These days, I don’t bake as much as I used to. I just can’t afford the sugar and calories anymore. At least while I was a graduate student living in a graduate dorm, I could always pass out my baking to all the hungry students and not eat them all myself.
These days, I’m being more careful to only bake when I have an occasion to bring them somewhere or when I have people over. Otherwise, being a stay-at-home mom, these baked goods somehow find their way into my hands and quickly into the safest place possible (my tummy! ^_^).
So even though I love to bake, I’ve resigned myself to doing it occasionally rather than as often as I would like. Last night though, I really wanted to bake even though I had no reason to (seriously, do we ever really need a reason?) nor any occasion for it!
Luckily for Nate, I decided to bake some blueberry muffins. I mentioned after dinner that I was feeling very much like baking something and I said, “How about some blueberry muffins?” You should have seen his eyes gleam when I said that. He absolutely loves blueberry muffins and remembers how, before he met me, he used to make them from a box and devour them all. I, of course, have much higher standards than baking from a box!
Now, it’s been a really long time since I baked blueberry muffins and I don’t even recall where my last recipe was from. Thankfully, this is when cookbooks come in handy. I referred to two different trusted cookbooks—Beranbaum’s Bread Bible (I guess muffins are a quick bread) and The Best Recipe (Cook’s Illustrated’s cookbook). Both recipes sounded good with one ingredient that was different—one used sour cream, the other yogurt. As fate would have it, I actually had both handy that day. Decisions, decisions…
So ok, I’m partial to Beranbaum. Everything that I’ve tried from her cookbooks have turned out fabulous and never so sweet as to get my teeth grating. So I decided she won the coin toss this round. I baked up her blueberry muffins recipe. And it was delicious! Crusty on the outside and tender and soft on the inside. And bursting with blueberries with a slight lemon tang that perfectly accentuated the blueberries and sour cream.
Blueberry Muffin Bursting with Blueberries
Blueberry Muffins Recipe
adapted from “The Bread Bible” by Rose Levy Beranbaum
Makes 6 large muffins (unless you’re [and it’s “you’re” not “your”—the English teacher in me cringes at how often this is now common usage] like me and have to just bake up a dozen because you’re pake and since you have the oven on, you might as well utilize it as much as you can [and the English teacher in me is cringing at my super run-on sentence])
Ingredients
(at room temperature)
4 Tbsp (2 oz) unsalted butter
1/2 cup (100 g) sugar
zest of 2 large lemons (see our video “How to Zest a Lemon” on YouTube!)
1 large egg
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
about 1 cup (135 g) bleached all-purpose flour
1/4 tsp (2 g) baking soda
1/4 tsp (2 g) salt
1/3 cup (80 g) sour cream
3/4 cup (100 g) blueberries, frozen or fresh (I used frozen)
Topping (I omitted and still tasted excellent):
3/4 tsp sugar
grated nutmeg, for dusting
Method
1. Preheat oven to 375 F.
2. In a large bowl, cream butter, sugar, and lemon zest until light and fluffy. Beat in the egg and vanilla.
Butter and Sugar Ready to be Creamed
3. In a small bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, and salt. Spoon half the flour mixture and half the sour cream into the batter/sugar mixture and fold in with a rubber spatula until flour has mostly disappeared. Repeat with the remaining flour and sour cream, folding in just until the flour disappears.
4. Fold in the blueberries gently.
5. Fill the muffin pan (or ramekins or custard cups) almost to the top. Batter will be somewhat stiff (especially if using frozen blueberries).
Blueberry Muffin Batter in Cups
6. Bake for 25 to 35 minutes or until the muffins spring back when pressed lightly in the center with a fingertip and a wooden toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
7. Unmold muffins and cool on a wire rack. Serve warm or at room temperature.
Blueberry Muffins Cooling
When the timer went off and I asked Nate to check to make sure the blueberry muffins were done, he opened the oven and exclaimed, “Oh maaan! They look soooo good!” And they were. Nicely domed and perfectly golden. Nate could barely contain himself. I’m surprised he didn’t grab one right off the muffin pan when they came out. He actually had enough restraint to take some pictures before diving into one.
Blueberry Muffin Made from Scratch
Well, he polished off two blueberry muffins that very night! And my kids had one each for breakfast this morning. It is definitely a winner of a recipe. But I can’t help wondering if the other blueberry muffins recipe would have been better or just as good. After all, those people test all their recipes a gazillion times…surely it must be just as good (and yes, they did try sour cream and they still claimed that yogurt was better).
So I have to do a bake-off and try the other recipe. It shouldn’t be too hard to do since I have yogurt on hand and even though I doubled the recipe this time, I’m only left with three more blueberry muffins (I shared some with my neighbor). And yes, I do have more blueberries (I have a bag of frozen ones handy that my kids like to snack on, and it turns out they are great for baking muffins too!).
