The pomegranate chocolate chip pancakes are a great balance of tart and sweet and they’re very festive looking!

Pancake Sunday came a little early this week.

The pomegranate chocolate chip pancakes are a great balance of tart and sweet and they're very festive looking!
Want to save this recipe?
Just enter your email and get it sent to your inbox! Plus you’ll get new recipes from us every week!
Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.

Since I’m nowhere near my warm kitchen today and probably somewhere in center city Philadelphia around mile 4 when this posts running a half marathon, I enjoyed these Friday morning instead.

Have you seen all the pancake Sundays of the past?

They’re definitely worth checking out along with these protein pancakes – my favorite go to high protein pancake recipe. 30g of protein in those babies will keep you full for awhile!

Some other fun pancake recipes to try:
Coconut flour pancakes
Cinnamon raisin oat bran pancakes
Banana nutmeg pancakes
Ricotta pancakes (these have coconut and caramelized banana creme fraiche topping – outrageously good!)

Festive pomegranate pancakes with chocolate chips make a great winter breakfast.

Pomegranates.

Everyone seems to love them this time of year.

Pom this, pom that.

The “virtual” pom peer pressure eventually got to me and I bought one this week.

On the second slice into the fruit, the knife slipped, the pomegranate went shooting across the counter, arils went flying everywhere, and it looked like a murder scene in my kitchen with red juice on me (and my white shirt..awesome planning) and the cabinets & walls.

Ginger came running in, sniffed around and then looked at me like “fruit? why can’t you drop bacon?!” and then walked out.

That’s when I remembered why I don’t really do pomegranates too often.

Although for this pomegranate flank steak or these orange pomegranate oatmeal chocolate chip cookies, they’re worth it.

I’ll happily pay $9.99 for a big bottle of POM juice or pick at arils that someone else has spent 20 minutes extracting, but deal with cutting the fruit myself?

No, thanks.

I have way more important things to do with that 20 minutes. Like play in blog or twitter-land as Ulysses likes to call it.

Try a stack of these pomegranate pancakes with chocolate chips this winter season.

So, if you have the patience for pomegranates these pancakes are totally worth it.

The arils burst with tartness in your mouth while the chocolate chips keep it sweet and balanced.

I love chocolate chips in pancakes like in these sweet potato chocolate chip pancakes or these peanut butter chocolate chip pancakes.

They really were good, I was just jaded by the whole 15 minutes of unexpected kitchen cleanup on top of the 20 minutes of aril extraction and cooking time.

Pancake recipes should not be an hour long process!

Want to save this recipe?
Just enter your email and get it sent to your inbox! Plus you’ll get new recipes from us every week!
Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
5 from 2 votes

Pomegranate Chocolate Chip Pancakes

Servings: 2 servings
Prep: 5 minutes
Cook: 10 minutes
Total: 15 minutes
The pomegranate chocolate chip pancakes are a great balance of tart and sweet and they’re very festive looking!

Ingredients 

  • 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup whole wheat pastry flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 egg
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/4 cup unsweetened applesauce
  • 1/2 cup almond milk
  • 1 tablespoon maple syrup
  • 1/2 cup pomegranate arils
  • 1/4 cup dark chocolate chips

Instructions 

  • Combine all ingredients except pomegranate arils and chocolate chips in a medium bowl and whisk until mixed well.
  • Fold in arils and chocolate chips.
  • Heat a pancake griddle or pan over medium heat. Grease with butter or cooking spray and pour batter onto pan.
  • Cook for 1-2 minutes on each side or until pancake is cooked through.
  • Repeat with remaining batter.

Nutrition

Serving: 1SERVINGCalories: 398kcalCarbohydrates: 65gProtein: 11gFat: 11gSaturated Fat: 7gPolyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 1gTrans Fat: 0.01gCholesterol: 82mgSodium: 1070mgPotassium: 442mgFiber: 7gSugar: 23gVitamin A: 133IUVitamin C: 5mgCalcium: 302mgIron: 3mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Additional Info

Course: Breakfast
Cuisine: American
TRIED THIS RECIPE?COMMENT + RATE BELOW!


Do you like pomegranates? Think they’re worth the effort?

Founder and Writer at Running to the Kitchen | About

Gina Matsoukas is an AP syndicated writer. She is the founder, photographer and recipe developer of Running to the Kitchen — a food website focused on providing healthy, wholesome recipes using fresh and seasonal ingredients. Her work has been featured in numerous media outlets both digital and print, including MSN, Huffington post, Buzzfeed, Women’s Health and Food Network.

You May Also Like:

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




24 Comments

  1. I absolutely love pomegranates! And pancakes. SO really, this is kinda amazing. The only thing is – do you find the pancakes taste drier when they’re whole wheat?

    1. Not with whole wheat PASTRY flour. It’s different than regular whole wheat. But if that’s what you’re referring to, no, I don’t think they’re drier. They might taste a little different than regular AP flour but not drier.

    1. Kathie- I just installed a print feature yesterday to use on all recipes. You can see it on the pomegranate orange scone post yesterday. I will be using that going forward with all my recipes. I can’t guarantee I’ll have the time to go back and reformat all the old ones right now but all new posts will have it!

  2. All you have to do is to cut off the top and bottom – then cut SLIGHTLY into the sides (as if you were going to cut it into fourths) – pop the whole thing into a bowl of water and let it sit for a couple minutes (pomegranate should be submerged) – then peel it while STILL UNDER WATER! (Be sure to remove the bitter, white part from the arils)

    MUCH more enjoyable this way! :o)