This recipe for Chocolate Chip Pumpkin Muffins was supposed
to make 30 muffins. I have exactly enough muffin tins for 30 muffins,
and even had exactly 30 orange muffin papers. Perfect! Unfortunately,
as I was prepping the tins for the (already made) batter, I couldn't
find one of my 12 hole muffin tins. This seemed like the perfect time
to finally use the donut pans my mom gave me, so in addition to 18
muffins, I got 6 normal sized donuts, 12 mini donuts, and the rest of
the batter I baked in 3 Fiesta bouillon bowls. I'm honestly a little
skeptical that the batter would have only made 30 muffins!
Regardless,
everything turned out great. I brushed the donuts with melted butter
and rolled them in cinnamon sugar. My husband loved them. I liked
them, too, but preferred the plain muffins. They're very moist and
light, with a delicate pumpkin flavor, barely a hint of cinnamon, and of
course, the melty little chocolate chips. I chose to use mini
chocolate chips (personal preference in muffins), and that was definitely a good call since I ended up
making mini donuts with some of the batter and full sized chips would have been huge. For some reason, in my
opinion, when they were freshly baked, a bit of the flavor of the muffins was lost with the addition
(and added texture) of the cinnamon sugar. By the next day, the flavors of the donuts had melded nicely and I actually liked them better then.
I froze most of
the muffins so I could put them in my husband's work lunches. I'm pretty
sure I'll be making this recipe again because we both really enjoyed
them!
Chocolate Chip Pumpkin Muffins
15 oz can pumpkin puree
2 C sugar
1 1/2 C canola oil
4 eggs
2 tsp baking soda
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
1 tsp cinnamon
3 C flour
10 oz bag mini chocolate chips
Preheat oven to 400 and either line approximately 30 muffin holes with paper liners, or grease the wells of donut pans.
Stir
together pumpkin, sugar, oil, and eggs until smooth, then stir in
baking soda, baking powder, salt, and cinnamon. Stir in flour until
batter is smooth, then stir in the chocolate chips.
If
you're making muffins, you can just spoon batter into the muffin liners
2/3 full. If you're making donuts, I suggest placing the batter into a
gallon sized Ziploc bag, cutting off one of the corners of the bag, and
piping the batter into the pans. You want the pans to be about 2/3
full.
Bake pans of muffins/donuts until a
toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean, about 20 minutes for
muffins for about 10 minutes for donuts.
If
you're making donuts, as soon as they come out of the oven, melt butter
(probably about 4 Tbsp, maybe more) in a bowl. Stir together about 1/2 C
white sugar and 2 tsp ground cinnamon. Run a plastic knife around the
edges of the warm donuts to loosen them from the pan, then place them on
a wire cooling rack. Brush both sides with the melted butter, then
roll them in the cinnamon sugar. Place them back on the cooling rack to
cool off.
If you want to freeze the muffins,
let them cool completely, then place them in the refrigerator for a
couple of hours. Transfer them to the freezer until they're completely
frozen, then place them together in a gallon Ziploc bag and store them
in the freezer. You can either let them thaw at room temperature, or
warm them in the microwave.
The leftover donuts can be stored in a container at room temperature.
Yield: Approximately 36 muffins (my guess) or a lot more donuts!