Easy Homemade Cornbread

$1.51 recipe / $0.19 serving
by Beth - Budget Bytes
4.62 from 134 votes
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Cornbread is a highly underrated side dish. You can whip up this deliciously sweet and moist homemade cornbread recipe with just a few pantry staples, and it makes a perfect side dish for breakfast, lunch, or dinner! Serve it slathered with butter at breakfast, crumbled into your soup or chili at lunch, or as a side with your collard greens and pork chops for dinner. It’s inexpensive, comforting, and seriously easy to make! So toss that boxed mix and let me show you how it’s done for real. ;)

Overhead view of cornbread in a glass baking dish with one piece cut out.

What to Serve with Cornbread

Cornbread is a great side dish to go with any thick and hearty soup, stew, or chili. The cornbread can be dipped or crumbled into the saucy stews, where it absorbs all the flavor. I love it with Slow Cooker Vegetarian Lentil Chili, Weeknight Black Bean Chili, Glazed Pork Chops, Mexican Red Lentil Stew. This cornbread recipe also goes great with eggs for breakfast!

Cornbread Add-Ins

To make your cornbread a little more fun, consider stirring in some add-ins, like cheddar cheese, roasted corn kernels, diced green chiles, chili powder, or jalapeños, blueberries, or even some cooked sausage!

What Kind of Baking Dish to Use

While this glass pie dish is my favorite dish to bake my cornbread in, you can use just about any baking dish. This amount of batter would fit well in an 8×8 casserole dish, or a 10-inch cast iron skillet (although you should preheat the skillet as the oven preheats). Glass, ceramic, and cast iron work best, but you can also use metal baking dishes.

Make Corn Muffins Instead

Yes, you can pour this batter into an oiled muffin tin, filling each well about 3/4 full. Bake at the same temperature for 16-18 minutes, or until the tops are golden brown. This recipe will make about 10 corn muffins (see step by step photos below).

Side view of a piece of cornbread being lifted out of the baking dish.
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Easy Homemade Cornbread Recipe

4.62 from 134 votes
Toss that boxed mix and make this fast and Easy Homemade Cornbread, which makes a great side dish for breakfast, lunch, or dinner! 
Side view of a piece of cornbread being lifted out of the baking dish.
Servings 8
Prep 10 minutes
Cook 20 minutes
Total 30 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 cup yellow cornmeal ($0.24)
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour ($0.15)
  • 1/4 cup sugar ($0.20)
  • 1 Tbsp baking powder ($0.24)
  • 1/2 tsp salt ($0.02)
  • 1 cup milk ($0.31)
  • 1 large egg ($0.27)
  • 1/4 cup cooking oil ($0.08)
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Instructions 

  • Preheat the oven to 425ºF and coat the inside of a 9-inch pie plate, cast iron skillet, or 8×8 casserole dish with non-stick spray (or butter for more flavor).
  • In a large bowl, stir together the cornmeal, flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt until evenly combined.
  • In a separate bowl, whisk together the milk, egg, and oil.
  • Pour the bowl of wet ingredients into the bowl of dry ingredients and stir just until everything is moist. Avoid over stirring. It’s okay if there are a few lumps.
  • Pour the batter into the prepared dish and bake for about 20 minutes, or until the top and edges are golden brown. Cut into 8 pieces and serve.

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Nutrition

Serving: 1ServingCalories: 241.23kcalCarbohydrates: 35.39gProtein: 4.79gFat: 9.15gSodium: 352.61mgFiber: 1.19g
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Video

Scroll down for the step by step photos!

Overhead view of cornbread sliced into pieces in the baking dish.

How to Make Cornbread from Scratch – Step by Step Photos

Dry ingredients for cornbread in a metal bowl.

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees and coat the inside of a 9-inch pie plate or 8×8 inch casserole dish with non-stick spray. In a large bowl, stir together 1 cup yellow cornmeal, 1 cup all-purpose flour, 1/4 cup sugar, 1 Tbsp baking powder, and 1/2 tsp salt. Make sure these are really well stirred together.

Milk, egg, and oil in a metal bowl with a whisk on the side.

In a separate bowl, whisk together 1 cup milk, 1 large egg, and 1/4 cup cooking oil.

We ingredients being poured into the bowl of dry ingredients.

Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients…

Mixed cornbread batter in a metal bowl with a wooden spoon.

And stir just until everything is moistened. You don’t want to over stir the batter because that can develop the gluten in the flour and make the end product a little rubbery, so it’s okay if there are a few lumps. No need to stir until everything is completely smooth.

Cornbread batter in a round glass baking dish.

Spread the batter into your prepared dish and bake for about 20 minutes, or until the top and edges are golden brown. The exact baking time may vary slightly based on your dish and your oven.

Baked cornbread in the baking dish.

The top will crack a little and look all delicious.

Cornbread batter in a muffin tin

Or you can pour the batter into an oiled muffin tin, filling each well about 3/4 full. You’ll get about 10 corn muffins.

