Monday 29 July 2013

summer/autumn recipes: cider apple muffins

CIDER APPLE MUFFINS

300g plain flour
125g brown sugar
1 tbsp baking powder
pinch of salt
3/4 tsp cinnamon, or to taste
tiny pinch of ground cloves
500ml apple cider
140ml flavourless oil, rapeseed or sunflower
1 egg
1 medium apple
Crumble Topping:

40g plain flour
50g brown sugar
25g flaked almonds
25g butter, melted
Preheat the oven to 200 C and line a 6 hole jumbo muffin tin (or 12 hole regular muffin tin) with paper cases or use squares of greaseproof paper, buttering the bases to keep the paper in place. Pour the cider into a saucepan and boil over a medium/high heat to reduce by a little over half and measure out 180ml of cider. Set aside to cool while you get the muffin batter ready. Combine the flour, sugar and nuts from the crumble ingredients in a small bowl and set aside also.
Place the flour, sugar, baking powder, cinnamon, cloves and pinch of salt in a large bowl and stir with a whisk to combine ( I use a whisk to stir because I'm too lazy to sieve the flour). Peel, grate or finely dice the apple and put it in the bowl with the dry ingredients and stir in with a fork. Put the reduced cider in a large jug or medium mixing bowl, add the vegetable oil next to help cool the cider further before adding the egg (scrambled eggs are not good in this recipe!). Beat the wet ingredients together lightly, Make a well in the dry ingredients and pour in the wet mixture using a fork to combine the batter. Mix only long enough to combine overmixing will make the muffins heavy instead of light and fluffy.
Transfer the batter to the muffin cases using a tablespoon. Stir enough butter into the crumble ingredients to make a moist crumble and scatter generously over the top of the muffin batter. Bake in the oven until risen, golden and springy when pressed lightly in the centre. Large muffins will take 35-40 minutes and regular sized ones will take about 25-30 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack to cool a little before diving in.
The muffins are best eaten warm on the day you bake them, but you could store them overnight in an airtight tin and warm them in the microwave (or oven) the next day.
Makes 6 large or 12 regular muffins. 

I found this on http://eatdrinklive.typepad.com/eat_drink_live/much_ado_about_muffins/ 

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