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pear chocolate muffins

Monday, October 5, 2009 by alana

Oh, I know, muffins again. But hear me out for a second- this post is a last hurrah of sorts on the muffin front.
What on earth would slow my muffin making?
Well, remember those stomachaches that have been plaguing Sadie? The doctor has lowered his gavel and yes, as we all thought, the girl’s allergic to wheat.
And eggs.
And almonds.
And she’s totally cool with it. Honestly, the transition is going smoothly. I swear! Because the truth is, the poor thing has had a stomachache for two years, and if there is a chance of it easing up, we will all eat anything (except maybe eggplant and cilantro).
I know, I know, plenty of people do all sorts of gluten-free baking. Even me. I am thinking, however, that gluten and egg free presents a bit more of a challenge. Although I do have quite a bit of applesauce. So I’ll start working with it, and you can be sure that I’ll tell you all about it.
But until then, we have pear chocolate muffins. Because just because I’m not making muffins certainly doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t.
Oh, and a word on the cake stand. Did you check out that beauty? Joey went out for one of his routine tag sale-ing missions the other day, and I said, “Honey? Find me a cake stand. And the things I’ll bake for you…” He came back with the ugliest cake stand I have ever seen. But he came back with a cake stand. And that’s why I married him.

Pear Chocolate Muffins
loosely adapted from Moosewood Restaurant New Classics
makes 1 dozen muffins

  • 6 tablespoons butter, at room temperature
  • 1/3 cup sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons buttermilk
  • 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • 2 cups peeled and cored pears, chopped into 1 inch pieces
  • 1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips or chunks
  • 2 cups white all-purpose flour or spelt flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1 cup chopped roasted almonds

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Lightly oil a 12 cup muffin tin or put a paper liner in each cup.

In a mixing bowl, cream together the butter and sugar until smooth. Beat in the egg and then the buttermilk and vanilla. The mixture will look lumpy. Fold in the pears and chocolate with a rubber spatula. Set aside.

In a large bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt and cinnamon. Add the
wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and fold together without overmixing. Fill each muffin cup about 3/4 full. Sprinkle with chopped almonds.

Place the muffin tin in the preheated oven and bake for about 35 minutes, or until the muffins begin to turn golden. Rotate the pan halfway through for even baking.

Filed Under: Bites, breakfast, chocolate, pears, Sweets Tagged With: baking

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Comments

  1. Lori N says

    Monday, October 5, 2009 at 4:08 pm

    Welcome to the world of egg free baking…so sorry you had to join me! But I have every confidence that you'll rise to the challenge with style and aplomb. 🙂

  2. alana says

    Monday, October 5, 2009 at 5:07 pm

    Thanks Lori! I think that I'm going to need a little help here. I just bought some egg replacer- that stuff worth anything?

  3. Jill says

    Monday, October 5, 2009 at 6:36 pm

    You can never have too many great muffin recipes–love the sound of this one! 🙂

  4. Jess Speer says

    Tuesday, November 3, 2009 at 9:42 pm

    Oh, lady, I've been way behind in my blog-reading. Flax meal with some hot water is good in some things but not others, and the egg replacer stuff is good for cookies and things you don't want to taste flaxy (flaxen?). And don't forget BANANAS!


