
These vegan Bumbly-Topped Blueberry Muffins are an easy new favorite recipe. They might seem like any ordinary blueberry muffin, but they have one secret new ingredient I love adding to my baked goods. Give these fluffy, dense, silky yet bumbly-topped muffins a try! Classic and gluten free recipe versions ahead!..
With lots of blueberries, I do not dare skimp on the blueberries in this family. Lots of berries. That is the best part according to my husband.
Maple syrup & maybe some vegan buttery spread on top..
With a side of a cute kitty cat to cuddle..
So. My secret ingredient: Potato Flour! Yup, naturally gluten free, (Bob's Red Mill) Potato Flour. I adore the smooth, dense, silky texture and tone that potato flour adds to baked goods. Another secret ingredient: vital wheat gluten. It helps to bind the batter and thicken it so that everything stays together and has a fluffy cake-like, yet scone-like texture.
I made two versions of this recipe. The first uses classic wheat flour with some nutty spelt flour and vital wheat gluten to bind and thicken the texture. The density really holds up and the gluten gives the muffins some body that doesn't sink or wilt at all when the muffins cool. I love this version and so did my taste testers! OK, when I say taste tester, I mean my husband.
The gf version..
Gluten-Free Version. I don't mind gluten in moderation, but if you are gluten sensitive, you can easily make these muffins using my favorite gluten free flour in place of the wheat and spelt: homemade oat flour using rolled oats. I love using homemade oat flour for my gf baking. To Make: Simply grind whole rolled oats in a Vitamix or food processor until powdery. A regular blender may work too.
I was surprised and thrilled by how delicious the gluten free version came out! The potato flour still adds a rich cake-y texture and my frozen berry trick (see recipe directions) to thicken and firm up the batter works well to keep things fluffy. I love both versions and the subtle differences of each. So I included both recipes in full below.
I like my muffins with vegan buttery spread + grade B maple syrup. Like pancakes. Only not. Only better?.. Maybe!..
GLUTEN-FREE version:
Bumbly-Topped Blueberry Muffins
vegan, gluten-free, makes 1 dozen standard muffins (or try round scones too using a baking sheet)
½ cup organic potato flour (Bob's Red Mill used)
1 ¾ cups homemade oat flour (made from grinding whole rolled oats into flour)
*more flour is used here (compared to classic) because you omit the vital wheat gluten and the oat flour is very fluffy/airy when measured)
¼ cup organic virgin coconut oil, melted
1 tablespoon flax seeds
¼ teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon baking powder
¾ cup homemade applesauce (or sub with store bought .. although fresh works best since it is rich in apple pectin)
2 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
⅛ teaspoon cinnamon
½ teaspoon vanilla extract (optional)
1 cup non-dairy milk, warmed
1 cup sugar
*I have experimented with a wide variety, all working beautifully (try sucanat, coconut sugar, basic dry vegan sugar, natural cane sugar, agave syrup or a blend.)
1 cup frozen wild blueberries (or freeze your own fresh berries - you want them to be frozen when added)
Directions:
1. Preheat oven to 420 degrees. Grind whole rolled oats into flour. Add the flax seeds to thIS oat flour mixture grind in blender - this will grind flax seeds with the oats. Pour oat + flax mixture into a large mixing bowl.
2. Make your homemade applesauce if making homemade. Add the apple cider vinegar to the applesauce and blend about a minute to make fluffy. Set aside in blender.
3. Add baking powder, salt and cinnamon to the flour mixing bowl. Blend together.
4. Warm non-dairy milk in microwave along with the coconut oil, vanilla extract and sweetener.
5. Add the warmed liquid to the flour mixture and blend well until a thick dough-like batter forms.
6. Pour the applesauce mixture into batter bowl and fold well until a fluffier (but still quite thick) batter forms.
7. Fold in the frozen berries. This will firm up the batter into a very fluffy dough since the cold berries harden the coconut oil in the batter. You will be able to easily scoop out the batter in thick mounds.
NOTE: If your dough seems heavy and dry, you may need to add another ¼ cup non-dairy milk or applesauce. You want the muffin batter/dough to be about the consistency of a fluffy cookie dough. Scone-like. You should be able to scoop it out in thick mounds. But you also want it to be very wet.
8. Grease your muffin tins with coconut oil and add heaping mounds of dough to the muffin tins. Top with a spray of coconut oil and pinch of sugar (optional).
