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The Secret to Strawberry Muffins That Actually Stay Moist

Finally, a Strawberry Muffin That Isn’t Dry as Dust

By Sandy GillmanPublished 13 days ago 3 min read
Our strawberry haul from our weekend strawberry-picking adventure.

A few months ago, we had a family outing to a strawberry farm where we could pick our own strawberries. You can read about it here:

When we got home, I felt excited about how many strawberries we had, which quickly turned into a weird kind of stress. What were we going to do with all these strawberries?

Fun Fact

Unlike bananas, strawberries don’t ripen once picked from the vine. Although strawberries taste better at room temperature, if they’re not consumed on the day of picking, they should be refrigerated before they turn to liquid and start going mouldy.

This will still happen in the fridge, but you might just have an extra couple of days before you go to pick up a strawberry and it collapses into a pile of goo in your hands.

Can I Make a Muffin That Doesn’t Need to be Swallowed with Liquid Like a Pill?

I always love the idea of a muffin. Every now and then, I’ll get a craving for one, and no matter where I buy it from, I take a bite, and I’m always disappointed by the dry, bready texture.

You practically need a liquid chaser with every bite to get it down! They’re like glorified dry crackers.

If you get one with icing to cover up the dryness, they can be slightly more bearable.

They’re practically arid. I looked up the actual meaning of this and, according to Google, it means “unpleasantly dry without life.” Perfect explanation.

I found a recipe for strawberry muffins and put my own spin on it in an attempt to make a moist muffin, and I was very happy with the results. No icing required.

Strawberry Muffins

Ingredients

Olive oil spray

1 1/2 cups self-raising flour

1/2 cup brown sugar

250g strawberries

200g (3/4 cup) low-fat Greek-style yoghurt

45ml (1/4 cup) light olive oil

1 egg, lightly whisked

Method

  • Preheat oven to 180°C. Spray a 12-capacity muffin pan with olive oil spray to lightly grease. Insert a patty pan into each hole for easy removal. Spray with oil again.
  • Blend the strawberries to make a pulp. I put mine in my Nutribullet and it worked really well.
  • Sift the flour into a large bowl. Stir in the brown sugar and strawberry pulp.
  • Combine the yoghurt, oil and egg in a large jug. Pour into the flour mixture. Stir until just combined.
  • Divide the mixture evenly among the prepared pans. Bake for 25 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the centres comes out clean. Place onto a wire rack to cool.

Why This Works?

Most muffin and cookie recipes (trust me, I’ve tried a few) ask you to chop the strawberries and add them as a mix-in, like chocolate chips. Blending the strawberries creates a juicy pulp, which then adds more moisture to the dry ingredients.

I can’t take credit for this one because it was part of the original recipe, but Greek yoghurt also makes muffins more moist.

Bonus Level

We still had so many strawberries left, so I made a slight variation and came up with choc strawberry muffins.

Choc Strawberry Muffins

Ingredients

Olive oil spray

1 1/3 cups self-raising flour

2 tbsp cocoa

1/2 cup brown sugar + 1 tbsp extra to counteract the bitterness of the cocoa

250g strawberries

200g (3/4 cup) low-fat Greek-style yoghurt

45ml (1/4 cup) light olive oil

1 egg, lightly whisked

Follow the method above.

Pro Tip

If you’re not going to consume these muffins within a day or two, it’s best to freeze them. I put mine in individual freezer bags and take them out for my son’s morning snacks.

They still taste great from the freezer. I was chopping one up for him yesterday, and the centre actually looked like it had a fudge texture. Delicious!

🍓

Shameless plug: If you enjoyed the strawberry photo at the top, you can now grab it as a canvas print, phone case, or more over on my Redbubble store.

recipehow to

About the Creator

Sandy Gillman

I’m a mum to a toddler, just trying to get through the day. I like to write about the ups and downs of parenting. I’m not afraid to tell it like it is. I hope you’ll find something here to laugh, relate to, and maybe even learn from.

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Comments (20)

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  • L.C. Schäferabout 17 hours ago

    These sound great, I might try them this summer when I have too many strawberries. I hate having to throw them away!

  • Wooohooooo congratulations on your Leaderboard placement! 🎉💖🎊🎉💖🎊

  • Sara Wilson6 days ago

    Yay!! Leaderboard! Everyone will be enjoying some yummy strawberry muffins soon ☺️☺️

  • Cryptic Edwards8 days ago

    Thank you for this piece, this recipie sounds like one I need to do with my son . 💜💜

  • The strawberry photo is a beautiful. I do remember your visit to the strawberry farm that was a very fun and heartwarming read. Both recipes sound great. I will have to try both. I’m a fan of strawberry and chocolate. This is a really good read. I enjoyed it.

  • Ph these sound good especially the choc strawberry ones. That's a really good tip about blending the strawberries.

  • Imola Tóth10 days ago

    I want to make these now! Sounds delicious.💕 My grandma used to have strawberries in her garden, and when she had a lot she just pureed them and froze them for later. We ate it like ice cream.

  • Tiffany Gordon11 days ago

    These recipes sound yummy! Thx 4 sharing! Red bubble, baking, & writing; You are becoming a Jacqueline of all trades! Go gurl! 💪🏾💕

  • Tim Carmichael11 days ago

    When I was growing up, we had a field called the new ground. Wild strawberries, which are small berries unlike the large ones you find in grocery stores, grew everywhere, and my granny and mother would make strawberry muffins from them. Now you have made me hungry for strawberry muffins.

  • Sara Wilson11 days ago

    Strawberry is my favorite fruit! I've never made strawberry muffins! I might have to give you recipe a shot!

  • Edward Swafford12 days ago

    I used to include strawberries in my juicer blends. I usually tip the excess into the garden, and one Spring about five strawberry plants shot up?! Quite a hardy and miraculous fruit!! 😆❤️

  • S. A. Crawford12 days ago

    Oooh im going to try this - I LOVE strawberries

  • I love the follow up to the strawberry outing! My oldest daughter is an avid baker I will pass this recipe to her thank you! 🍓 ♥️

  • Tanya Lei13 days ago

    I love a good moist muffin. I love strawberries. and I often each plain yogurt with fresh strawberries. a Fantastic combination!

  • Komal13 days ago

    This is so fun and relatable 😂 the “muffins are basically dry crackers” part had me because it’s SO true. Now I’m craving one of those choc strawberry muffins especially that fudgy center you mentioned 👀

  • Susan Fourtané 13 days ago

    The strawberry muffins sound delicious, indeed. I was hoping to see the pictures of the muffins, though. :D If you still have some, there is time to add one or two. :D The dry muffins must be an Australian thing. I've never had a dry muffin as far as I remember. And I love a good muffin, usually blueberry muffins!

  • I loveeeeee muffins but I've never had one that's dry. The ones I've had are always so moist. So I was shocked by your muffin experience. I'm happy that yours turned out well hehehe

  • 🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀 COOL 🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀

  • Seema Patel13 days ago

    We just eat it as such, but it goes in many desserts, salads.

  • Miss Bey13 days ago

    Love it!♥️♥️🌻🙏

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