and for the first couple of years that we were dating, so I visited often!). I don’t recall ever going to an Italian restaurant, but Vasilis in the Kentlands in Gaithersburg is the best Greek restaurant I’ve ever been to… Jackie’s in Silver Spring is phenomenal.

  23. Wendy Reply

    I live in Australia and I don’t think we can get cornmeal here. Is polenta the same thing? I grew up in Canada, never had cornbread but I still remember coming home at lunch to my mom’s cornmeal muffins. Those were special days!

    • Michelle Reply

      Hi Wendy, Polenta is made from cornmeal… as long as what you’re buying is the ground corn and not prepared polenta, that will work!

  24. Linda Reply

    I also use a cast iron skillet. Can’t remember ever making it in anything else.

  25. Beachside Baker Reply

    I’m a big fan of Cook’s Illustrated, but when it comes to cornbread I’m all about the cast iron skillet. Sorry C.I.

    • Michelle Reply

      They do have a cast iron skillet recipe as well… I don’t know if I just fail every time, but they always come out a little dry for me!

  26. Nathan R. Reply

    I’m sorry Michelle, I love your recipes but I couldn’t imagine cornbread not made in a cast iron skillet. If only you could replicate that deep golden crust that the bacon fat creates as it fries the batter pouring into the hot cast iron pan, yielding a crisp crust encapsulating an ever moist and delicate crumb – yum!

    • Marcia Reply

      I was just going to suggest that she heat up oil/bacon grease in the cast iron skillet before adding the mix. That is the way my grandma’s always made it, and I agree, so delicious.

    • Lori Reply

      My folks put half a stick of butter in the cast iron skillet, and lets it melt in the oven while the oven preheats. It makes all the difference–you don’t need it to stay fresh more than a couple days, because it won’t be around that long!

      Also, I can’t begin to say how wrong adding sugar to cornbread is. To each their own, I guess.

  27. Sarah Reply

    Hi Michelle,
    Absolutely great website! I plan on making this corn bread and I wanted to know if I can substitute the butter with sunflower oil?

    • Michelle Reply

      Hi Sarah, I think that doing so would affect the final the texture and taste.

      • Sarah

        Thanks Michelle! By the time I got your response I had already decided to use margarine. It was truly fantastic! Everything you describe it to be: crunchy just yum! I made this with your creamy basil tomatoe soup but I used 16 fresh tomatoes cause where I live they are tonnes cheaper and more available. Perfection!! Thanks for these great recipes-My family and I are thoroughly enjoying them-even my LO (9 months) been doing one to two recipes a week and they really give me something to look forward to each week :-) Thankyou so much!!

  28. Julie O'Melveny Reply

    Hi! Can I double the all- purpose cornbread?

    • Michelle Reply

      Hi Julie, I haven’t done so, but I think it should work okay.

  29. Trina Reply

    Any idea how long this keeps for? Id like to make it ahead of time… Friday for a party Sunday. Thoughts?

    • Michelle Reply

      Hi Trina, It’s definitely best fresh. If you make it two days ahead of time, be sure to wrap it tightly in plastic wrap. You might want to warm it up when you serve it if it seems a little dry.

  30. Debbie Reply

    Recipe looks great, but I can’t pin this because non of the pictures are being isolated there.

  31. Nancy Long Reply

    will have to try this – mine is similar, but never thought to use brown sugar and I usually bake it in cast iron

  32. Courtney Reply

    HI MIchelle – just to let you know, I’m having a hard time pinning this – it says I need to provide the image url or something.

    • Michelle Reply

      Hi Courtney, I was just able to pin it without a problem. Maybe try restarting your browser and give it another go.

  33. Pamela Reply

    What about a laye of crumbled bacon, cubed ham, or sliced sausage to the top?
    Love your website, Pamela

    • Michelle Reply

      Hi Pamela, All of those sound delicious!

  34. Nancy Reply

    I made these with a slow cooker chili recipe that I found online. They were good, but I think I might have overmixed my batter accidentally. I just kept seeing so many dry flour clumps everywhere! I was mixing and mixing and mixing… Definitely not “only a few turns”. Whoops!

  35. Amanda Reply

    Just made these with whole wheat pastry flour and they came out great!

  36. Jen Reply

    Great cornbread recipe! I am having a Halloween party with chili on menu and I can’t wait to whip up the cornbread. Thanks for all the great ideas!
    Thanks

  37. Amber Reply

    This looks and sounds awesome! I will have to keep it in mind for when I make chili this fall/winter.

  38. jeena Reply

    Hi there you have a great blog,lovely recipes. Feel free to visit my blog too :)

    Jeena xx

    click here for food recipes

  39. Deborah Reply

    I love sugar in my cornbread, but never thought to do brown sugar. This sounds fantastic!

  40. MrsPresley Reply

    i’ve been looking for a good cornbread recipe, thanks!

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