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If you bake them right, there鈥檚 nothing like a fresh-out-of-the-oven muffin. Good muffins should be moist, light, and pillow-soft (not spongy). Here are our top tips and tricks on baking muffins, plus 12 recipe ideas.
Using Muffin Pans
Most muffin recipes use a 12鈥揷up muffin pan, each cup having a capacity of about 1/3 cup. This has become a standard size for the new, non-stick muffin and most aluminum pans for sale. If your pan has larger or smaller cups, adjust the baking time by about five minutes more for the larger muffins and five minutes less for the smaller ones. If muffins in the small cups get too brown, reduce the oven temperature to 375掳F.
Grease muffin pans well before adding the batter. Save paper from sticks of butter for this, or use an oil spray (After experimenting with paper baking cups and greased pans, I鈥檝e come to prefer the greased pans. Sometimes, baking cups cause the bottoms of the muffins to get soggy, or the muffins will stick to them). If you prefer paper baking cups, grease them with vegetable oil spray before putting the batter in.
If you end up with too little batter in your batch for the number of cups in your pan, put a little water in the empties to keep the greased surfaces from scorching in the oven.
How to Make Muffins Moist
Depending on what ingredients you鈥檙e using, the batter will range from runny (like thin cake batter) to very thick (like drop-cookie dough). As a general rule, the thinner the batter, the lighter the muffins will be when baked. But don鈥檛 be afraid to bake thick, gloppy batter. It can yield moist muffins with extra keeping power.
Buttermilk gives muffins a special moistness and flavor. You can buy it fresh in most supermarkets or look for dry, powdered buttermilk, which will keep for weeks and is the next best thing. Add the powder to your dry ingredients, and add the amount of water needed to the wet ingredients. (Note: Whenever you add buttermilk to a recipe, add 1/2 teaspoon of baking soda per cup of buttermilk.)
Tips for the Best Ever Muffins
Most muffin recipes offer dire warnings: 鈥淒on鈥檛 overmix! Fill muffin cups only a fraction of the way鈥攆rom 1/2 to 2/3.鈥 Ignore all this and use common sense. Don鈥檛 be afraid to stir the ingredients together until they look like batter. Remember not to use an electric mixer since beating the batter will produce hockey pucks. Fill the cups as much as you want to. The idea is to bake some muffins, not worry about what fraction of space the batter should occupy. I confess that I spoon the batter around in my 12鈥揷up pan as evenly as I can, usually filling each cup right up to the top, and the muffins come out fine. Try using a small ice cream scoop to fill the cups!
Keep your pantry stocked with imaginative additions for muffins: raisins, nuts, dried cranberries, dried blueberries, canned pumpkin or squash, applesauce, and pineapple tidbits. You can also add dry or cooked breakfast cereal, wheat germ, and granola to the batter.
For a special effect, before baking muffins, sprinkle them with sugar or cinnamon sugar. Or use this Crumb Topping: In a food processor, combine 1 cup flour, 1 cup brown sugar, 1 cup rolled oats or granola, two teaspoons cinnamon, and one stick cold butter (cut into small bits). Pulse together until the mixture forms fine crumbs. Store in a covered jar in the freezer and use as needed.
Best-Ever Leftovers: To jazz up leftover muffins, split them in half, butter each half, and place them under the broiler for a couple of minutes. Be careful reheating them in a microwave; they can quickly get soggy.
12 Mouthwatering Muffin Recipes
Now that you have all these tips try some of our favorite muffin recipes:
Catherine Boeckmann loves nature, stargazing, and gardening so it鈥檚 not surprising that she and The Old Farmer鈥檚 蜜桃恋人 found each other. She leads digital content for the 蜜桃恋人 website, and is also a certified master gardener in the state of Indiana. Read More from Catherine Boeckmann
I have and use several types of silicone baking products, including the Silicone bake ware and I love them.The directions that came with all of them said to spray them with non-stick spray prior to first use.I did and had no problem cleaning them. About every third use I give them a quick spray again.I think in over 3 years I have only had one section an my mini-loaf pan that the batter stuck and I had to scrub it clean. The cupcake liner have never stuck.I don鈥檛 have a dishwasher, I just put them in hot soapy water, give them a quick wash, rinse, and air dry in the dish strainer.
My mother always flipped her biscuits. & muffins to stop sweaty bottoms. Usually 10 minutes cooling time before flipping works. Cornbread. Same, same. Must post due to suspect this knowledge is becoming extinct.
We flipped our bread loves also, then when I started working, I found out they would flip out the large connected (6 to 8 loaf) pans onto the board and leave them, 5 - 10 min later walk thru and turn them again. Evens out the moisture!
Old ways are best, if it ain't broke, don't fix it!
Some great hints and tips!(I especially like the one about adding 1/2 tsp. baking soda for each cup of buttermilk -- or, as I like to call it, bettermilk -- used.) Buttermilk gives extra moistness to a lot of baked goods, not just muffins, and it's great for just drinking, too. :)
However, I do agree with filling the muffin cups no more than 2/3 of the way because they need room to rise when baking. (I've learned that from messy experience!) I would never fill them to the top.
My tip 鈥.After lining the muffin tin with baking cups spray them with a light coat of non-stick cooking spray and the muffins want stick to the baking cups.