There’s. So. Much. Zucchini.
When I plant my garden in the
spring, I am driven by greed. I planted three “hills” of zucchini seeds, at
least 4 seeds in each hill. Of all of those, 2 seeds germinated. I was resigned
to having a small amount of zucchini. I was wrong. (I also planted yellow crooked neck squash, which is slightly less prolific.)
I made a few changes to the
batter and doubled the streusel topping recipe in this blueberry coffee cake to
sprinkle on top. This crumb topping is kind of an all-purpose streusel, sweet,
but neutral, and it works with all kinds of muffins and coffee cakes. I made 18
muffins out of the batter, which was originally designed for 2 8-inch loaves,
largely because that’s how many cups there are in my collected muffin pans.
My muffins ended up large and
puffy with big, domed, crunchy tops. I felt like I was putting a lot of the
crumb topping on them, but there was still some leftover, which I froze for a
later use. You could make more than 18 muffins, say 22-24. They would be
smaller, but still good, and would probably use up all of the streusel recipe.
Like any zucchini quick bread
recipe, the shredded vegetable fills more of a moistening and texture-enhancing
role than a flavor one. It also provides some pretty green confetti effects, and is a nice neutral background for the fresh berries. I used blueberries
and raspberries, but chopped strawberries, blackberries, or whatever else you want
to feature in your muffins would be great. You could probably also use other fruits,
perhaps even dried fruits.
I hadn’t made muffins of any
kind for a while, so these were a deliciously pleasant treat. The berries are the
stars here, but the muffin stage is well set by the buttery, zucchini-laced
batter. The crunchy crumb topping isn’t necessary, I suppose, but it adds a
delightful flourish.
Of course, there’s still so
much zucchini. Next, I intend to spiralize some and either make a salad like
this one, or toss the zoodles with some version of roasted tomatoes, like this one. Okay, honestly, there’s enough zucchini to do both.
Zucchini Berry Muffins
with Streusel Topping
Streusel:
2/3 cup flour
2/3 cup sugar
¼ teaspoon fine salt
4 tablespoons cold butter,
cut into small pieces
Muffins:
3 ½ cups flour
1 ½ teaspoons baking soda
1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon fine salt
Zest of 1 medium lemon
3 large eggs
1 ½ cup granulated sugar
½ cup (1 stick) melted butter
2/3 cup buttermilk
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon almond extract
Juice of 1 medium lemon
2 cups shredded zucchini
1 ½ cups fresh berries
1. To make the streusel
topping, whisk together the 2/3 cup flour, 2/3 cup sugar, and ¼ teaspoon salt.
Cut in the cold butter pieces with a pastry blender or with your fingers until
the mixture is crumbly and can be squeezed together into clumps. Cover and refrigerate
until ready to bake. (This can be made up to a few days ahead.)
2. Preheat oven to 350 F. Generously
grease muffin pans or line them with cupcake liners. You will need 18-24 cups.
3. In a large bowl, combine
the flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Whisk together to combine
well. Add the lemon zest and whisk in or work in with your fingers to evenly distribute.
4. In a medium-size bowl,
combine the eggs and sugar. Whisk together well. Continue whisking until the mixture
is pale and smooth. Whisk in the melted butter. Whisk in the buttermilk,
vanilla extract, almond extract, and lemon juice.
5. Add the egg mixture to the
flour mixture. Fold together just until most of the dry ingredients are
moistened. Stir in the zucchini. Gently fold in the berries. Try to avoid
crushing the delicate ones too much.
6. Portion the batter evenly
into the prepared muffin pans. Sprinkle the streusel mixture evenly over each batter
portion. If you are making 18 muffins, you may have leftover streusel. (It can
be frozen for a later use.)
7. Bake the muffins at 350 F
for 20-25 minutes, or until a wooden pick inserted in the center comes out with
just moist crumbs attached and no liquid batter.
8. Cool the muffins in the
pan for about 10 minutes. Remove from the pan and cool on a wire rack until
cool enough to eat. Leftovers can be kept covered at room temperature for a few
days or frozen in an airtight container or zip-top freezer bag for a month or
so.
Makes 18-24 muffins.
Other recipes like this one:Blueberry Lemon Zucchini Bread, Blueberry Banana Quick Bread, Strawberry Basil Muffins, Blueberry Oatmeal Muffins
One year ago: Zucchini Cheddar Risotto
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