In season now — Late June through August (peak: July)
Breakfast Easy American

Simple blueberry muffins

A straightforward muffin batter with visible fruit and a tender crumb — one of the most useful ways to turn extra berries into breakfast or snack food that actually gets eaten.

A plate of blueberry muffins with domed tops and visible berries, with one muffin split open.
Prep
10 min
Cook
22 min
Total
32 min
Serves
12

Simple blueberry muffins are one of the most useful ways to turn extra berries into breakfast or snack food that actually gets eaten — the goal is tender muffins, visible fruit, and a recipe simple enough to make without talking yourself out of it.

Simple blueberry muffins

Makes 12 standard muffins

Serves 12

Ingredients (9)

You'll need

  • 12-cup standard muffin tin
  • Paper liners or cooking spray
  • Ice cream scoop (optional, for even filling)
Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1 muffin
195 Calories
4 g Protein
30 g Carbs
7 g Fat
1 g Fiber
13 g Sugar
190 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Duke — early season, mild, widely grown at pick-your-own farms
  • Bluecrop — the classic reliable variety; balanced sweetness and acidity
  • Jersey — late season, tart and complex; excellent for baking
  • Wild lowbush — small, intensely flavored; the best flavor per berry when you can find them

Ripeness

Deep blue-purple all the way through with a powdery white bloom. Firm enough to hold shape, not mushy. No red or green tinge — those berries are under-ripe and sour.

Imperfections are fine

Unevenly sized berries are fine for baking. Small, slightly soft, or blemished berries work perfectly in muffins where texture matters less than flavor. Wild lowbush blueberries are often small and imperfect-looking but are flavor-forward.

Good substitutions

  • Fresh raspberries or blackberries (no tossing in flour needed)
  • Frozen blueberries (no thawing — fold in frozen, toss in flour first)
  • Diced peaches or cherries (drain well before folding in)

In season

Blueberry season runs late June through August, with July being peak in most US regions.

How much to buy

About 1 1/2 cups (roughly 1 pint / 3/4 lb) for a full batch of 12 muffins.

From a grower near you

Find your blueberry grower on CollectiveCrop

Commercial blueberries are bred big and durable — which means they're picked just before ripe and ship well. A local highbush berry, picked at peak, is sweeter and more fragrant. A wild lowbush berry, if you can find one, is smaller, more intense, and practically a different fruit. CollectiveCrop is how you find the farm growing either kind well. Muffins are the recipe that shows off the difference.

  • In season Late June through August (peak: July)
  • For this recipe 1 pint / about 1 1/2 cups
  • While you're there Local eggs · Yogurt · Local honey

At the market

About 1 1/2 cups (roughly 1 pint / 3/4 lb) for a full batch of 12 muffins.

Best varieties

  • Duke early season, mild, widely grown at pick-your-own farms
  • Bluecrop the classic reliable variety; balanced sweetness and acidity
  • Jersey late season, tart and complex; excellent for baking

Good to know

Tips

  • Do not overmix once the flour is added — a few lumps are correct and keep the muffins tender.
  • Toss frozen blueberries in a tablespoon of flour before folding in to prevent them from sinking.
  • Fill the cups evenly for consistent baking; an ice cream scoop works well.

Storage

  • Room temperature: up to 2 days in an airtight container.
  • Refrigerator: up to 5 days; reheat briefly before serving.
  • Freezer: up to 2 months; wrap individually and reheat from frozen.

Reheating

  • Microwave: 20–30 seconds from refrigerated; 45–60 seconds from frozen.
  • Oven: 325°F for 5–8 minutes to restore a slightly crisp top.

Make ahead

  • Whisk the dry ingredients together up to 1 day ahead; keep covered at room temperature.
  • Baked muffins freeze well — make a double batch and freeze half for the week.

Variations

  • Lemon blueberry: add zest of 1 lemon to the batter and drizzle with a simple lemon glaze.
  • Whole grain: replace up to half the flour with whole wheat pastry flour.
  • Jumbo muffins: use a 6-cup jumbo tin; add 5–8 minutes to the bake time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you make simple blueberry muffins ahead of time?

Yes. Muffins are excellent for making ahead and freezing.

Can you use frozen blueberries?

Yes. Toss them in a tablespoon of flour before folding in, and add them straight from the freezer so they bleed less.

Why are my muffins tough?

Overmixing develops gluten — once you add the flour, stir only until just combined and stop. A few lumps are correct.

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