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Friday, November 28, 2025

Gingerbread Muffins



Why It Works

  • Starting the bake at high heat rapidly generates steam, causing the batter to expand quickly and form a domed top.
  • Dropping the oven temperature partway through baking ensures the centers cook through without burning or over-browning the muffins.

There’s nothing quite like the smell of gingerbread cookies baking—that warm aroma of ginger, cinnamon, and molasses instantly feels cozy and inviting, especially during the winter holidays. These gingerbread cookie–inspired muffins bring that classic holiday flavor to the breakfast table. They’re spiced enough to feel festive and also simple enough for an everyday bake. With ginger and cinnamon leading the way, a spoonful of molasses grounding the sweetness, and buttermilk keeping the crumb supple, these muffins are tender and fragrant, with winter spices woven through every bite. They’re perfect for a holiday breakfast, brunch, or afternoon snack—or anytime you need a portable holiday party in muffin form. 

Building Flavor in the Batter

This festive muffin recipe was developed by our Birmingham, Alabama–based test kitchen colleague Julia Levy, who took inspiration from classic gingerbread cookies and gingerbread cake. The batter begins with flour whisked together with a generous amount of spices: ginger for its warm, pungent heat; cinnamon for its sweet, aromatic depth; cloves and nutmeg for their woodsy complexity; and just enough black pepper to sharpen the blend and keep the flavors from tipping too sweet.

Buttermilk keeps the crumb tender and moist—and when combined with baking soda, it triggers a chemical reaction that helps leaven the muffins. The muffins are sweetened with light brown sugar, which provides gentle caramel notes, and unsulphured molasses for bittersweet depth. Made from mature sugarcane, this molasses delivers a dark, robust sweetness. Sulphured molasses, by contrast, is made from young cane treated with sulfur, resulting in a lighter color and a sharper, more chemical aftertaste. Finally, melted butter adds richness, while eggs and vanilla bring the batter together.

Serious Easts /  Morgan Hunt Ward, Prop Stylist: Julia Bayless, Food Stylist: Margaret Monroe Dickey


The Crunchy Topping

Once the batter is scooped into tall muffin liners for that bakery-style dome, you’ll top it with a spiced streusel that bakes into a crunchy, bronzed cap. The streusel is simple to whip up: Just whisk the dry ingredients, add the melted butter, and stir until the mixture forms sandy clumps. Flour provides structure, brown sugar brings caramel sweetness, and a hint of salt keeps everything balanced. Finely chopped crystallized ginger adds chewy little sparks of spice, while cinnamon layers in warmth. Melted butter pulls the mixture together into sandy crumbs of all sizes that eventually bake into crisp clusters, giving each muffin a textured top that contrasts beautifully with the tender crumb beneath.

The Perfect Bake

After the muffins are topped with streusel, you’ll pop them in an oven set to 425°F (220°C)—much hotter than the usual 350°F (175°C) for muffins. That initial blast of heat generates steam, pushing the batter upward and creating tall, domed tops. After five minutes, you’ll reduce the heat to 350°F (175°C), allowing the centers of the muffins to bake through gently and evenly. The result is a muffin that’s lofty and golden, with a moist, tender crumb that stays soft from edge to center.

Serious Easts /  Morgan Hunt Ward, Prop Stylist: Julia Bayless, Food Stylist: Margaret Monroe Dickey


The Final Glaze

Once the muffins have cooled, they’re topped with a glaze made from cream cheese, confectioners’ sugar, vanilla, and just enough milk to make the mixture easy to drizzle over the muffins. Its slight tang balances the rich sweetness of the brown sugar and molasses in the crumb. Poured in thin ribbons over the domed, streusel-crowned tops, the glaze sets into a light sheen that makes the muffins just as fitting for a holiday gathering as for an everyday breakfast.

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