Apple, Almond & Buckwheat Muffins

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If the warm apple and cinnamon fragrance from our kitchen found a way to fly into my laptop, on to the internet and out through whatever device you are reading this on, then I could stop writing this text right here. You would already be deep into your pantry drawers looking for the ingredients to start baking these muffins.

Instead, I guess I have to convince you the old-fashioned way, with words and images. And since we truly want you to understand how thrilled we are about this recipe, we also filmed a video for our youtube channel. Let’s start with that!

Apple trees heavy with fruit, small rubber boots tumbling around in the leaves, warm porridge in the morning, furry sweaters, cinnamon sticks, pitch dark nights and rainy afternoons. Autumn is already over us and it always seems to come with a profound desire for baking. In our apartment, switching on the oven is also a necessary trick to keep warm, since our radiators have a mind of their own.

If anyone remember my previous aversion to warm apples, this recipe must be the ultimate proof that I’m passed it. Not only does our muffins have shredded apples in the batter and sliced apples on top of them, but they also hold small golden pockets of apple sauce in the middle. It’s a serenade of apple flavours and textures paired with warm spices and they sing happy songs together.

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I guess this is an Autumnal edition of our Blueberry & Turmeric Breakfast Muffins. These are only sweetened with apples and dates, they are gluten-free and we have included a well-tested vegan option. The vegan version come out just slightly denser, but they taste almost identical. The combination of apple, oats, almond and buckwheat is perfect in an earthy, wholesome but still light kind of way.

So if you are also feeling the autumn mood or are just freezing and need another excuse to switch on the oven, we have got just the right recipe for you.

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Apple, Almond & Buckwheat Muffins
Makes 12 muffins

These muffins are only sweetened with apples and dates. We make our own apple sauce and even though it is unsweetened, it has a naturally sweet flavour that works perfect in this recipe. Since the muffins are not overly decadent, we enjoy them both as weekend breakfast and weekday dessert. However, if you know that you like your muffins more on the sweeter side, you can replace have of the apple sauce with maple syrup.

Dry ingredients
1 cup / 100 g almond flour
1 cup / 100 g rolled oats (use cert. gluten free if intolerant)
2/3 cup / 75 g buckwheat flour
2 tbsp arrowroot (or potato starch)
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp ground cardamom
½ tsp ground ginger
½ tsp sea salt

Wet ingredients
160 ml / 2/3 cup plain unsweetened yogurt or plant yogurt
80 ml / 1/3 cup coconut oil, butter or olive oil
10 fresh soft dates, pitted and mashed
3 large eggs (or 3 tbsp chia seeds mixed with 9 tbsp water)
1/2 cup / 120 ml apple sauce, unsweetened (see below for instructions hot to make your own)
3 organic apples

Preheat the oven to 400°F / 200°C. Grease a muffin pan with oil or butter or line it with muffin tins. Add all the dry ingredients to a food processor or blender and process on high speed so the oats turn into coarse flour and all ingredients are mixed. Transfer to a large mixing bowl. Add eggs, yogurt, coconut oil, dates and 1/3 cup / 80 ml of the apple sauce (save the rest for later) to the food processor or blender and mix until smooth, and then transfer to the mixing bowl with the dry ingredients. Grate two of the apples and add them to the batter. Divide the batter into the muffin tins, filling them only half way up. Drop a heaping teaspoon of apple sauce in the middle of each muffin and then cover with the remaining batter. Slice the last apple thinly, brush the slices with oil and place one or a few slices on top of each muffin, pressing them down slightly. Dust with cinnamon. Bake for about 18-20 minutes. Let cool for a bit before taking them out of their tins and they will release easier. Enjoy!

 

Apple Sauce
Apple sauce is one of the simplest things to make and if you choose a sweet variety of apples, no other sweetener is needed. This makes more than you need for the Apple Muffin recipe, which is good as you can add large spoonfuls of the leftovers on top of yogurt or cultured buttermilk in the morning.

1 lb / ½ kg organic apples
¼ cup / 60 ml water
1 tsp lemon juice

Core the apples, cut them in ½ inch / 1 cm dices and add to a large sauce pan on medium heat together with the water. Bring to a boil and then turn down the heat slightly. Let simmer for 20-25 minutes. Use a hand blender to mix it smoothly. Add lemon juice and stir around to prevent the color from going brown. Store in air-tight glass jars the fridge for up to about a week or in plastic containers in the freezer for-like-ever.

