I've got to tell you that there is beauty and serenity in the art of muffin baking. Sounds crazy, I know. But consider this: you don't need any fancy equipment. Two bowls, a wooden spoon, and an ice cream scoop. That's as fancy as it gets. The repetitive but mindless activity of filling each well in the muffin tin with thick, fluffy batter is so gratifying! I LOVE MAKING MUFFINS!
Think you're too busy to make muffins? Not a baker? I tell you you're too busy NOT to make them! Why don't you stop for a moment and sample what life might be like if you were June Cleaver? Where else in your hectic life do you get the chance to have a Betty Crocker moment in a Lean Cuisine world? I'm telling you, freshly baked muffins are the ticket! Besides, after you've made them, your normal life will be waiting right where you left it, but you'll have fantastic muffins to eat for the next few days. Bonus!
Before I give you the recipe, I must say a few words about the ingredients. There are a few specialty items that are needed, but once you have them on-hand, the muffin possibilities are endless! Simply go to Pinch My Salt and search the recipes there for whole grain muffins. Make a new batch of muffins each week, trying out different recipes. You'll already have most of the hard-to-find ingredients. You'll be so glad you did.
- Bananas: These aren't exactly hard to find, but you do need to understand one important thing: the blacker the banana, the better the muffin. Trust me. You might be scared to let your bananas ripen to the point of blackness, but believe me, once you taste the muffins made from them, you will kiss my feet. I buy a bag of discounted, over-ripe bananas from my grocery store and I leave them out for a week or two extra, until they are black all over. If you want to help this process along, pop them in the fridge. Store unused bananas in the freezer in bags (just the flesh, not the peels). Thaw them in short bursts in the microwave for your baking delight.
- White Whole Wheat Flour: I found this in the baking section of my grocery store. Hyvee, to be exact. It is a special type of whole wheat flour that is supposed to be a little bit lighter than regular whole wheat flour.
- Low-Fat Buttermilk: Did you know that buttermilk is naturally low in fat? Cool, huh? I now keep a large container of buttermilk in my fridge and use it as needed, mostly for muffins. It lasts forever. My sister uses dried buttermilk, which she found next to the powdered milk in her grocery store.
- Wheat Bran: I found this in the health food section of Hyvee. It was approximately $2.
- Flax Seed Meal: Not called for in this recipe, but used in a lot of other Pinch My Salt muffin recipes. It is also called ground flax seed and is approximately $2. Store this in a freezer bag in the freezer, for optimum freshness.