9. Bake at 420 degrees for 20 minutes. Then reduce to 400 and bake for an additional 10-15 minutes. The tops will brown and the edges will turn a bit dark brown when they are close to done. The muffins firm up as they cool, so do not let a doughy texture fool you. That is just the potato flour. After 25-35 minutes they will be done.
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Bumbly-Topped Blueberry Muffins - classic version
vegan, makes 1 dozen standard muffins (or try round scones too using a baking sheet!)
½ cup organic potato flour (Bob's Red Mill used)
½ cup sprouted grain spelt flour (or use regular spelt or any whole grain flour you'd like)
¾ cup white whole wheat flour
⅓ cup organic virgin coconut oil, melted
¼ teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon baking powder
½ cup homemade applesauce (or sub with store bought .. although fresh works best since it is rich in apple pectin)
2 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
2 tablespoon vital wheat gluten
⅛ teaspoon cinnamon
½ teaspoon vanilla extract (optional)
1 cup non-dairy milk, warmed
¾ - 1 cup sugar
*I have experimented with a wide variety, all working beautifully (try sucanat, coconut sugar, basic dry vegan sugar, natural cane sugar, agave syrup...)
1 cup frozen wild blueberries (or freeze your own fresh berries - you want them to be frozen when added)
Directions:
1. Preheat oven to 420 degrees.
2. Make your homemade applesauce if making homemade. Set aside in blender.
3. Add flours, baking powder, salt, cinnamon and vital wheat gluten to a large mixing bowl. Blend together.
4. Warm non-dairy milk in microwave along with the coconut oil, vanilla extract and sweetener. You want the to be roughly the same temperature so that the coconut oil doesn't chill and harden.
5. Add the warmed liquid to the flour mixture and blend well until a thick dough-like batter forms.
6. Using a blender, blend the applesauce and apple cider vinegar. Blend so that it is nice and fluffy, whipping some air into it. Spoon into batter bowl and fold well until a fluffier (but still quite thick) batter forms.
7. Fold in the frozen berries. This will firm up the batter into a very fluffy dough since the cold berries harden the coconut oil in the batter. You will be able to easily scoop out the batter in thick mounds.
NOTE: If you have used drier/grainier flours than in the recipe you may need to add another ¼ cup liquid. You want the muffin batter/dough to be about the consistency of a fluffy cookie dough. Scone-like. You should be able to scoop it out in thick mounds. But you also want it to be very wet.
8. Grease your muffin tins with coconut oil and add heaping mounds of dough to the muffin tins. Top with a spray of coconut oil and pinch of sugar (optional).
9. Bake at 420 degrees for 15 minutes. Then reduce to 400 and bake for an additional 10-15 minutes. The tops will brown and the edges will turn a bit dark brown when they are close to done. The muffins firm up as they cool, so do not let a doughy texture fool you. That is just the potato flour. After 25-30 minutes they will be done.
Cool a bit and serve warm. Store on the counter, covered for up to a day or store in the freezer for longer periods. Warm to serve.




















Guest says
Can I use Rice Drink as the "non-dairy milk" option or is that too watery? Any suggestions for an alternative? Almond milk does NOT agree with my body and hemp or coconut MAY be okay but I'm mostly concerned about this ingredient making the dough consistency unable to bake up properly!
AwesomeSauce says
Can I use Rice Drink as the "non-dairy milk" option or is that too watery? Any suggestions for an alternative? Almond milk does NOT agree with my body and hemp or coconut MAY be okay but I'm mostly concerned about this ingredient making the dough consistency unable to bake up properly!
Kathy Patalsky says
I do not usually use a mixer for my muffins, however if I am using liquid ingredients that should be blended or smoothed (like silken tofu) I will blend those in a blender and fold into dry.
