Oatmeal Muffins Recipe (Add Your Own Mix-Ins)
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This oatmeal muffins recipe is so easy to make with shelf-stable ingredients. Add your own mix-ins (from fruit to chocolate chips) to these moist, tender, and delicious muffins.
Let me dive right in and tell you why this oatmeal muffins recipe is wonderful and why you need to make them TODAY.
- You mix up the batter ahead of time.
- You probably have most, if not all of the ingredients already. We’re talking eggs, sugar, all-purpose flour, oats, salt, cinnamon, butter, baking soda, and buttermilk (plus whichever mix-ins you choose).
- The muffin batter keeps for up to a month in your fridge, provided you use fresh eggs and milk (but why would you use old eggs and milk anyway, right?). This will probably remind you of that raisin bran muffin recipe but I actually like it better. It’s so much more versatile and you don’t have to buy that gargantuan box of Raisin Bran.
- You can make just one homemade muffin at a time, or five dozen at a time.
- You can mix in whatever you want to make whatever type of muffin you want. This might be blueberry oatmeal muffins, a banana oatmeal muffin recipe, or chocolate oatmeal muffins. The choice is yours.
- They are so so moist, so so tender, and so so delicious.
- They freeze well once they are baked. But let me tell you, even the batter freezes well before it is baked.
- They’re pretty darn healthy too.
Seriously, what are you waiting for? Let’s get baking!
Recipe Ingredients
- Eggs
- Sugar
- All-purpose flour
- Salt
- Cinnamon
- Old-fashioned oats
- Butter (can substitute for vegetable shortening)
- Baking soda
- Buttermilk
- Hot hot hot water
How To Make My Oatmeal Muffins Recipe
Pour your boiling water over 2 cups of the oats. Set that aside to soak a bit while you work on the rest of the recipe.
In a dishpan or large bowl, place all of your remaining dry ingredients.
Stir ’em up good and then make a little well in the center kinda sorta like what you see pictured.
Crack your eggs in there… Get you a wooden spoon or something similar and beat ’em up a bit with it.
Add your milk.
You know that is a habit I had to work on breaking when I was cooking on television and camera for folks. Directors would always tell me I need to say “Break the eggs” instead of “break your eggs” and “pour the milk” instead of “pour your milk.” This is silly because if you’re cooking it at home along with me, I would fully expect it is your milk and your eggs… unless you borrowed them. In that case, I’d say “Pour your neighbor’s milk….break your neighbor’s eggs…”. So today, I’m talking however I want to because I may not be Leslie Gore, but it’s still my party.
Stir that up really well.
Your oatmeal muffins recipe is now taking shape!
Stir your melted butter into the hot oats.
Dump that oat mixture into your batter and stir again.
This is what it will look like.
Cover that up and let sit at least overnight in the fridge.
It’s time to add your mix-ins!
When you’re ready to bake your oat muffins, add your mix-ins…
1 cup of batter will make about 4 muffins. To every cup of batter, add about 1/2 cup of mix-ins.
Pictured clockwise are almonds and dried cherries, chopped apple, blueberries, and chocolate chips.
Just stir those up with a spoon until they are stirred in good.
Place the muffin batter into a muffin tin that has been sprayed with cooking spray or a lined with muffin papers like I’m using here. Either one works just fine.
Top each muffin liner with additional mix-ins if you want, but you don’t have to.
Bake at 400 for 20 minutes, or until lightly browned on top. ENJOY!
I’d love to hear your mix-in ideas for this oatmeal muffins recipe!
What would you add to these muffins?
Please tell me your ideas in the comments section below! Also, do you have any earthquake stories?
Storage
- Baked oatmeal muffins keep for up to three days if kept in a sealed container on the countertop, and at least a week if kept in the fridge.
- The prepared muffin batter keeps for up to one month in the refrigerator, provided you use fresh eggs and milk.
- This batter also freezes well, as do the prepared muffins!
Recipe Notes
- I know I like for y’all to use what you have on hand, but I’d really like you to get old-fashioned oats for this because they’re just so good with them. You CAN make do, but if you buy generic old-fashioned oats, they don’t cost very much, so you can justify it. If you don’t feel comfortable buying generic, pretend you are reaching for name brand and then put generic in your buggy and don’t tell them that they’re not Quaker. See the secret is, ingredients can’t read! So if you don’t tell them they’re not name brand they’ll never know ~beams~.
- Substitute the melted butter for 1/3 cup of the vegetable oil of your choice.
- Sprinkle your muffins with cinnamon sugar before baking.
- Feel free to add a teaspoon of vanilla extract to your muffin batter.
- Don’t use an electric mixer, as this will overmix the batter. If you want moist and dense oat muffins, you skip the mixer!
- For gluten-free muffins, you can use a gluten-free alternative like .
- Here are some more mix-in ideas:
- Blueberries
- Chocolate chips
- Sliced almonds and a teaspoon of almond extract added to the muffin batter.
- Chopped walnuts or chopped pecans. You can also sprinkle some chopped nuts on the top of the muffins before baking, no matter the mix-in.
- Diced apples for .
- Dried cranberries, apricots, raisins, or cherries.
- Chopped banana or mashed banana.
- I prefer fresh fruit, but you can use frozen blueberries, for example, to make a . Just make sure they’re thawed before throwing them into your batter.
