Dan Cooks
The Belgian Waffle That Actually Earns the Crispy Shell
One Southern grillmaster's take on the breakfast table centerpiece — golden, airy, and built on a technique secret that most recipes skip right over.
I'll be honest with you — I came up cooking over fire, not over a waffle iron. But the same instinct that tells me when a steak is ready, when the smoke is right, when to leave something alone and let the heat do its work? That same instinct applies here. Belgian waffles aren't complicated. They're just unforgiving of shortcuts. Get the egg whites right, don't rush the iron, and you'll put something on that table that makes your whole family go quiet for a few beautiful seconds. That's the goal every single morning in my house.
The One Move That Changes Everything
Most waffle recipes tell you to separate the eggs but don't explain why it matters so much. Here's the deal: when you beat those egg whites to stiff peaks and fold them in at the end, you're building a structure that holds air all the way through the cook. That trapped air is what gives you a waffle that's genuinely light inside while still developing a crisp, golden shell against the iron. Skip the separation — or fold carelessly — and you've got a dense, flat batter that'll cook up more like a thick pancake with grid marks. Fold gently, in two additions, and stop the moment you don't see big white streaks. A few small ones are perfectly fine.
