Home » Muffins » Blueberry Muffins

Blueberry Muffins

Updated on June 13, 2026 By Mia Caldwell
Blueberry Muffins

A classroom breakfast emergency at 6:30 AM, a bag of frozen berries, and fifteen minutes of controlled chaos produced the best blueberry muffin recipe I have ever made. These homemade blueberry muffins come out with giant, bakery-style domed tops because of one simple oven trick: five minutes at 425°F before dropping the temperature for the rest of the bake.

The batter takes ten minutes to mix, the sour cream keeps every crumb moist for days, and the walnut cinnamon streusel on top covers any imperfect surfaces with something better than perfection. Mismatched socks optional, but encouraged.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

  • Stupidly fast. The batter comes together in ten minutes, which makes this an easy blueberry muffin recipe built for chaotic Tuesday mornings.
  • Giant bakery tops. A five-minute blast at 425°F before dropping the temperature forces the batter to dome up rather than bake flat.
  • Fruit justification. Each muffin contains a generous amount of berries, which makes it a serving of fruit by any reasonable interpretation.
  • Ugly-friendly. The streusel covers every imperfect surface with something better.

Tools You’ll Need

Nothing fancy, I promise.

  • 12-count muffin pan. Standard size for the batter quantity in this recipe. A 6-count jumbo pan also works but requires adjusting the bake time by 5 to 8 minutes.
  • Muffin liners. Paper liners prevent fruit cement from bonding to the metal and make cleanup take thirty seconds.
  • Handheld mixer. A whisk works for everything except creaming the butter, which requires either a mixer or serious commitment.

Ingredients

For the Topping

  • 1/2 cup packed light or dark brown sugar – Dark brown sugar gives it a molasses kick, but use whatever is in your pantry.
  • 1/2 cup chopped walnuts – Omit these if your household has strong anti-nut opinions.
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon – Measure with your heart.

For the Muffins

  • 1¾ cups all-purpose flour. Spoon the flour into the measuring cup and level it off. Scooped flour packs in 20% extra and produces dense, heavy muffins.
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda. Check the expiration date. Baking soda reacts with the sour cream’s acidity to create lift. An expired box produces flat muffins with no dome. For a deeper look at how sodium bicarbonate works as a leavening agent, the chemistry is genuinely interesting.
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder. You need both. Baking powder and baking soda perform different jobs and neither one fully replaces the other in this batter.
  • ½ teaspoon salt. Balances the sugar and sharpens the blueberry flavor.
  • ½ cup unsalted butter, softened. If you forgot to take it out in advance, microwave it for 8 seconds and proceed.
  • ½ cup granulated sugar. Standard white sugar for sweetness and structure.
  • ¼ cup packed brown sugar. Adds moisture retention and a faint caramel note to the crumb.
  • ½ cup sour cream. The ingredient that separates a genuinely moist muffin from a dry one. Plain full-fat yogurt substitutes 1:1. According to King Arthur Baking, the fat and acidity in sour cream tenderize the crumb and react with the leaveners for better rise.
  • 2 large eggs. Room temperature eggs incorporate more smoothly into the creamed butter than cold ones.
  • 1½ teaspoons pure vanilla extract. Pure extract rather than imitation. The flavor difference is noticeable in a simple batter.
  • ¼ cup whole milk. The fat content in whole milk keeps the batter from tightening up. Skim milk produces a drier result.
  • 1½ cups fresh or frozen blueberries. Both work. Frozen berries go straight from the bag into the batter with no thawing. Thawed berries bleed purple dye into the batter and produce a gray, unappetizing crumb.
ingredients on marble surface including flour, sugar, eggs, vanilla, butter, cinnamon, and milk.

Instructions

Set your oven and grab your bowls, because we are about to make your kitchen smell infinitely better than whatever candle you currently have burning.

  1. Prep the pan: Preheat oven to 425°F (218°C) and line a 12-count muffin pan with liners. If you forget the liners, grease that pan like your life depends on it, but seriously, just use the liners.
  2. Make the streusel: For the topping, mix the brown sugar, walnuts, and cinnamon in a small bowl. Resist the urge to just eat this with a spoon.
  3. Whisk the dry: Whisk the flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt together in a large bowl. A few lumps are fine, this is not a chemistry exam.
  4. Cream the butter: Using a mixer, beat the butter, granulated sugar, and brown sugar together until smooth and creamy. If it looks a little grainy, that is between you and the mixing bowl, nobody else needs to know.
  5. Combine it all: Add the sour cream, eggs, and vanilla extract, beating until combined, then add dry ingredients and milk. The batter will be thick, which is exactly how to make blueberry muffins that actually rise instead of spreading flat.
  6. Add the berries: Fold in the blueberries gently. If you smash a few and the batter turns purple, congratulations, you now have tie-dye muffins.
  7. Bake high, then low: Spoon the batter into liners, filling them to the top, and press the streusel on. Bake for 5 minutes at 425°F, then lower to 350°F (177°C) for 16–19 minutes. This high-heat trick is the easiest muffin recipe secret for getting those giant bakery tops.
muffin batter being spooned into liners and topped with streusel.