Baked Corn Muffins in the muffin tin

Bake the muffins at the same temperature, for 16-18 minutes, or until they’re golden brown on top.

Close up side view of butter melting on top of baked cornbread.
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  1. I mixed the recipe exactly as instructed, but baked them up in our betty crocker mini donut maker for 2 mins per batch and turned out the BEST! Thanks for this great recipe

  2. I made it with 3 teaspoons of baking powder and it tastes way too much of it. How big is your teaspoon?

  3. I didnโ€™t have milk so I used buttermilk instead. It worked great! I doubled the recipe and filled a big cast iron pan. Will make again. Went great with ย my white bean turkey chili.ย 

  4. Would it work to use buttermilk instead of regular milk? If so, are there any adjustments needed?
    Thanks!

    1. Unfortunately I haven’t tested this one with buttermilk, but you’d probably need to replace some of the baking powder with baking soda, to account for the acid in the buttermilk (baking powder already has acid in it). :)

  5. I made this last night and went exactly by the recipe and it came out dry and crumbly??? What could cause that?? ย 

    1. Sounds like the liquid to dry ingredient ratio was a little off, which could happen with slight differences in measuring, or if the wrong size egg was used? That’s my best guess!

  6. I never liked cornbread until I found your recipe. Now I make it ALL. THE. TIME! So moist, not overly sweet. Itโ€™s perfect. (I have to use gluten free flour and I also use Splenda) Thank you so much for this!ย 

    1. Yes, that’s what makes the cornbread rise and have a nice fluffy texture instead of being dense. :)

  7. Made this in a 10 inch cast iron with unsweetened applesauce instead of oil and it was perfect after 20 minutes. Served with slow cooker black bean soup. ๐Ÿคค

    1. I think there is something wrong with this recipe. I made it tonight for a dinner side and to say it was โ€œoffโ€ is an understatement. ย The baking soda maybe? ย Seems like a lot. ย 

      1. If you used baking soda, that’s what made it “off.” :) The recipe calls for baking powder. They’re very different!

      2. I used the amount of baking powder required and it was too much it was overpowering I’ve used less since then

      3. Maybe because you used baking soda when it calls for baking powder? 4 teaspoons of baking soda would be verrrrrrry salty and bitter. ๐Ÿ˜ฌ

      4. I just use self rising flour, no baking soda/powder or salt. Also butter instead of oil.

  8. Hi! There is a mistake in your recipe, it should be 1 tsp of baking powder, not 4 tsp. I made cornbread according to this recipe and it was awful because of the excess of baking powder.

    1. I wish I had read this comment! I literally just put mine in the oven and as I was making it thought 4tsp was way too much but did it anyways. Oh well!

      1. I totally agree – 4 tsp is too much and I can taste it! Definitely reduce to 1.

      2. LOL–I just put MINE in the oven, and am now reading the comments! I used 3 tsp. baking powder–will comment again once I’ve tasted it.

    2. I used 4 tsp baking powder and mine turned out fine. ย Couldnโ€™t taste it at all.ย 

    3. So, I used 3 tsp baking powder, because I am in high altitude and usually only use 3/4 of the amount called for. Didn’t notice any “off” flavor, but will cut it to 2 tsp next time because it didn’t rise as much as I would have liked. However the flavor, and texture inside was good. I put the oiled cast iron in the oven to preheat also, and the outside was nice and crispy and crunchy–just the way i like it! 20 minutes was perfect!

    4. I’ve made this recipe hundreds of times over the years and I always use 4 tsp. :) That being said, cooking is highly personal, so if you feel like you like the results better with less, that works too!

    5. I made the lemon blueberry version of this from her other recipe and the first time I used 4 tsp and used muffin cups and it was fine. The second time I used a disposable round pan and swapped the oil for apple sauce and I thought it tasted like poison and threw the whole thing out. It was definitely the baking powder not sure if either of those substitutions had an effect.

  9. Hello! I just started using your Site and Iโ€™m wondering if I could add a can of cream corn instead of oil?

    1. We haven’t tested adding a can of creamed corn. The oil is pretty key ingredient however.

  10. Great basic cornbread recipe. I’ve used this recipe several times and it never fails. The only change I make is to use a milk alternative such as almond or oat milk in place of dairy milk. Even better when eaten with a generous amount of butter :) Thanks for the recipe!

  11. Can I add something else in place of the oil? Water? What would be the best substitute in this situation? Thanks!

    1. I swap applesauce for the oil in a lot of my baking and it comes out wonderfully.

  12. I made this gluten free and dairy free. 1/2 cup Bob’s red mill cup for cup flour and 1/2 cup brown rice flour. I used unsweetened almond milk. I did have to add some extra almond milk maybe 1/4 cup to the batter because of the absorption of the rice flour. I also used butter instead of oil. (It’s what I had). My family gave it a huge thumbs up. I served it with honey butter and lentil chili. It had a great flavor but was a little crumbly maybe add a touch of xanthan gum if you dont want it crumbly.