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130 Comments

  • Dr. Snuggles
    I don't get it, how do I line muffin pans with muffin tins? Is this a typo or do you stack to pans on top of each other for a special baking method I am not aware of?
  • David and Luise thank you for creating this recipe. My 10 year old son, Ryan recently gave up sugar (including coconut sugar) and although I never cook with cane sugar and am used to creating healthy recipes, I really needed some fresh inspiration. I stumbled across your site and am so glad I did. This was the first recipe I tried and it was such a great success. The dollop of apple sauce in the middle of the muffins is genius. I used quinoa flour instead of the buckwheat as we don't like the taste of the latter. This worked beautifully. Looking forward to trying more recipes. Ryan is also very thankful.
  • Allison
    Hi David and Luise! I was instantly attracted to this recipe when you first posted it, it has SO many things I love (apples, warm spices, muffins)! I've made it a couple times now, and while the muffins themselves have a great flavor I can't seem to get a good rise or that applesauce pocket in the center (like in your photos). Both times the muffins turn out pretty squat and the applesauce is there but it gets squished into the muffin so it's barely visible when you cut into them. Any suggestions? I've followed the recipe exactly with no substitutions, although I like to incorporate a cinnamon stick and a splash of orange flower water when making my applesauce. :) Cheers, Allison
  • Look so delicious :) The video is very cute like me :D I will buy the ingredients right now and i will try this. it really helps, thank you for sharing the recipe
  • Kat
    Boy, it looks delicious! And the video is really cute :) What variety of apple do you use to make the apple sauce, because i imagine that the flavor, texture.. may change from one to another kind of apples. Thank you!
  • Lilith
    And yes: From whom is the song?
  • Lilith
    Dear David & Luise. I love this video, images, sound and text, so nicely combined. It is a great inspiration for me. Kind Greetings, Lilith
  • Floor
    I have altered your lovely recipe slightely. First I have used wholewheat speltflour instead of buckwheat. I have nog used any applesauce just 2 grated apples and plant Milk instead of yoghurt. As a topping I have used whole hazel or pecan nuts. They have turned put excellent! Thanks for this great recipe I have made them in huge badges and put them in the freezer. Great as in-between snack or breakfast!
  • hi! Could you please let us know the music.? I like it!!!
  • I absolutely love this recipe. The end result is a very moist muffin, full of flavour. I thought that the cardamon might be overpowering, but I was very wrong. The only change I had to make was the flour - I had no more buckwheat at home so I used millet flour. Delicious.
  • Sibylle
    Hi Luise, I hope this hasn't been answered already... I saw several people asked, but didn't find a reply. How can I replace the almond flour? (I have a nut allergy). Someone else suggested maybe with 1/3 of original quantity coconut flour to make up for the liquid absorbing qualities of coconut flour? I would love to make these asap - they look delicious. Thank you, Sibylle
  • Conny
    Hi, can I use freshly ground oat flour (from the full grain) as well?
  • hannah
    hi! Looks lovely as usual! Do you think I can make this recipe as an "apple loaf", putting all of the batter in one form instead of making many muffins? :) /Hannah
  • Hi! I just made these and they're delicious! I used chia eggs and replaced almond flour with shredded coconut. Works very well. Thank you for sharing the recipe! Xx
  • Cynthia
    Thanck you so much for your inspiring way of cooking, your generosity...I'm grateful for" knowing" you! You inspire me, as well, to learn about changing a healthy food into a DELICIOUS healthy food to share with our loved ones, our tots...nos bouts de chou as we say In French! Love the amount of positive energy flowing throw your posts and videos! A question, though...what kind of household electrical,blender or so..do you use? I think I've recognised a Vitamix in the background :)? what's the best efficient household to cook with? NB: that recipe is Heaven! Cheers from France!
    • Yes, we have a Vitamix, which is one of the best blenders. But if you only choose one, I would probably pick a food processor instead, since it is even more versatile. We have a Magimix food processor. Best Luise
  • Mona
    So inspiring! Loved the video and the muffins turned out perfectly! Thank you for all your hard work! Has anyone successfully frozen and defrosted them before?
  • Ok, as promised, I made these last night. I was soooo happy with the homemade applesauce (added some cinnamon while it simmered) and the batter. I saved the food processor step by using 100g of packaged oat flour and had no problems with the substitution. However, as anticipated, filling the muffins before baking resulted in them soaking up most of the applesauce filling during baking. There were random small pockets of sauce in some muffins, but not like your pictures. I'm assuming baking at a high temp is meant to help with this, but any other suggestions to keep the filling from soaking into the batter? (fyi, I used, eggs, butter, and dairy yogurt, if that makes a difference)