♥ The Misfit Tips!

  • Give the pudding the full four hours minimum. A pudding pulled from the refrigerator after two hours runs soupy and structural. After four hours it holds its shape. Overnight it becomes something categorically different and better. Build the overnight step into the plan whenever the event allows it.
  • Use yellow bananas with no spots for caramelizing. Overripe bananas dissolve in the brown sugar butter in under two minutes and turn into a fragrant paste. Yellow bananas hold their shape through the cooking and the layering and stay intact after overnight chilling.
  • Press plastic wrap directly onto the pudding surface. Any gap between the wrap and the custard produces a rubbery skin across the top layer. Press the wrap flat against the surface before refrigerating, both on the finished assembled dish and on any leftover pudding stored separately.

Troubleshooting Guide

Something went sideways? Been there. Here is how to fix it.

  • Problem: The muffins baked flat with no dome
  • Why: Expired leaveners or skipping the initial 425°F temperature
  • Fix: Replace the baking soda and baking powder with fresh boxes. Use the current batch as crumbled muffin topping over yogurt.
  • Problem: The blueberries sank to the bottom
  • Why: The batter ran too thin or the berries were large and heavy
  • Fix: Toss the berries in one tablespoon of flour before folding them in next time. The light coating helps them stay suspended.
  • Problem: The muffins turned out dry and crumbly
  • Why: Overmixing the batter develops too much gluten, or the muffins spent two extra minutes in the oven
  • Fix: Slice and butter them generously. Next batch, mix just until the flour disappears and pull the pan the moment the toothpick comes out clean.

Variations Worth Trying

Lemon blueberry muffins. Add one tablespoon of lemon zest and one tablespoon of fresh lemon juice to the batter with the vanilla extract. The citrus brightens the blueberry flavor and makes the muffins taste lighter. These lemon blueberry muffins work especially well in spring when fresh berries come into season.

Banana blueberry muffins. Replace the sour cream with half a cup of mashed ripe banana. The banana adds natural sweetness and a dense, moist crumb that pairs well with the tartness of the berries. These banana blueberry muffins also freeze beautifully.

Oatmeal blueberry muffins. Swap ¼ cup of the flour for ¼ cup of old-fashioned rolled oats and add a tablespoon of extra milk to compensate for the oats absorbing moisture. These oatmeal blueberry muffins have a slightly heartier texture and work well as a weekday breakfast.

Mini blueberry muffins. Use a 24-count mini muffin pan and fill each cavity two-thirds full. Reduce the bake time to 3 minutes at 425°F followed by 9 to 11 minutes at 350°F. Mini blueberry muffins bake faster and make a great addition to a brunch spread or a lunchbox.

Gluten-free blueberry muffins. Substitute the all-purpose flour with a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend. King Arthur and Bob’s Red Mill both produce reliable results in muffin batters. These gluten-free blueberry muffins taste nearly identical to the original when you use a blend that contains xanthan gum.

Perfect Pairings

These homemade blueberry muffins need very little company, but a few things help:

  • A second cup of black coffee eaten in peace before anyone else wakes up
  • Sliced in half with salted butter melted into the warm crumb, because streusel and butter in the same bite earns its own category
  • Fridge. Up to 2 days covered tightly. The vanilla wafers continue softening each day, which many people prefer over the firmer first-day texture.
  • Freezer. Never. The custard separates, the bananas release water, and the whipped cream collapses into a liquid layer. Eat it within two days.
  • Serving temperature. Always cold. This dessert requires refrigeration from assembly through serving.
Blueberry Muffins

My Best Blueberry Muffins

These blueberry muffins are buttery, soft, and moist. For that bakery-style goodness, add an easy cinnamon brown sugar topping. This thick muffin batter combined with my initial high oven temperature trick guarantees tall muffin tops. Prepared with basic ingredients and a couple mixing bowls, you’ll appreciate this easy breakfast recipe.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Servings: 12 servings
Course: Breakfast
Cuisine: American

Ingredients
  

  • 1/2 cup (100g) packed light or dark brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup (67g) chopped walnuts (or pecans)
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 and 3/4 cups (219g) all-purpose flour (spooned & leveled)
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup (8 Tbsp; 113g) unsalted butter softened to room temperature
  • 1/2 cup (100g) granulated sugar
  • 1/4 cup (50g) packed light or dark brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup (120g) sour cream or plain/vanilla yogurt at room temperature
  • 2 large eggs at room temperature
  • 1 and 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 1/4 cup (60ml) milk at room temperature
  • 1 and 1/2 cups (210g) fresh or frozen blueberries

