The Insufficient Kitchen

Lemon Muffins

Yield: 12 muffins
Approximate Baking Time: 15-20 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 Large Lemon
  • 2 Cups All Purpose Unbleached Flour
  • 1 Tablespoon Baking Powder
  • ½ Teaspoon Salt
  • 2 Large Eggs
  • 1 Cup Cream (alternatively: 1 Cup whole milk or half and half.)
  • Scant ½ Cup Granulated Sugar
  • 1 Teaspoon Vanilla
  • 1 (8 tablespoons) Stick Sweet Butter

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 400 F
  2. Line a 12-cup muffin tin with baking liners. Alternatively, you can use non-stick spray, or lavishly butter each muffin well.
  3. You will need two large bowls.
  4. Scrub the lemon. Using a vegetable peeler, shave the peel off in long strips, avoiding the white part, or pith. I like to chop it into fairly large pieces, but you can also grate it with a Microplane grater. Set the peel aside in small bowl.
  5. Juice the lemon. I often do this right over the peel. Set aside.
  6. In a large bowl, stir the flour, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.
  7. In the second bowl, whisk the eggs, cream, sugar, and vanilla. Melt the butter in the microwave or over the stovetop. Stirring constantly, add to the wet mixture. You don’t want to scramble the egg. Add the lemon mixture and stir briefly. The mixture might look curdled. That’s okay.
  8. Add the wet mixture to the dry bowl. Stir only until the two are blended; do not overmix. Lumps are okay.
  9. Spoon the mixture into the muffin tin. I find a using large spoon and spatula together do the job best. Aim for an even amount of batter in each well. The batter will look shaggy. That’s okay: it will collect itself during baking.
  10. Bake for 15-20 minutes, until a tester comes out cleanly. Cool on a rack.
  11. Keep 2 days at room temperature, wrapped; muffins are best reheated in a toaster oven or low oven. Microwaving leads to rubberiness. I’ve frozen muffins for months; so long as they are well-wrapped and carefully reheated, they come to no harm.

Notes:

  • After years of shunning muffin tin liners, I caved. They make cleanup immensely easier.
  • If you bake lots of muffins, a quality muffin pan is a worthwhile investment. After years of cheap tins, I invested in a professional-weight muffin tin. The difference is shocking. The muffins are lighter, the cleanup easier. Good cookware is expensive but worth it.
  • About Vanilla: the late, great Laurie Colwin gives a wonderful recipe for making your own: drop a vanilla bean into a bottle of inexpensive brandy. Continue refreshing each regularly, dropping in the used vanilla pods from other baking projects. You’ll never look back.

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