Our good friends
Mike and Erika gifted a beautiful teapot for Karla’s wedding last fall, and we
had been planning to have a tea party for a while so we could use it. So a
couple weekends ago we got together to have refreshing tea with cookies and
muffins. That was my first attempt at baking oat muffins, which turned out
okay, but not quite how I wanted. They were not as moist as I thought they
would be, and the texture was a bit dense. So after making some modifications
to the recipe (and a few spills and burns later), I am pretty happy with the
result – a light and moist chocolate muffin, which really is healthy!
Ingredients (Makes ~12 regular or ~36 mini muffins)
Heat oven to 350 F. Line a muffin pan with muffin liners (or prepare any other baking pan by lightly greasing).
~Gayatri
Ingredients (Makes ~12 regular or ~36 mini muffins)
1 ¾ cup old
fashioned oats
¾ cup unsweetened
cocoa
½ tsp cream of
tartar (or 2 tsp. vinegar)
1 ½ tsp baking
powder
1 ½ tsp baking soda
¼ tsp salt
2/3 cup agave
nectar (or 1 cup granulated sugar)
½ cup unsweetened
applesauce
½ cup yogurt (I
used low fat)
3 egg whites
1 tsp vanilla
extract
2/3 cup hot water
(1 cup water if using granulated sugar instead of agave nectar)
Chocolate chips
(optional)
Heat oven to 350 F. Line a muffin pan with muffin liners (or prepare any other baking pan by lightly greasing).
In a food processor, grind all the dry
ingredients together (except chocolate chips). Add the wet ingredients and
blend. The hot water should be added in the end, just before you start
blending, or you might lose all the fizz from the baking soda which helps with
the airy texture.
Fold in the chocolate chips in the batter.
Fill the muffin cups ¾ full, and bake for 10 min. After 10 min, sprinkle chocolate chips on
top of the muffins, and bake for another 3-4 min, or until a toothpick inserted
in the middle comes out with some cooked batter stuck to it (not liquid!). Do
not wait for the toothpick to come out clean, or the muffins might be too dry.
~Gayatri
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