These are the absolute best vegan strawberry muffins! They’re full of juicy, fresh strawberries, and they’re perfect for spring. Plus, they’re very easy to prepare.
Oh, these muffins.
I made them for the first time about three weeks ago, in a fit of excitement about the beginning of strawberry season. I kept the recipe simple: basically, a vanilla muffin with chopped strawberries folded in and a bit of sparkling sugar on top.
I was expecting to be happy with the recipe—I love both muffins and strawberries, after all—but I wasn’t prepared for how special these would be within their simplicity.
It’s the strawberries. Those juicy pockets of fruit become so sweet upon baking. With their presence, the strawberry muffins don’t need any bells or whistles.
This muffin recipe is all about fresh, seasonal fruit, and it’s better for it.
When I wrote about vegan buttermilk earlier this week, I mentioned that a lot of vegan baking recipes don’t actually require egg replacer.
I’ve found this to be especially true when it comes to quick breads: muffins, banana bread, pumpkin bread, and so on. It can also be true when it comes to vegan cake recipes.
This is possible with the right flour (or flours) and leavening agents. Eggs usually provide structure and leavening to baked goods, along with some richness, from fat.
It’s easy to create that same richness with plant-based fats, such as oil, vegan butter, nut or seed butter, or vegan yogurt.
Mimicking the effect of egg on leavening and structure/binding is trickier, yet very possible. Leavening agents, combined with something acidic (like vegan buttermilk), create rise.
Using a flour with gluten preserves structure. So can the right combination of gluten-free flours and starches.
All three of these ingredients—leavening agents, vegan buttermilk, and all-purpose flour—come together to make the vegan strawberry muffins work.
The muffins are light, but they still have structure. The muffin crumb is sturdy enough to support the fresh, diced strawberry pieces, without their collecting at the muffin bottoms.
Simplicity is the name of the game for this particular muffin recipe. Here’s what you’ll need.
I use unbleached, all-purpose flour for the vegan strawberry muffins, not to mention nearly all of my other baking endeavors. It gives me light, moist, fluffy treats with very consistent results.
If you’ve got your heart set on using a whole grain flour in the recipe, that’s OK. Just be prepared for the muffins to be slightly denser or more dry than they would be otherwise. I recommend white whole wheat flour for the best results.
If you bake gluten-free, I recommend an all-purpose flour and starch blend. This one is my favorite by far.
I use my go-to combination of baking powder and soda in a 2:1 ratio for the strawberry muffins.
And in order to make those muffins rise, I use my vegan buttermilk.
This straightforward mixture of unsweetened, non-dairy milk and freshly squeezed lemon juice (or apple cider vinegar) contributes some acid to the muffin batter.
In doing that, it sets off a neutralization reaction with the leavening agents, which are bases. That reaction produces tiny bubbles of carbon dioxide, which help the strawberry muffins to rise.
You can read more about how that magic happens in this post!
I use melted butter as the fat source in the muffins. I like the way buttery flavor works in this recipe.
However, you can use a neutral-flavored vegetable oil to make the strawberry muffins, too. Refined avocado oil is my go-to for baking.
The strawberry muffins are sweetened with cane sugar. If you like, you can use coconut sugar as a substitute.
These muffins benefit from just a hint of vanilla flavor. I use vanilla extract, but if you have vanilla powder or syrup instead, that’s fine.
The muffin recipe calls for 1 1/2 cups of chopped, fresh strawberries. Typically I tell readers that frozen fruit is a fine substitute for fresh in baking recipes.
For these strawberry muffins, though, I think that it’s important to use fresh fruit. The texture and flavor of chopped, fresh strawberries is key in the recipe.
Sparkling sugar is a shimmering sugar that can be used to very simply decorate muffins, scones, and cookies. It gives them just a tiny bit of irresistable, sugary crust on top.
Each time I mention sparkling sugar, I’m asked where it can be purchased. I really like the sparkling sugar from King Arthur Baking, which you can order from the KAB online shop.
However, you can also find a bunch of sparkling sugar options on Amazon. If you have a local cake decorating store or specialty baking store, you ought to be able to find it there, too. Sometimes sparkling sugar is even easy to locate in the baking section of a big grocery store.
If you don’t have sparkling sugar but you do happen to have demerara sugar in your pantry, you can use the latter instead.
If you don’t have fresh strawberries, an alternative option is to use fresh blueberries in their place. Go for the same amount of fruit: 1 1/2 cups.
Homemade muffins are without a doubt one of my favorite sweet breakfast foods for making ahead. I nearly always make a dozen and freeze half.
Homemade muffins make a wonderful, on-the-go light breakfast or sweet snack.
As far as breakfast goes, you could of course pair the strawberry muffins with all sorts of other foods. I like to have them with a cashew or almond yogurt and some additional, fresh strawberries.
You could serve them with some nuts or nut butter, a pat of vegan butter, a smoothie, or a nice, frothy oat milk latte. Or whatever else you might be in the mood for.
Store the muffins in a sealable container or resealable bag at room temperature for up to 2 days or in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 5 days.
Room temperature storage will keep the muffins moist—fridge storage tends to dry out baked goods—but keeping them in the fridge will extend their freshness.
Definitely. The strawberry muffins can be wrapped or transferred to an airtight container and frozen, individually or in batches, for up to 6 weeks.
If reading this post makes you excited to bake, then you might enjoy these additional ways to savor fresh, juicy spring and summer strawberries:
I’ve made the strawberry muffins four times (!) since I first made them left than one month ago.
I’ve now shared them with yoga friends, gifted them to a friend on Mother’s Day, and enjoyed a batch all to myself. I’m happy to say that I still have some in my freezer.
I hope you’ll like them as much as I do. Here’s to spring.
xo
This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something I may earn a commission. Visit my privacy policy to learn more.
Leave a Comment
LOVE this recipe!! I started using blueberries instead and found that they hold better and taste delicious too.
That’s great to hear! Thanks for sharing your variation, Sheri.
So yummy!
Hooray!
My husband made these first, and they were soooo good. I made a second batch with 1 cup of raspberries and ยฝ cup of dark chocolate morsels, instead of strawberries, and it was just as good. This is a fantastic recipe that holds up, even with slight tweaks!
So glad you enjoyed! I love the idea of a chocolate variation ๐
These came out great! The strawberries get even sweeter as they bake and the muffins are the perfect texture. Consider bringing these to the next potluck you get invited to. Also I used apple cider vinegar instead of lemon juice for the butter milk and it worked perfectly.
Hi Gena! I want to make these and am wondering if it would make a difference if I substituted the cane sugar for stevia or monk fruit? Iโm a type 1 diabetic and would like to eliminate the giant blood sugar spike. Thank you!
Hey Danielle! I’m so glad you want to try them. Unfortunately, they probably won’t turn out the same. Sugar adds moisture as well as sweetness, so there’s a good chance they’ll be denser and more dry. I do know that some of the new sugar substitute blends (like King Arthur’s) are supposed to give better texture than stevia or monkfruit alone. But because I haven’t tested any of them, I’m not 100% sure how they work, and I’d hate to give you a suggestion that doesn’t work out for you. My best suggestion is to experiment and see what kind of results you get, knowing that it may take some time to land on the right changes to the recipe.
Here’s more about the new KAB baking sugar substitute: https://www.kingarthurbaking.com/blog/2020/10/07/our-new-baking-sugar-alternative
I’m sorry this isn’t more helpful, but I hope you figure something out!