  • Gigi
    These are so yum--thank you for sharing! I added a drizzle of maple to the remaining unsweetened apple sauce (that went into the center) and also brushed a bit of maple on the top of the muffins in the last 5 mins of baking--so wonderful! I loved these so much that I added the link to the recipe into a wellness newsletter that I have been sending out at work weekly! I had to share the love (and the yum!). :-)
  • Luise, what a beautiful stew, 'love the addition of chopped apples - visually and texture wise :) And David, no worries, your site is loading just fine. Awesome video as well!
  • These are DIVINE!!! The best morning muffins ever (like it even better than the blueberry & turmeric ones...) I used sorghum flour instead of buckwheat and without the addition of the arrowroot. They are light, soft and sweet! Everyone loves them! Thanks, guys!
  • Hi GKS these are so amazing ! I ate them with salted butter and I was in heaven. I can't believe there is no sweetener or wheat flour, yet they are sweet, moist and so sinfully good. I have to thank you so much for your blog and this recipe, it really changed my life. xx Cindy (From New Zealand)
  • Vittoria
    Beautiful video and great recipe! Thank you! Unlike other commenters, I found the texture to be perfect - no one would know this was such a healthy, gluten free muffin. I used olive oil, fresh ginger and instead of cardamom I used dried cloves and nutmeg alongside the cinnamon (they were all I had at home). I found the recipe to be not sweet at all (I used one tart granny smith apple and one spartan apple, which could also be why it wasn't that sweet). They would be perfect spread with some almond butter or butter, with some honey or jam for added sweetness. I made it entirely in the vitamix too. For anyone wanting to use their blender, I have some tips: I would put the oats in first and give it a quick 5-second whir to break up the oats first, then I would add all the other dry ingredients and mix them up. I dumped the dry mix out into the large bowl. Then, without cleaning the vitamix, I blended up the wet ingredients (including the dates and a hunk of ginger because I did not have dried ginger). I made a well in the dry ingredients and added the wet ingredients, but did not stir right away because I didn't want to activate the baking powder/baking soda yet. Then I roughly chopped up two apples and put them in the vitamix (which I very quickly rinsed out beforehand). I pulsed it a few times to grate the apple. Then I mixed everything together. For me, the recipe made 12 good sized (medium-large) muffins and two small mini-loaves. The little dollop of apple sauce wasn't actually that visible in my muffins, but rather it made that inside part very moist - which I think is delicious!
  • Hanna Lucia
    Hej! Jag älskar era gurkmeja/blåbärs-muffins och jag bjuder ofta våra konferensgäster på dem. Nu ska jag testa era höstiga äppelmuffins också! Men det händer att vi har nötallergiker hos oss och jag undrar om nu har testat nån nötfri variant av de båda sorterna? Tror ni att solrosfrön kan fungera istället för valnötter/mandelmjöl eller har ni något annat förslag? Kram och tack! Och tack för allt underbart ni gör
  • What a tasty recipe, sounds so delicious! And what a wonderful Video, so lovely... Have a wonderful day, Franzi
  • Mimi
    Hello, thanks for this incredible recipe! Could I substitute the dates for something else healthy? Maybe bananas or more apple sauce? I wouldn't want to exchange them for 1/2 cup of applesauce as I think that's too much sugar for me:)
  • Lovely, so lovely, you guys are really great. The perfection of colors, design and, of course, amazing recipes. Lots of love from Paris. I wish you come here one day <3
  • Meg
    Love the taste of these muffins but I found that mine were a bit too 'delicate'? I followed the recipe exactly, just substituting homemade almond greek yogurt for the dairy (I'm allergic). I had planned to serve them at a brunch but I don't think I can...but I will enjoy them all to myself:)
  • Verena
    Hello there, I absolutely love your books and recipes, and I am someone who does not usually like recipe books! I was also inspired by your travelling with kids section in the book. I am newly pregnant and would love to go travelling with my partner during maternity leave (maybe when the baby is four months old). I was wondering whether you had any further tips or advice where to go with such a small child. Most people think I am crazy and I Mau well be, but I figured I might as well try! Thanks in advance for your help, Verena
  • These look yummy! Also, I love the dishes you used in this post- where are they from?
  • I am traveling and without a kitchen this week :( This recipe really does make me want to run home to our chilly weather and bake muffins asap, which I'll be doing in a few days. Yum!

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