Looking for a delicious twist on cornbread? I have the best recipe – Easy Amish Sour Cream Cornbread!
Easy Amish Sour Cream Cornbread
A quick, easy, super moist, dense, delicious cornbread that is made from scratch. The perfect side for so many meals. The best cornbread I have ever made!
Read great reviews from people who tried this recipe on Pinterest (Photos)!
I saved this recipe on Pinterest over four years ago, always wanting to give it a try, I am so glad I finally did. This recipe is from A Cracking Good Egg Blog (Cracking Good Egg sited an Amish recipe site as the original source, however that site is no longer up and running).
What You Need to Make Amish Sour Cream Cornbread (Full Printable Recipe at Bottom of Post)
- cornmeal
- all-purpose flour
- sugar
- baking soda
- cream of tartar
- salt
- Sour cream
- an egg
- butter
- milk
How to Make Amish Sour Cream Cornbread
Preheat oven to 400 degrees f. and grease a 9×5 bread/loaf pan with non-stick cooking spray. In a large bowl, add all the dry ingredients (cornmeal, flour, sugar, baking soda, cream of tartar and salt) and mix well using a whisk. Next, add wet ingredients (sour cream, egg, butter and milk), using a spoon, mix until just blended (do not over mix) then pour batter into baking pan spreading evenly.
Bake on middle rack of oven for 30 to 35 minutes. Be sure to check the bread using a toothpick in the center, making sure it comes out clean. Remove from oven, allow to cool for 10 minutes, then remove from pan.
The magic to this amazing cornbread is the sour cream, it is so moist and tender with just a hint of sweetness. Even better, it’s simple to make. I was done mixing the dough before my oven was pre-heated. I love easy recipes that deliver on taste and are a cinch to make. This is sure to be on regular rotation.
PINNABLE IMAGE
Easy Amish Sour Cream Corn Bread
Recipe Source: A Cracking Good Egg
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup cornmeal
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 2 1/2 Tablespoons white granulated sugar
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 teaspoon cream of tartar
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 cup sour cream (regular or reduced fat – full fat is best)
- 1 large egg, beaten
- 2 Tablespoons butter, melted
- 1/4 cup milk (whole milk is best)
Directions
Preheat oven to 400 degrees f. and grease a 9×5 bread/loaf pan with non-stick cooking spray.
In a large bowl, add all the dry ingredients (cornmeal, flour, sugar, baking soda, cream of tartar and salt) and mix well using a whisk. Next, add wet ingredients (sour cream, egg, butter and milk), using a spoon, mix until just blended (do not over mix) then pour batter into baking pan spreading evenly.
Bake on middle rack of oven for 30 to 35 minutes. Be sure to check the bread using a toothpick in the center, making sure it comes out clean. Remove from oven, allow to cool for 10 minutes, then remove from pan. Enjoy!
Tips
- This bread is best served warm, but is pretty good cold too.
- Heats up nicely in the microwave (less than 10 secs for one slice).
- Serve with butter, honey, honey butter and more.
- As for cornmeal, you can use fine or medium-ground, whatever you prefer or have in the pantry.
Thanks for stopping by!
Cheers!
Barbara Stull
My friend was looking for a recipe, not too sweet, and that would stay together, not crumbling too pieces! I think I just found the recipe for both of us to give a try!
Donna
SO good! Was looking for a quick cornbread recipe to go with a pot of beans….I didn’t have sour cream or milk, but after seeing this post I couldn’t wait to make it. So, I sub’d yogurt for the sour cream and half and half for the milk. It turned out fabulous! Will definitely make again. Thank you!
Judy
Try buttermilk powder, it’s in the baking section. It’s the same taste but without having to dump the unused portion of the liquid kind if you’re not a fan of curdled milk. According to directions you use the same amount of water as buttermilk, you can add the powder to water before adding to wet ingredients or I add the powder to dry ingredients. Both work. Just be sure to refrigerate the powder once you open it.
johnhenry
I grew up in Dixie, and I’m with you. This recipe looks like it’s great. FWIW, I live in China now and before that in South Korea. They actually have cornbread there, but it’s sweet. It’s much better than the stuff I grew up with!
Monique skal
Can o.o put some fruits in itm
Jackie
Can’t wait to try this
Susie
Have you ever substituted honey for the sugar. If so, how much honey do you recommend?
Angel
My mother shared this recipe with me. We’re from the Upper Midwest, and while I had never heard of Amish cornbread, it made perfect sense to me. We Midwesterners will put any bread product into a loaf pan. I prefer a moist cornbread, so this recipe seemed like a good one to try.
My husband’s family is Tex-Southern. (Cornbread is sacred, it has the texture of sand, and it is never baked in a loaf pan.) With trepidation, I served this recipe for dinner one night. My husband said it was really good, and I breathed a great sigh of relief. (He had thirds. Really.)
Maurice Gianesin
Instead of salt, use garlic salt. Mix all dry ingredients together with a whisk.
Then, add a 3 oz. package of dehydrated onions and mix, with your hands, the dehydrated onions with the dry ingredients by gently folding the dehydrated onions until they are well coated.
Substitute Buttermilk for regular milk. Preferably whole milk Buttermilk.
Jackie
That’s not cornbread
Nelda Barnes
Is it possible to double this recipe and, if so what size pan should I use?
Lexcie Price
is there a way you could make this recipe print friendly, please.