So stay tuned to my next “baking-for-no-other-reason-other-than-plain curiousity” and if you’re in my neighborhood, drop by for a taste! In the meantime, enjoy Beranbaum’s blueberry muffins recipe!
Cheers, Annie
>In high school, whenever I baked something, I brought it to school to share with my friends. In college,It was a little more difficult to give food away.Weird, huh? I guess the people at my college were health conscious.
These look so good. Wish I had one for breakfast right now.
>I love baking muffins but, like you, I can’t afford the fat or sugar. I have a wonderful and quick recipe that calls for a small amount of vegetable oil instead of butter and I also substitute whole wheat flour for some of the white flour.
If you want the recipe, let me know and I’ll e-mail it to you. However, it’s probably not as luxurious-tasting as the one you featured. It’s more of utilitarian-type of muffin, one that I can make up quickly and that the kids can grab and eat for breakfast or snack. In other words, it’s a healthy muffin and I know some people abhor that. We still think it’s pretty tasty.
(BTW, I have a writing/editing background and the “your/you’re” errors drive me nuts, too, although I’m sure I’ve been guilty of that as well.)
>LOL, I love your much higher standars! These muffins look awesome. Nate is very lucky, indeed :-p
>Those babies are bursting with berries. In my book, any dessert that has fruit in it is “healthful.” I know, I know, that doesn’t always wash. But that’s the way my mind likes to work. 😉
>Blueberry muffins are my favorite. It’s only good right when it comes out of the oven. The ones at Sweet Tomatoes are actually pretty good.
>These muffins look really lovely! The perfect shape, just like you’d see in a bakery.
>I love blueberry muffin. Years ago I used to buy blueberry muffin from Sam’s club (whole seller)so I have to buy 12 huge muffins. I will pack them in the freezer and eat one muffin every other day. I am too cannot afford to eat all those fat and sugar. But the next time I am thinking about having blueberry muffin, I will try to bake it myself. Thanks for the inspiration to be better than using box mixed.:-)
>Delicious. I simply love these time of breakfast treats and it looks like you really loaded these up with blueberries.
>I’d love to be your “taste-tester”. Wish you can be my neighbor.
>Even though I prefer making bread than cake in my baking, your blueberry muffins look so irresistable!
>Look at those popping up blueberry muffins. So gorgeous!
>Hahaha I am like you i.e. love to bake but try my best to wait for an occasion cos can’t afford the extra calories / cholesterol. Btw, I tried your 3-cup chicken recipe recently and it is super duper yummy!
>@all – thanks for your comments!
@Nila – college people refusing free food? What’s up with that!
@Jenster – Sometimes you just have to make the sacrifice: hips for taste.
@Ben – thanks!
@Carolyn – Kinda like our li hing margarita – it has plum, lemon and lime, so it must be healthy!
@Jocelyn and Colin – Do you wanna come over and make some muffins one day?
@Ari – thank you!
@Zue – warehouse store muffins are really bad. No love in them at all. Please do try this recipe and let us know how it turns out for you!
@laufamily – okay, you got the yogurt one, now make this sour cream one and tell us which one you like.
@Dorach – great to hear!
>I just made these for my kids and I and they were divined! I substituted the sour cream with yogurt b/c that’s all I had on hand. I wish I had doubled the recipe since they are almost gone : (
I really enjoy the recipes and the great photos you share. Thanks!
>@Holly – wonderful! I’m so glad you and your kids like this recipe.
>I'm wondering which blueberry muffins recipe to try out, but these are definetely on my list! So pretty and bursting with berries!
Genoius! Fantastic! and estraterranean!!!!!!!!
Thanks for your comments! I think these muffins are out-of-this-world good too 🙂
Can i substitue the sour cream with yogurt?
Sabrina,
you can substitute the sour cream with yogurt. Commenter Holly did last year and said it was divine 🙂
Thanks a lot. I’m gonna try it tonight!!! So anxious =)
I’ve tried this recipe yesterday night! It’s simply delicious!!! Thanks a lot for sharing!
hi, cam omit the lemon zest? will it affect the taste?
thanks
Teru,
yes you can omit the lemon zest. It will make the cupcake taste less lemony if you do.
hi, had tried making the muffin with lemon zest. it was delicious and fantastic..
i love the lemon aroma 🙂
I’d love to bake a blueberry cake which is similar to the muffin recipe. Do you think the ingredient amounts are good for a 20 inch round cake?
Sharon,
thanks for your question.
This muffin recipe probably won’t work for a 20-inch cake.