Last Tuesday night, I found myself staring into my kitchen cupboard with the kind of desperate hunger that only comes from skipping lunch. All I wanted were fluffy, golden crepes, but my kitchen scale was buried somewhere in storage, and my measuring cups were dirty in the dishwasher. Just when I was about to give up and order takeout, my French neighbor knocked on the door to return a borrowed book.
“Making crepes?” she asked, spotting the flour on my counter. When I explained my measuring tool crisis, she laughed and grabbed a regular drinking glass from my cabinet. “You don’t need scales,” she said with that confident smile French people get when they talk about food. “Just remember 1-2-2.”
That simple phrase changed everything. Within twenty minutes, I was flipping perfect crepes using nothing more than a water glass as my measuring tool. The 122 crepe method isn’t just a recipe—it’s pure kitchen freedom.
Why the 122 crepe method works so well
The beauty of the 122 crepe method lies in its incredible simplicity. You use one glass of flour, two eggs, and two glasses of milk. That’s literally all you need to remember.
“The proportions are mathematically perfect,” explains culinary instructor Marie Dubois from Lyon’s cooking school. “French grandmothers developed this method because it’s impossible to mess up, even when you’re cooking by candlelight.”
The glass becomes your universal measuring unit. Whether you’re using a small juice glass or a large water tumbler, the ratios stay perfectly balanced. Small glass means fewer crepes, large glass means more—but the texture and taste remain consistently excellent.
This method eliminates the guesswork that intimidates so many home cooks. You don’t need to convert grams to cups or worry about metric versus imperial measurements. The glass in your hand is all the precision you need.
What you actually need from your kitchen
The 122 crepe method works because it uses ingredients you probably already have. No specialty items, no expensive equipment, no last-minute grocery runs.
| Ingredient | Glass Method Amount | What It Does |
|---|---|---|
| Plain flour | 1 glass | Creates structure and body |
| Fresh eggs | 2 whole eggs | Binds ingredients and adds richness |
| Milk | 2 glasses | Creates smooth, pourable consistency |
| Neutral oil | 2 tablespoons | Prevents sticking and adds flexibility |
| Salt | Pinch | Enhances flavor balance |
The key is using the same glass throughout. Don’t switch from a wine glass to a water glass halfway through—consistency is what makes this method foolproof.
You can add flavor enhancers like vanilla extract, rum, or orange zest, but they’re optional. The basic 122 formula creates delicious crepes on its own.
Step-by-step mastery of the technique
Creating perfect crepes with the 122 method follows a simple progression that even nervous beginners can master.
Start by putting your glass of flour into a mixing bowl. Create a small well in the center—think of it as a flour volcano. Crack your two eggs directly into this well. This prevents flour from flying everywhere when you start mixing.
“The secret is gradual incorporation,” says professional chef James Mitchell from London’s Le Bernardin. “Add the milk slowly while whisking. This prevents lumps better than any fancy technique.”
Pour in half of your first glass of milk and whisk from the center outward. The batter will look thick and lumpy—don’t panic. Add the remaining milk gradually, whisking constantly. The mixture transforms from lumpy to smooth as you work.
Add your two tablespoons of oil last. This keeps the crepes from sticking to the pan and gives them a beautiful golden color.
Here’s what many people get wrong: they try to make the batter perfectly smooth immediately. Let small lumps remain for the first few minutes of whisking. They’ll disappear naturally as the flour hydrates.
How this changes your cooking confidence
The 122 crepe method does something powerful—it removes the fear factor from cooking. When you realize you can create restaurant-quality crepes with just a drinking glass, it opens up possibilities you never considered.
Parents love this method because kids can help measure without creating disasters. College students use it because it works in tiny dorm kitchens. Busy professionals rely on it for impressive weekend brunches that require zero advance planning.
“I’ve taught this method to hundreds of students,” notes cooking instructor Sarah Williams from Edinburgh’s culinary school. “Once they master it, they start experimenting with confidence. It’s like giving someone permission to cook creatively.”
The technique works for both sweet and savory applications. Use the same 122 base for dessert crepes with strawberries and cream, or savory versions with ham and cheese. The batter adapts to whatever direction you want to take it.
This method also travels well. Whether you’re cooking in a vacation rental or a friend’s kitchen, you can make crepes as long as you find a glass and basic ingredients. No need to pack measuring tools or worry about unfamiliar kitchen equipment.
The confidence boost extends beyond crepes. Once you understand how simple ratios work, you start seeing patterns in other recipes. Pancakes, Yorkshire puddings, even some cake batters follow similar principles.
FAQs
Can I use any type of glass for the 122 crepe method?
Yes, any glass works as long as you use the same one throughout the recipe. The size determines how many crepes you’ll make, not the quality.
What if my batter seems too thick or thin?
Add milk gradually if it’s too thick, or a bit more flour if it’s too thin. The beauty of this method is that it’s forgiving and easy to adjust.
How long should I let the batter rest?
Ideally 30 minutes, but you can cook immediately if you’re hungry. Resting helps the flour hydrate fully for smoother crepes.
Can I make the batter ahead of time?
Absolutely. The batter keeps in the fridge for up to two days. Just give it a quick stir before cooking.
Do I need a special pan for crepes?
Not at all. Any non-stick pan or well-seasoned regular pan works perfectly. The oil in the batter helps prevent sticking.
What’s the difference between the 1-2-2 and 1-2-2-2 method?
Some versions include the oil measurement (1-2-2-2), but the core ratio of flour to eggs to milk remains 1-2-2. Both work perfectly.