Equipment

  • 12-count muffin pan
  • Muffin liners
  • Handheld mixer

Method
 

  1. Prep the pan
    Preheat the oven to 425°F (218°C). Line a 12-count muffin pan with paper liners. If you skip the liners, grease the cavities thoroughly with softened butter or cooking spray and flour each one.
  2. Make the streusel
    Stir the brown sugar, chopped walnuts, and cinnamon together in a small bowl until combined. Set aside.
  3. Whisk the dry ingredients
    Whisk the flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt together in a large bowl. A few small lumps are fine.
  4. Cream the butter and sugars
    Beat the softened butter, granulated sugar, and brown sugar together with a hand mixer on medium speed until smooth and creamy, about 2 minutes.
  5. Add the wet ingredients
    Add the sour cream, eggs, and vanilla extract to the butter mixture and beat until the batter looks uniform. Add the dry ingredients and milk, mixing on low speed just until the flour disappears. The batter will be thick, which is exactly the consistency needed for a blueberry muffin recipe that rises tall rather than spreads flat.
  6. Fold in the berries
    Add the blueberries and fold them in with a spatula using gentle strokes. A few broken berries are fine. Aggressive stirring turns the whole batter purple and breaks down the berry texture.
  7. Fill and top
    Spoon the batter into the liners, filling each one to the very top. Press a generous pinch of streusel onto each muffin and press it lightly into the surface so it doesn't slide off during baking.
  8. Bake with the temperature drop
    Bake at 425°F for 5 minutes, then reduce the oven temperature to 350°F (177°C) and bake for another 16 to 19 minutes until a toothpick inserted in the center of a muffin comes out clean. The initial high heat forces the batter to dome upward fast before the structure sets, producing the tall, rounded tops you see at a bakery.

Recipe Notes

🍋 Add lemon zest for a citrus upgrade.
One tablespoon of lemon zest stirred into the batter transforms these into lemon blueberry muffins with a brighter, more complex flavor. The citrus cuts through the richness of the sour cream and makes the blueberry flavor taste more vivid. Lemon zest adds flavor without adding liquid, so it requires no other adjustments to the recipe. ✨
🥛 Sour cream is non-negotiable for the crumb.
The fat and acidity in sour cream tenderize the gluten and react with the baking soda to create lift. Full-fat plain yogurt or full-fat Greek yogurt substitutes 1:1 in a pinch. Low-fat dairy produces a noticeably drier result. Skim versions make the batter behave differently and the muffin denser. ⚠️
🌾 Gluten-free swap works with a 1:1 flour blend.
Replace the all-purpose flour with a certified gluten-free 1:1 blend that contains xanthan gum. The batter behaves slightly thicker than the original, so add one extra tablespoon of milk if it looks too stiff to fold the berries in cleanly. These gluten-free blueberry muffins bake at the same temperature and time as the original recipe. 🥜

🙋‍♀️ Frequently Asked Questions

🚫 Freezing banana pudding breaks the custard’s emulsion, turns the bananas gray and watery, and causes the whipped cream to separate into a liquid layer on thawing. The texture becomes impossible to recover. Make this recipe in the quantity you plan to eat within two days and skip the freezer entirely. Individual banana pudding cups freeze slightly better than a full assembled dish, but still lose significant texture on thawing.

✅ Fold 8 ounces of softened cream cheese into the finished warm custard before assembling the layers. Whisk the cream cheese thoroughly so no lumps remain. The cream cheese adds a tangy richness that makes the pudding taste closer to a banana pudding cheesecake recipe and helps the finished dish set firmer and slice more cleanly than the standard version.

👉 Replace the ¾ cup of granulated sugar in the custard with ½ cup of sweetened condensed milk. The condensed milk sweetens the custard with an added caramel undertone and makes the finished texture slightly denser. Keep the cornstarch amount the same. The banana pudding with condensed milk version chills and sets on the same four-hour timeline as the original.

🍓 Add a layer of fresh sliced strawberries between the second caramelized banana layer and the final custard pour. The strawberries release a small amount of juice as they sit overnight, which creates a pink streak through the custard near the fruit layer. This banana pudding with strawberries version looks striking in a clear trifle dish and adds a bright tartness that balances the richness of the cream.

📅 Assemble the full dish up to 24 hours before serving for the best flavor. Beyond 24 hours, the bananas begin releasing liquid into the surrounding custard and the presentation loses some of its clean layered appearance. The whipped cream topping holds best when added three to four hours before serving rather than the full night before.

🥥 Replace the whole milk with full-fat coconut milk, the heavy cream with chilled coconut cream, the egg yolks with an additional tablespoon of cornstarch for a total of 5 tablespoons, and the butter with refined coconut oil. Use coconut whipped cream for the topping. This vegan banana pudding sets firmly after four hours and carries a coconut undertone that works well alongside the caramelized banana flavor.

Did you make this recipe?

Pin this recipe to share with your friends and followers.

Pin it

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating