Tessa’s Recipe Rundown
Taste: Fresh and, of course, lemony.
Texture: The interior is ultra tender and moist with those delightful little bites of poppy seeds.
Ease: Super easy.
Pros: Quick, simple, and delish.
Cons: None!!
Would I make this again? Yes.
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I’ve always had a soft spot for muffins, and Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins are definitely among my favorites.
In high school, muffins were the little treat to break up the monotony. There would be a muffin cart in the main hallway once a week.
I’m pretty sure the muffins were from Costco. They weren’t wonderful, but it was nice to have a little sweet indulgence to look forward to.
Muffins will probably always have a place in my heart.
They’re truly a multi-purpose treat. They’re perfect for breakfast, as a snack, or even for dessert.
Unfortunately, most muffins are bland. And in my experience, the muffins that often look the prettiest with the tallest muffin tops are often super cakey and dry – even from a good bakery.
I prefer a nice moist muffin with a bit of a springy texture. I don’t want pound cake. Or cake at all. Which I find is what most packaged muffins feel like. And I certainly don’t want a dry muffin. I want MOIST muffins… everyone’s favorite word 😉
So if you feel the same, or are just curious about the science of muffin baking, check out the tips below.
Sprinkle of Science
How to Make Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins
Don’t Overmix Your Muffin Batter!!
- Be very very careful not to overmix the batter once you combine the wet + dry ingredients. This will create rubbery muffins.
- Gently stir until *just* combined.
- If there’s a few small streaks of flour remaining, that’s perfectly fine.
Secret Baking Science Tip: CHILL The Muffin Batter!
- The BEST thing you can do to make Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins (or any muffins!) more tender and even a little taller is to cover and chill your batter in the fridge overnight before baking.
- It’s very similar to chilling cookie dough.
- Think of it like marinating.
- By chilling the batter, the starch in the flour is able to absorb more moisture, resulting in a more tender muffin.
- It also thickens the batter without making it drier, which helps encourage taller muffin tops without that crumbly or cakey texture.
- This technique works particularly well with muffin batter, which is usually made from melted butter or oil (not creamed butter + sugar) and uses only baking powder as the leavener, which is double acting. Meaning, it’s activated both by the moisture of the batter and the heat of the oven. Baking soda is only activated by acid in the batter, not from the heat of the oven.
- If you don’t believe me, just look at the comparison below. And what the image doesn’t quite capture is just how much more TENDER the chilled batter muffins turned out.
How to Chill Muffin Batter:
- Chill the batter in one large bowl, as opposed to chilling it in the individual muffin cavities, to prevent it from drying out.
- Bake directly from the fridge.
How Do I Get MORE Lemon Flavor in These Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins?
Add 1/2 teaspoon lemon extract along with the juice and zest.
How Do I Stop My Muffins From Sticking to the Liner?
- This can sometimes be caused by the brand of liners.
- This is my favorite brand that I order in bulk from Amazon.
- If you find your liners still get stuck and end up ruining your muffins, don’t worry. I’ve actually written an entire article about how to prevent muffin or cupcake liners from sticking here.
What’s the Best Muffin Tin?
I typically don’t like nonstick bakeware, which is why I was so surprised when I fell in love with the Wilton Recipe Right Nonstick Muffin Pan. They bake evenly and achieve lightly golden brown edges and clean up beautifully. I’ve had 3 of these tins for 6+ years and love them!
Can You Freeze Muffins?
Yes! Unglazed Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins can be frozen in an airtight container for up to 3 months. Defrost on the counter until room temperature. Refresh in a 300°F oven for 5 minutes if desired. If desired, glaze once thawed and at room temperature.
More Muffin Recipes:
- Brown Butter Blueberry Muffins (with a streusel top!)
- Banana Espresso Chocolate Chip Muffins
- Pumpkin Muffins
- Chocolate Coffee Toffee Crunch Muffins
- Bakery Style Banana Muffins
More Lemon Recipes:
- Glazed Lemon Cookies
- Lemon Bundt Cake
- Lemon Cheesecake
- Lemon Yogurt Zucchini Bread
- Raspberry Lemonade Cheesecake Bars
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Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins
Ingredients
- 2 cups (254 grams) all-purpose flour
- 3/4 cup (150 grams) granulated sugar
- 2 tablespoons poppy seeds
- 1 tablespoon baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon fine salt
- 1 cup whole milk, at room temperature
- 1 stick (113 grams) unsalted butter, melted and cooled
- 1 large egg, at room temperature
- 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
- 1 1/2 tablespoons fresh lemon zest
For the lemon glaze:
- 1 cup (125 grams) powdered sugar
- 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 400°F. Line a standard muffin tin with paper liners.
- In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, sugar, poppy seeds, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.
- In a small bowl, whisk together the milk, butter, egg, juice, and zest. Pour into the dry ingredients and stir with a rubber spatula until just combined. Do not overmix – there should be a couple streaks of flour remaining.* Divide evenly among the muffin tin cups.
- Bake until golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean and the edges are golden, about 15 minutes. Let cool until barely warm.
- Serve, or store in an airtight at room temperature for 3 days. Muffins can also be frozen in an airtight container for up to 3 months.
Make the glaze:
- In a small bowl, combine the sugar and lemon juice with a fork until a smooth and thick glaze forms. Drizzle or dip each cooled muffin top with the glaze. Let set before serving.
Recipe Notes
This recipe was originally published in 2012 and updated with recipe improvements, new photos, and more baking tips. Photos by Ashley McLaughlin.
Can I use 2% milk instead of whole milk?
We haven’t tried that as we prefer whole milk for the best flavor, though other readers have had success 🙂
Tessa at it again with this AMAZING muffin recipe. I’ve never let muffin batter sit overnight but I read Tessa’s post and explanation, and have seen others also suggest the benefits of letting muffin batter “marinate” overnight. Pro: these muffins turned out SO well. Besides the batter being almost too easy to make, letting the batter refrigerate overnight produced moist, fluffy and tall muffins! No flat hat ones. Con: I will now have to wait overnight before making other muffins again… like with cookie dough this time in the fridge really does yield a better end product. But guess its worth it! And it was really nice waking up, and only having to divide the batter into liners and 20 minutes later having oven fresh muffins first thing.
I love following your blog, Instagram and baking your recipes – knock on wood but I haven’t had a “dud” yet. Now i must find the willpower not to eat all 12 muffins… 1.5 are already missing …
Aw yay!! So happy to hear how much you love this recipe! And I’m so glad that you tried marinating the batter overnight too, it really makes a difference! Feel free to freeze some of the extra muffins in an airtight container so you can enjoy them for longer (if there’s any leftover!) 🙂
LOVE THEM! I had unexpected company and only one egg. I’m so glad I was able to find this recipe and was able to make a tasty treat for my guests. EVERYONE loved them! (I added a streusel topping before baking. One can’t have too much goodness with their morning coffee.)
Wonderful! So glad this recipe worked perfectly for your company and that everyone enjoyed!
The texture and moisture was PERFECT!!! Best muffin I’ve ever had in those terms…even better than muffins I’ve gotten at bakeries!
The glaze was very good. The muffin itself could have used some more lemon flavor. Next time I’ll experiment with a bit of lemon extract. That’s just my preference to make a recipe that is already SO delicious better suited for someone who likes more of a punch.
Yay! So happy you enjoyed them, Christine! Thanks for taking the time to write such a rave review, we appreciate your feedback as well!
I love your content, especially when you tell the truth about how you feel about a particular matter like buttermilk.
Question: What is the difference between using 2 cups (here) vs. 2-1/4 cups (in your ultimate muffin freebie) flour? Thank you.
Hi Janine! Glad you’re enjoying our content! This recipe and the Ultimate Muffin recipe have a completely different set of ingredients, including the weight of each. While each recipe is absolutely delicious, this recipe was created specifically to make the perfect Lemon Poppy Seed Muffin, whereas the Ultimate Muffin recipe was created specifically as a base recipe that can be used for endless flavor/add-in options. I hope that helps!
Hi,
What can happen if you over mix?
Hi Taji! Over mixed muffins are not light and fluffy, they’re a more tough muffin with a chewy texture. They can have peaked tops and develop “tunnel-shaped” holes in the interior. Sometimes they may not even rise to full volume. We recommend that your batter still contains a few traces of flour when you stop mixing. I hope that helps!
Hi Tessa,
Can I use bread flour for your Lemon Poppyseed Muffins and Ultimate Muffins in lieu of all-purpose?
I am looking forward to making them.
Many thanks,
Robin
We haven’t tried that, though we always recommend making the recipe as written for best results. Bread flour has a higher protein content, so we don’t typically use it in muffin recipes as it can result in a tougher, more chewy muffin.
Hi Emily,
Bread flour is used in your Easy Bakery Style Banana muffins, so before I make these can you please let me know why is doesn’t work for other muffin recipes. I am sure there is a very good reason but I need to know how it works for one and not others.
Warmest wishes,
Robin
No problem, Robin! The bread flour was used in the Banana Muffin recipe to help absorb more of the moisture of the bananas and to help with its structure. Tessa hasn’t actually used bread flour in any other muffin recipes, just all-purpose flour, but you’re more than welcome to try with this one 🙂
Amazing recipe! cant fault it! i tried it with orange instead of lemon and it was also amazing!
Delicious! Love making them with orange instead, so happy you enjoyed this recipe 🙂
These turned out delicious! Thanks
So happy you enjoyed them, thanks for letting us know! 🙂
Hi Tessa,
I live half time in Sun Valley, Idaho at 5900 feet. I have looked at so many recipes that were meant for altitude but it looks like one needs to “try” one or more of three alteration possibilities for baking at altitude (less leavening, higher/lower heat/ less or more flour…eeeks!) ; that requires lots of time and often wasted ingredients.
Do you have any foolproof tips? For example, I recently made a delish lemon meringue pie. One recipe said make the meringue at the same time as the custard…a bit daunting…and spread the egg white on the hot custard and bake. Another was make the custard and refrigerate for 2 hours or more (I did 2 hrs) cover w/the egg whites and bake for 10 min at 400. It looked great tasted good but the custard turned runny.
Any advice?
Love what you do and so happy to see you succeed! Keep it up!
I’m sorry, I don’t bake at high-altitude so I can’t help much-I’d suggest checking out King Arthur Flour’s tips linked here 🙂
Hello, I tried the cheat sheet recipe today, however this version of the recipe is way better than that in the Ultimate Cheat Sheet for muffins. The cheat sheet recipe lacks flavor and tender crumb whilst this version of your recipe is perfect!
Thanks for sharing your recipes!
I rarely comment on recipes after I have made alterations because that would be unfair, but this recipe still holds up brilliantly! The muffin was soft and baked up super well without the greasy bottom, it was (sorry) MOIST and fluffy. Definitely make this!
Alterations that I made:
– Reduced granulated sugar by half a cup. If your family doesn’t like sweet recipes, this won’t affect the muffins.
– Lemon drizzle instead of glaze. Ran out of powdered sugar and I’m unorganised. I used the juice of a lemon and 55 grams of granulated sugar then stirred until the sugar dissolved. Poked holes into the muffin and spooned the drizzle over it. FOLLOW THE RECIPE! The drizzle didn’t get absorbed well, but this was still super delicious. If you don’t have powdered sugar I recommend this.