Mary Neumann
Hi Lexcie- this recipe is printer friendly, you must have missed the “PRINT RECIPE” right above the ingredients – just click that or head here:
https://sites.google.com/site/sweetlittlebluebird/easy-amish-sour-cream-cornbread
Lori Prentice
I made this and my husband was wowed! He called his father and bragged. I grew up eating jiffy cornbread, but no longer!!!!
This is a wonderful recipe!
cooking gram
i have a mini cast iron muffin pan and they come out superb with crust on outside,light inside. Just accommodate size of muffin with baking time differences.
Cookies4kids
I am wondering if a person could make regular individual portions using regular muffin tins.
Susan
Any cornbread recipe can be baked in a muffin tin, filling each cup 2/3 full.
Maggiesur
I remember my grandma and mother taking a a glass of buttermilk and putting the cornbread in it and eating out of the cup. At the top me I did not like buttermilk but now that I have acquired the taste I’m going to give this a try and taste it like they use to.
Jackie
I learned this from my grandparents too! Although I’m not a fan of buttermilk, I use whole milk. Depending on the cornbread recipe used, (this one has sugar) we always liked to add a little sugar to the glass 🙂
Tammy
Hi. I can’t find whole milk buttermilk anywhere. Will the recipe work ok with 2% buttermilk?
Maurice Gianesin
Oh, yes!
And, good luck trying to find whole milk Buttermilk. I have to travel across town to purchase whole milk Buttermilk. It’s worth the trip.
Susan
Is this a sweet cornbread?
Jean
How many people will this serve?
Susan
Depends on how thick or thin you slice it, it is baked in a loaf pan, so it’s up to you. Probably would serve 8 people per loaf.
S
The recipe says milk, not buttermilk.
Looks amazing!
Maurice Gianesin
OMG!!! Use Buttermilk instead of regular milk. This is the most delicious cornbread I have ever tasted. A must try. Serve with plenty of salt free butter. It is essential that you do not over stir the batter. I mixed all the dry ingredients together and made a well. I then mixed the sour cream, buttermilk, melted salt free butter and egg together then added it to the well.
I hand greased the loaf pan with Crisco and dusted with flour. You get a crisper crust.
Serve warm.
Debbie
I don’t have cream of target. Can I substitute with something else or omit it?
Maurice Gianesin
No Debbie,
Cream of Tartar is a levening agent that works with the baking soda to make the bread rise. Corn meal is very heavy and needs all the help it can get to rise.
And, use whloe milk buttermilk. The acid in the buttermilk reacts with the soda to create carbon dioxide ( bubbles in soda pop ) to make the cornbread even rise higher.
Beverly
I don’t know how long ago you asked your question, but – if you use self-rising cornmeal instead of regular cornmeal, and self-rising flour instead of the AP flour, you can leave out the baking soda, cream of tartar, and salt. The leavening is built into the SR Cornmeal, and SR Flour.
Buttermilk is usually sold as low-fat. I haven’t seen whole fat buttermilk, and I live in farm/dairy country, now. Low-fat buttermilk works fine. I’m Midwest born, but southern raised, taught by my southern daddy how to cook. I use buttermilk in breads, rolls, cakes, and of course, buttermilk biscuits!
Happy baking!
And I learned a LONG time ago, Miracle Whip is a northern/midwestern thing. Real mayo (Blue Plate was more popular where I grew up. Never heard of Dukes until I was an adult). Location, location, location! Now, Ima go pour myself a co-coler. (aka Coke) 😂😉
Beverly
Oops – real mayo is more of a southern thing. I use both, depending on the recipe, or salad/sandwich. (read the Miracle Whip label. It says right on it, “Salad dressing”.
Joanne @ No Plate Like Home
This recipe looks so good. I have all the ingredients to make it today and it’d go great with meat loaf leftovers! I bet apple butter would be good on this bread too. I live 40 minutes from the beginning of the Amish in Lancaster.
Pamela Shank
No wonder you pinned this! It looks delicious. I will be trying this for sure. It looks like a cake to me, which is just the texture I love. Thank you for sharing the recipe. I think all of the recipes featured this week look amazing.
Susan Rainey
I’m surprised that there’s no sugar in the recipe …. I like my cornbread to be a little sweet.
Mary Neumann
There is sugar, but not a ton, just 2 1/2 tablespoons, Susan. This cornbread has just a hint of sweetness.
Jackie
Might want to read the recipe again
Maurice Gianesin
Could you substitute butter milk for the regular milk?
Mary Neumann
I don’t see why not – it will probably make this already awesome bread even better. Love buttermilk! If you do, please stop by and share how it turned out, Maurice.
Maurice Gianesin
It was deeeeevine with the substitution of Buttermilk.
If you can find whole milk Buttermilk, even better.
It’s one of those specialty items you have to travel all over town to find.
Buttermilk and baking are a match made in heaven.
If the recipe calls for baking powder and/or soda I would venture Buttermilk could be substituted.
What do you think, Mary?
Carlee
I am a fellow midwesterner and this looks fabulous to me! Sour cream does add that little something to baked goods so I know this is going to be good. I’ll make some with my next pot of chili!
Mary Neumann
Hope you love it, Carlee – the perfect side for chili!
Maralyn Sims
I didn’t know this is an Amish receipt, I have made cornbread and biscuits with sour cream for years. I also add dried onions to my cornbread. Live in the South.
Maurice Gianesin
By dried onions, do you mean Durkee Dried Onions out of the can?