Kathy Patalsky says
The gf flour can be a bit sticky just like oatmeal (since oat flour) but yes using dry sugar may help a bit. Or try a different gf flour if you do not like the oat version. Some people love it and some do not like the sticky texture. Gf is tricky, so if you find a gf flour mix you like, stick with that for your recipes. I do like the oat flour texture and actually enjoy the "oatmeal" texture a bit
heather says
Thank you Kathy for the quick reply! Should I be mixing batter with a mixer or by hand? Will that effect texture at all? Excited to give these a try again!
heather says
just made the gluten free version, and they were doughy/rubbery. I didn't use homemade applesauce, and I also used a hand mixer. Should I mix by hand? I just found it really tough to mix that way. Also- I used agave syrup, should I use a dry sugar next time? Wanted to get your thoughts to see if either of these two things would change texture. I will try again!
anne hewell says
I have just made my second batch and they are just the yummiest muffins I have ever made Keep them coming xx
KarissaRenee says
I'm a huge fan of your Double Coconut Blueberry Muffin recipe (I've made it 4 times now!) so I can't wait to try this recipe! These look so yummy and I love how you provided a GF version!
Maggie Muggins says
He he, I just love the name Bumbly. The picture with the melted butter looks insanely good!
RockMyVeganSocks says
Wow Kathy - these look super delicious. I can almost smell them... mmmm
Heather McClees says
Blueberry muffins were my FAVORITE childhood treat. My dad made the Martha White mixed stuff and I just thought they were out of this world tasty:) Funny how now, they're my favorite thing to make homemade in the kitchen:) I can't have sugar, so I sweeten mine with applesauce and bananas:) Thanks for these two recipes! Your photos are to die for:)
Kathy Patalsky says
ooo you had me at "swimming in maple syrup" 🙂
Kathy Patalsky says
haha 🙂 thanks for making me smile xo
Kathy Patalsky says
yes coconut oil or even better one of my coconut oil butters.. http://kblog.lunchboxbunch.com/2012/04/coconut-butter-spreads-cacao-goji.html
Kathy Patalsky says
Thanks Sarojini!
Kathy Patalsky says
Thanks Lisa! 🙂
Kathy Patalsky says
That is great to hear Danielle!! Yes oat flour is a life saver in a gf kitchen 🙂
Kathy Patalsky says
Your muffin batter had too much liquid and not enough flour and binder. You may want to try using a thicker version of applesauce than the one you used and try grinding your oat flour even finer so that it is less fluffy when measuring. Or add another 1/2 cup of flour in the same consistency you used.
Jennifer Solomon says
I made the gf version and they came out all rubbery...not scone or muffin like at all...any suggestions?
Danielle Byrne says
I'm really liking the use of oat flour! I can never find spelt flour anywhere in the UK where I live so being able to use normal oat flour I can make at home, really motivates me to bake!!
Lisa Fitzgibbons says
Soooo excited to try the gf version! Nice clicks of the muffins.
I am so sure these will taste as excellent as the pictures 🙂
Kathy Patalsky says
Hey Lacey! The potato flour is really my secret ingredient for this specific recipe. Yes you could sub one of those alternative flours but the texture will be a bit drier and different. Still delicious though I'm sure! 🙂
Sarojini says
These look sooo tempting- and I love the gluten free version too. Potato flour is a great idea.
Lacey says
Those look like melt in your mouth muffins! I'm definitely pinning them to hopefully make some time in the near future. Question though- for the gluten free version, is there a different flour I could use in replace of the potato (like almond or coconut)? Let me know your thoughts!
Thanks,
Lacey
Kathy Patalsky says
My friend had a great idea to use pears in place if apples for sauce! Bananas, non dairy milk or even a sweet potato purée would work too.
Claudia says
Hi Kathy, these look amazing! Definitely want to make them but I wondered what could be used to substitue the apple sauce as I am intolerant to apples. I see apple sauce in a lot of baking recipes and just cannot think of anything with the same texture. Any tip would be much appreciated! Thanks, Claudia
Jenni says
The pictures with the vegan butter and maple syrup are making me drool! Coconut oil would taste really great instead of butter. I love the flavor of coconut oil. I've never tried potato flour before. I don't really have a problem with gluten, but I still like to limit it (and experiment with gluten-free baking), so I should give potato flour a try!
The Peace Patch says
I think you have redefined the idea of paradise...it clearly means being lucky enough to live with someone who experiments with blueberry muffin recipes on a daily basis. And having the arduous task of acting as taste tester. 🙂
These are crazyamazing! Definitely would have to try them with all sorts of nutty cream cheezes and nut butters too. Many thanks for all your hard work...and hubby's too! 😉
jodye says
I'm so with you on the potato flour, and the abundant blueberries. Blueberries have to be the best part of a blueberry muffin - it's in the name. These look so wonderful! I'd love to get my hands on that one swimming in the maple syrup. Yum!