Last Updated: April 25, 2021
These muffins are almost too cute to eat. Well, almost. They are sweet and delicious, fruity and nutty, and you will probably devour them. I love the combination of hazelnuts, raspberries, and cinnamon in this recipe, all the flavors go together really well. Both ground and chopped hazelnuts are used, giving the muffins more texture and crunch. And using whole raspberries in the batter makes this treat taste juicy and fresh.
The icing is a dream come true – pure, sweet, pink raspberry heaven!
I used birch sugar for the muffins, but you're free to use regular sugar if you prefer it. You can substitute the birch sugar 1:1 with regular white or brown sugar.
🍽 Recipe
Hazelnut Muffins with Raspberries and a Raspberry Icing
These muffins are almost too cute to eat. Well, amost. They are sweet and delicious, fruity and nutty, and you will probably devour them in no time.
Servings: 12
Equipment
- Coffee or nut grinder (Needed only if ouy're not using icing sugar for the topping)
- A 12 cup muffin pan
- 12 muffin paper liners
Ingredients
Batter
- 1 Chia or ground flaxseed "egg" 1 tablespoon of chia seeds or ground flaxseeds mixed with 5 tablespoons of water
- 200 g gluten-free flour mix or regular white flour
- 50 g ground hazelnuts
- 50 g chopped hazelnuts
- 150 g birch sugar or regular granulated sugar
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar
- 50 ml rapeseed oil or any other neutral tasting oil
- 200 ml water
- 125 g raspberries I had frozen raspberries
Icing and Topping
- 150 g birch sugar alternatively regular granulated sugar or icing sugar
- 50 g raspberries I had frozen raspberries
- 12 hazelnuts to decorate the muffins
Instructions
- Make the chia or flaxseed "egg" by combining 1 tablespoon of chia seeds with 5 tablespoons of water. Let sit for 10-15 minutes.
- Preheat the oven to 150° C / 302° F (fan on).
- Combine all the dry ingredients.
- Mix the apple cider vinegar with the oil and the water, and combine with the dry ones.
- Line the muffin tins with the papers liners.
- Distribute the batter evenly across the muffin tins.
- Distribute 125 g / 1,2 cups raspberries across the batter in the muffin tins. Use your fingers or a teaspoon to push the raspberries into the batter and cover them slightly with batter.
- Bake for 20-25 minutes at 150° C / 302° F (fan on). Leave to cool completely.
- For the icing, grind the sugar in a coffee or nut grinder until it has the consistency of icing sugar. You can skip this step if you're using regular icing sugar.
- In a bowl, mash the raspberries with a fork or spoon. For a seedless raspberries purée, strain the mashed raspberries through a fine sieve (until only the seeds are left, that is, you want to make sure that no drop of raspberry juice is wasted).
- Combine the icing sugar with the raspberry purée. The icing should be rather thick, not runny.
- Decorate the muffins immediately with the icing, as the icing will harden up quickly.
- Press a hazelnut into the icing of each muffin.
- Let sit for about 2 hours for the icing to completely harden up before serving.
- The muffins will keep in an airtight container for a couple of days. I recommend serving them within 2-3 days, as the icing will start softening and losing its bright pink color after 3 days.
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