Check out these other mouthwatering muffin recipes:
The Best Blueberry Muffins On A Budget
Ingredients
- 6 cups old-fashioned oats
- 5 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 cups very hot water
- 1 cup melted butter can substitute for melted vegetable shortening
- 2 cups sugar
- 4 eggs
- 4 cups buttermilk
- 5 teaspoons baking soda
- 2 teaspoons cinnamon
- 2 teaspoons salt
Instructions
- For each batch, you can add 1/2 cup of mix-ins to one cup of batter. Mix-in ideas include blueberries, chocolate chips, sliced almonds, walnuts, chopped pecans, diced apples, dried cranberries or cherries, other dried fruit or berries, and chopped banana.
To make the oatmeal muffins
- In a medium bowl, place 2 cups of oats and hot water. Stir and set aside.6 cups old-fashioned oats, 2 cups very hot water
- Place all of the remaining dry ingredients into a large bowl or dishpan. Stir to combine. Form a well in the center and crack eggs into the well while beating them lightly with a spoon. Add milk and stir batter well with a large spoon until well combined.6 cups old-fashioned oats, 5 cups all-purpose flour, 2 cups sugar, 4 eggs, 5 teaspoons baking soda, 2 teaspoons cinnamon, 2 teaspoons salt, 4 cups buttermilk
- Melt the shortening or butter, pour it into the hot oat mixture, and stir. Pour the hot oats into the batter and stir again until well combined. Cover and refrigerate at least overnight.1 cup melted butter
- Bake in a greased muffin tin or a muffin pan lined with cupcake papers at 400 for 20 minutes, or until lightly browned.
Notes
Nutrition
You might also enjoy Crock Pot Chicken Tetrazzini – and how we changed our focus.
The art of being happy lies in the power of extracting
happiness from common things. — Henry Ward Beecher
OK…I’m glad you can laugh about it now, but being away from home and your family…I can understand your heart racing like that! Enjoyed all the humor you put into this post, though! Now, about these muffins,…love the idea of having batter ready and having the option of making several different types at on time and any amount you want/need! Fresh, too! My first crack at this recipe will be 1/4 cup each of bananas and chocolate chips! You KNEW I was going to go with chocolate, huh?!! Then the next time…pineapple and coconut!
blueberry pecan, raspberry almond, banana walnut, cranberry orange, cherry almond. no that was a quake. i’ve had them jerk the bed in the middle of the nihght its scary- great post and recipe cant wait to try it! i prefer tornados i’m from Grand Island Nebraska and survived two major by the time i was ten Omaha 1974 and grand Island 1980- one even went over our house thats why i agree withthe freight train comparison but add a large vacuumcleaner sound to it.. it sucked the insulation out of our house! earthquakes-. i lived in LA/Sherman Oaks for 6 years and was there for the Northridge quake in 1993.. that shook everything so hard i couldnt crawl across the floor, it just threw me back and forth until it stopped. the next 5 years i experienced earthquakes at all hours and places – in the shower, in the stores get out from under things that can fall on you fast – i still cant have any pictures or shelves above my bed- in a parking lot the ground ripples like an ocean and the car alarms going off as the ground rippled and hat rumble and everything shook – i saw power lines on fire and climbed up crumbling stairs to get just another load of possesions out of my apartment before the second floor caved into the first.- it took me several years being in Kansas that when someone walked behind me on the floor and it shook i didnt immediately run for the doorway. then one night in my apartment WE had an aftershock from a quake down in Oklahoma and i went.. i just got glassware and china here! seriously?? LOL.. i’m so happy that you have Beat the Chefs.. i wish i could see it but i dont have cable/dish. i loved your reading of the Giraffe story Christy so much i bought a copy for my great nephew! thanks for everything you inspire Christy! Michelle.
I hear you on the Northridge Quake. We were in the Whittier-Narrows Quake but the Northridge Quake was much worse. As a Midwesterner, we get a little jaded over our tornados, hailstorms, ice storms and flooding but if our New Madrid Fault were to ever go active, we’d be in a world of hurt.
sooo good! we like chocolatecovered raisins and apple pie spice in ours!…sometimes shredded coconut, and a tablespoon of apple butter too. Yum.
Aw Christy your earthquake story was very funny, I can imagine how you would’ve felt then! I’m in Christchurch (New Zealand) and we sat up for hours after the first big one in 2010… Mind you that was a 7.1! We had aftershocks (and a bigger more destructive one in Feb2011) almost every night trying to sleep through 3’s and 4’s it was exhausting! Now when I travel I always think about which pajamas are most presentable in case of evacuation!!
Look at you 🙂 You’ve done it again! I used up all my raisin bran muffin mix yesterday and ran out this morning to buy more! I was looking thru the different cereals wondering if I could use a different kind… Came home from shopping and here is the answer! You are awesome, girl and a mind- reader as well 🙂
Thank You So much!! I’m very much looking forward to seeing you tonight!
So happy for you 🙂
So funny! Glad you survived. Thanks for the muffin recipe. I think I ‘ll make them for a sleepover party and the kids can add the mixins they like!
Peanut, Peanut Butter…Jelly, Jelly! That ole song says it all. Yay to the gal that said, The sky is the limit”, to this I agree! Yummy; Carrot Cake Style, yes with crushed pineapple and pecans (and even fast, easy cream cheese frosting or from a can, lol), ginger and molasses for a play on Ginger Snaps, Morning Glory Muffins, any dessert, cookie or muffin you could make work with this basic batter; even Stevia or Splenda, of course and one of my gluten-free flours. I don’t see why coconut milk wouldn’t work for the milk and I will use Coconut Oil for nutrition and yummy texture and taste. Might use 1/2 butter to 1/2 coconut oil. Thanks, Christy, for a wonderful recipe starter and yet another super story!! I will pass both onward!