I've made these twice this week. The flavor is really amazing. It reminds me of this Almond Tart a bit - probably because of the almond extract and the cranberries. Those flavors just go together so well. The soft, slightly sweetened cream cheese is just a bonus.
If you want, you can take a knife (or your finger) and spread that soft cream cheese all over your muffin. Yum!
Cranberry Cream Cheese Muffins
adapted from The Pajama Chef
Ingredients:
adapted from The Pajama Chef
Ingredients:
- 4 oz. cream cheese, softened
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar, divided
- 6 oz. fresh cranberries (or frozen)
- 2 eggs
- 1/4 cup brown sugar
- 1/4 cup oil
- 3/4 tsp. vanilla
- 1/4 tsp. almond extract
- 1-1/2 cup flour, part whole wheat (or use all white whole wheat)
- 1 T ground flax seed (optional)
- 2 tsp. baking powder
- 1/2 tsp. salt
- Preheat oven to 350°. Line muffin tin with paper liners or grease well.
- Mix cream cheese with 2 T sugar; set aside
- In small saucepan, combine another 2 T sugar with the cranberries. Heat on medium, stirring occasionally, until cranberries pop. Mash slightly with a wooden spoon and set aside.
- In mixing bowl, beat eggs then stir in the rest of the granulated sugar and the brown sugar. Mix in oil, vanilla, and almond extract.
- Stir flour, flax seed (if using), baking powder, and salt together; mix into wet ingredients. Then gently fold in cranberries, being careful not to over-mix or your batter will turn pink.
- Pour batter into prepared pan, filling muffin cups about 2/3 full. Use a spoon to scoop cream cheese mixture into the center of each muffin, pressing down gently.
- Bake 20-25 minutes, until golden brown. Cool 5 minutes in muffin tin then remove to wire rack to cool.
I like my muffins dense and not too sweet, so I used the white wheat flour and flax seed and cut the sugar down just a touch. They were still plenty sweet, but if you like your muffins sweet and light, use 1 cup of sugar in the batter, with an additional 2 T sugar for both the cream cheese and the cranberries. And use white flour instead of the whole wheat, though white wheat isn't as heavy as regular whole wheat would be. I would also recommend using cupcake liners because, even with the wheat flour, these muffins wanted to stick to my muffin pan just a little.
The reason I made these twice in one week wasn't just because I love the flavor - which I do - it was because the recipe, as first posted, called for about 1/2 the flour it should have. (Sarah weighed all her ingredients, so she got it right, but then she used an online conversion calculator when she wrote the recipe post) I did not even bother to check, just followed the recipe - and they still turned out really good! Just very delicate. And hard to stop eating. Very hard to stop eating.
I will definitely be making these again!
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