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Old-Fashioned Muffin Recipe

3.4

(178)

A plate of basic muffins being served with butter and jam.
Photo by Joseph De Leo, Food Styling by Micah Marie Morton

This basic muffin recipe has a neat trick: Instead of giving you instructions for making just one kind of muffin, it acts as a base recipe for making pretty much any kind of muffin you can imagine. We have a few variations here (including bacon muffins!) to get you started, but they’re illustrative of the many other things you can try. You can use the raisin variation, for instance, to make chocolate chip muffins or the fresh blueberry muffin instructions to make a cranberry version. If you want to get even more creative, you can even make chocolate muffins, or a double chocolate version, by adding a bit of vanilla extract and cocoa to the muffin batter before you mix in your chips. (While the recipe calls for buttering the muffin tins, you can opt to use silicone or paper liners instead to dress them up.)

However you flavor them, these quick bread–adjacent treats are delicious. They’re a bit heartier than the tender cupcake-style muffins you usually find in coffee shops these days. These have a dense, moist crumb, and the muffin tops are rounded and pebbly rather than puffy. They’re also really quick and simple to make—particularly since the ingredients are only lightly mixed—so you can easily throw them together for breakfast or brunch and serve with butter and jam or a swipe of cream cheese. If you make them ahead, store at room temperature in an airtight container.

This recipe was excerpted from ‘The Fannie Farmer Cookbook’ by Marion Cunningham. Buy the full book on Amazon.

Recipe information

  • Total Time

    30 minutes

  • Yield

    Makes 12 muffins

Ingredients

2 cups (250 g) all-purpose flour
1 Tbsp. baking powder
½ tsp. kosher salt
2 Tbsp. granulated sugar
1 large egg, slightly beaten
1 cup (8 oz) whole milk, room temperature
¼ cup (½ stick) butter, melted

Preparation

  1. Preheat the oven to 375°F. Butter muffin pans. Mix the flour, baking powder, salt, and sugar in a large bowl. Add the egg, milk, and butter, stirring only enough to dampen the dry ingredients; the batter should not be smooth. Spoon into the muffin cups, filling each one about two-thirds full. Bake for about 20 to 25 minutes each.

    VARIATIONS:

    Blueberry Muffins: Increase sugar to ½ cup. Reserve ¼ cup of the flour and toss with 1 cup blueberries; stir them into the batter last.

    Pecan Muffins: Increase sugar to ¼ cup. Add ½ cup chopped toasted pecans to the batter. After filling the cups, sprinkle with more granulated sugar or brown sugar, cinnamon, and more chopped nuts.

    Whole-Wheat Muffins: Decrease all-purpose flour to 1 cup and add ¾ cup whole-wheat flour.

    Date or Raisin Muffins: Add ½ cup chopped pitted dates or ⅓ cup raisins to the batter.

    Bacon Muffins: Add 3 strips bacon, fried crisp and crumbled, to the batter.

    Mini Muffins: Swap standard muffin tin for mini muffin tin and bake at 375°F for 10–13 minutes. (Makes about 36 mini muffins.) 

    Editor’s note: This recipe first appeared on Epicurious in August 2004. Head this way for more of our favorite breakfast recipes

Cover of The Fannie Farmer Cookbook 1996 edition.
Excerpted by permission of Knopf from The Fannie Farmer Cookbook: Celebrating the 100th Anniversary of America's Great Classic Cookbook, copyright © 1996 by Marion Cunningham. All rights reserved. Buy the full book from Amazon or Bookshop.

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