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Showing posts with label white whole wheat flour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label white whole wheat flour. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Browned Butter Blueberry Maple Muffins

browned-butter-blueberry-muffins-5

Think Blueberry Pancakes. In a nice little handheld size. And no slaving over a hot griddle making pancake after pancake. These are almost instant gratification!

Some of you may remember the Daring Bakers Cake, Caramel Cake with Caramelized Butter Frosting, from Shuna Fish Lydon. One of the best cakes ever, and the one I’m requesting for my birthday in September. It’s amazing how browning the butter makes the whole thing better. And it’s a simple step, too! Just make sure you run the browned butter through a strainer (a metal mesh one, so it doesn’t melt!) and let it cool slightly before you add it to your recipe.

frozen-wild-blueberries

So, I was thinking about muffins, as I often do. Yes, really! I love them like family. They make a nice breakfast or a delicious snack. It’s cake that’s contained in it’s own little hand held package. Want fruit? Go for it! Nuts? Chocolate? Whatever you feel like!

While I was thinking about muffins, I inadvertently drifted over to breakfast--->pancakes--->blueberry pancakes--->maple syrup--->muffins! The light went on over my head and hit me like a dozen muffins. Or in this case, ten.

Blueberry muffins. Nearly everyone loves them. But putting a spin on them is the fun part! To mimic blueberry pancakes, I could add maple syrup. And browned butter to get the flavor you get from frying your pancakes up in melted butter.

Oh, yes. Now we’re talking! These are right up there in my top 5 favorite muffins now. I’ll definitely make them more, and in fact, they’re now my official blueberry muffin recipe!

I used frozen Wild Maine Blueberries in these. You know, the little tiny ones? But you can use any kind you like. And even though I think purple muffins are extremely cool, I did rinse them before using. I wanted to see if the browned butter gave the batter some color, and it did. After baking, they were a nice caramel color.

frozen-wild-blueberries-2

Maple Syrup. Please, if you love me, use real maple syrup in these. Not the doctored up corn agave-maple-syrupsyrup with artificial maple flavoring and coloring. In this case, I used a maple agave blend from Trader Joe’s. It’s real maple syrup blended with agave. It’s one of my new best friends! If you can’t get your hands on that, maple syrup is perfect.

agave-maple-syrup-drop

I adapted this recipe from one found in 100 Muffins and Scones, by Felicity Barnum-Bobb. This book is packed with mouthwatering recipes to feed my muffin addiction!

Browned Butter Blueberry Maple Muffins
adapted from
100 Magnificent Muffins & Scones, by Felicity Barnum-Bobb

To print this recipe, click here.

1 cup all purpose flour
1/2 cup white whole wheat flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 cup blueberries (if frozen, rinsed and set aside to dry a bit)
1/2 cup butter
1/2 cup maple syrup
2 eggs
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 cup maple syrup, for brushing over tops

browned-butter-blueberry-muffins

Heat oven to 375, and lightly grease your muffin pan.
Melt the butter in a small pan, letting it go until it starts to brown and smell nutty. Don't let it burn, but stop
when it gets deep brown. There will be dark sediment in the pan, so pour the butter through a wire mesh strainer
and set it aside to cool a bit. Don't worry if a bit of the sediment makes it through the strainer.
In a medium bowl, whisk together the flours, baking powder and sugar.
In a smaller bowl, toss the berries with 1/4 cup of the flour mixture.
In a large measuring cup or smaller bowl, whisk the melted butter, maple syrup eggs and salt.
Pour the wet stuff into the dry stuff, mix just until blended--then fold in berries.
Fill the muffin cups evenly (I got 10 muffins) and bake for 18-20 minutes.
Do the toothpick test--it should come out clean.
Let the muffins cool a few minutes in the pan, then run a knife around the edges, and turn them out on to a
cooling rack.
Place the cooling rack over a parchment lined pan, and brush the tops with the maple syrup.

browned-butter-blueberry-muffins-3

A question to you, my readers--what are your favorite kinds of muffins?

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Thursday, March 6, 2008

Chocolate Chip Cookies


One of my best friends, Jen, gave me this recipe the other day. She said they were better than my extra special chocolate chip cookies. Huh? Say what? The hell you say! I figured I'd give them a whirl. Jen's a great baker, so she must know something that I don't, hehe.

She was right. They are better! I admit it. Oh well, I'll feel bad about it later. Maybe. If I do feel badly, I can always cheer myself up with more of these cookies, right?

Not surprisingly, the recipe calls for all purpose flour. Since I'm trying to sneak more whole grain goodness to my kids, I figured I'd be brave and go for broke. I didn't use part white and part whole wheat. Nope. I used ALL whole wheat flour. (I know, you're thinking, "Elle! You wild woman, slow down there!") Well, more specifically, King Arthur Flour White Whole Wheat Flour. This stuff is great! Here's what KAF has to say about the flour:

WHY WE LOVE IT: Unless you love the somewhat assertive flavor of traditional whole wheat, we strongly urge you to use this white whole wheat—or our organic white whole wheat—for your whole-grain baking. Lighter colored, milder tasting, and a somewhat finer grind, it acts much more like white flour in baking. We routinely substitute white wheat for 100% of the all-purpose flour in cookie, muffin, brownie, pancake, and other recipes where the difference won’t be noticeable. Like, don’t make an angel food cake with it; but gingerbread? Chocolate chip cookies? Cinnamon muffins? Go for it!

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Right out of the oven, the cookies tasted sort of "wheaty." But as they cooled, the wheat flavor faded, and by the next day, they tasted like they were made with regular white flour. We love them. I increased the salt to 1 tsp. Oh, the recipe only makes 18 cookies--I wanted more, so made them smaller, about the size of a walnut, and got about 32. They still took more time to bake, but again, the oven is only at 325°. Mine baked for about 15 or so minutes. And since it's a small amount of dough, I think 1 1/2 cups may be too many chocolate chips. Wait...did I really just say too much chocolate? God help me, I think I did. I think one cup would be plenty in these, but that's up to you to decide.




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