These
muffins are GREAT. Definitely among the best I've ever had. They're
very interesting, too. The finished muffin is like a cross between a
muffin and a biscuit, both in texture and flavor. When I looked the
recipe over the first time, I had my suspicions they'd be rather
biscuit-like because the ingredients look more like a biscuit dough than
muffin batter, and I was right! They aren't very sweet and have a
texture reminiscent of a buttermilk biscuit, but are rather airy, like a
muffin. The jam in the middle is an awesome addition. I used
strawberry, but pretty much any flavor would be really good. I've tried
making jam filled muffins in the past and they haven't been
particularly good to start with, but the leftovers were awful because
the jam made them very soggy. The texture of these muffins is dense
enough that they don't get soggy and were still tasty the next day.
In
the future, I'd like to experiment with making these muffins with other
ingredients added instead of jam. They'd make great dinner
biscuit/muffins with green chiles and cheddar added, or any number of
other ingredients. I'll bet they'd even be great left completely
plain. It's such an easy, one bowl recipe, that I'm sure I'll try
several variations.
Jamboree Muffins
1 egg
3/4 C milk
1/2 C vegetable oil
1/3 C sugar
1 Tbsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
2 C flour
about 1/3 C jam
Preheat oven to 400 and grease a 12 cup muffin pan with oil, or use muffin papers.
In
a large bowl, beat egg with a fork. Mix in milk, vegetable oil, and
sugar with a spoon until smooth, then stir in baking powder and salt.
Stir in flour and mix thoroughly, but don't worry about lumps. This is
basically a wet biscuit dough, so you don't want to over mix it!
Fill
each muffin cup 1/3 full with batter, then top each with a small
spoonful of jam. Divide the remaining batter among the muffin cups.
Bake until golden and a toothpick inserted into the middle comes out clean, about 15-20 minutes (mine took 17).
Yield: 12 muffins
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