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Instagram post 2337331591407595410_13442450 Sending off my taxes today with intention and prayer that they will be used to support programs for the most vulnerable, and that my little contribution will join with others to help move us towards the country I know we can be. #taxmagic ✨
Instagram post 2335726864949371764_13442450 Goodies en route to @north_plain_farm today for pickup! Word about town is that LOTS of moolah was raised for BRIDGE in this little #bakersagainstracism bake sale. Thanks to North Plain Farm and @raisinporpoise for the organizing, to everyone who bought and bid, and most of all to BRIDGE for the essential work they do. (Want to learn more about BRIDGE? Head to the link in my profile.)
Instagram post 2332756427273440195_13442450 So technically you’re not supposed to send food when trying to find an agent, but I did it it. 10 years ago, my granola helped seal that deal, and he insisted I send it to publishers when we were selling The Homemade Pantry (another general publishing no no) That Landed-a woman-with-no-platform-a-book deal Granola is up for grabs in this amazing bake sale, as well as goodies by some of my very favorite bakers (@madeinghent , @raisinporpoise , and @thedooryard to name a few). Oh and maybe my favorite item in there are the magical @susanspungen ginger chocolate cookies I mentioned a few weeks back, made by Sadie herself. All of this is to support the work of @multiculturalbridge , and the order form is up in my bio. Get to it! #bakersagainstracism
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Instagram post 2330131706816229761_13442450 I’ll be baking up a storm for this! Local bakers- there’s still room for more! Let @north_plain_farm know that you want IN.
Instagram post 2324845496300301430_13442450 To those who ask here? In Great Barrington? YES. In Great Barrington.
Instagram post 2324091364266290851_13442450 I know there are so many resources out there right now, but I want to share one that’s been really helpful for me in the last several months. There are many seasons of this podcast, but I recommend Season 2 on Whiteness as well is Season 4 on Democracy. #sceneonradio
Instagram post 2322615811734696638_13442450 Black lives matter.
Instagram post 2319329508599466327_13442450 I did not bake these cookies, as I am no longer the cookie baker in this house. But this is the second time that  Sadie has made @susanspungen ‘s Triple-Ginger Chocolate Chunk Cookies (and also the second time I’ve talked about a recipe Sadie has made from the #openkitchencookbook), and I think these might actually be the best cookies I have ever had. I’m often looking for the perfect ginger cookie and this is it, and I’d also choose it over a chocolate chip cookie (or let’s be honest-any other kind of cookie) any day.
Instagram post 2316311882260313364_13442450 No matter how many rulers and pizza cutters and other magical tools I use, it seems that the straight line will always elude me.
Instagram post 2314127252740427104_13442450 Living it up. 💥
Instagram post 2312088043104000827_13442450 Every day my neighbor’s yard gets prettier.
Instagram post 2311325683330503572_13442450 @paulaperlis sent us @susanspungen ‘s new book and of course the first recipe Sadie picked is marked with the *project* heading. She’s been cooking all afternoon and the house smells like ✨✨✨ (With gorgeous images by @gentlandhyers ❤️)
Instagram post 2311141543964321092_13442450 When I took on a day job a few years ago, I found that the first thing to go was all the homemade stuff I’d been making and writing about over the years. I’m still going out to work most days, but I’m finding now with a full and captive house and more downtime in general that those things I love to make are back. For me, it’s granola, yogurt, bread. Hello, old friends!
Instagram post 2308503311808232748_13442450 All the things in the house pasta: roasted cauliflower, a few sad leaves of kale, one jar of fancy tuna saved for a special occasion (how about Wednesday?), Rosemary, homemade breadcrumbs from the freezer fried in butter, crispy sage leaves, pasta water, salt, so much pepper. Success!
Instagram post 2307412630968777107_13442450 @artbywoodgy made this beautiful thing for me for Mother’s Day. All the veggies are on Velcro so I can plan to my hearts delight.
Instagram post 2306345003953662730_13442450 Happy Mother’s Day to my brave and beautiful mom, who birthed two different humans in such different times in her life. With me she was so young, and she figured it all out just as she was learning how to be an adult. This picture was taken nineteen years later, when she was pregnant again and I was almost an adult myself. Thanks for keeping at it, Mom, and for always showing up with love. ❤️
Instagram post 2304888771283579843_13442450 What we do for cake.
Instagram post 2302665269449083186_13442450 It’s a magnolia year for sure.
Instagram post 2295808104927071821_13442450 A long time ago, Joey talked about his crush on this particular alien-like flower with a good friend of ours. Months later, little bulbs arrived in the mail. We put them in the ground last fall, and now they are everywhere. If that isn’t some kind of magic, I don’t know what is. ✨ (🙏🏻 to @wildflowers1 for the cool vase, too.)
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