Why are the blueberries in my blueberry muffins not melting?

Why are the blueberries in my blueberry muffins not melting? - Assortment of Baked Sweet Goodies with Fruits

I've made a few batches of blueberry muffins and the first batch turned out perfectly. After that batch, I tried to substitute honey for sugar (just testing things out), but the blueberries didn't melt and they didn't have much flavor so I decided to go back to the original recipe. For some reason though, my blueberries still won't melt and it honestly ruins the muffin for me. For more clarification, when I say the blueberries won't melt I mean that they feel like they're ready to burst but they're completely intact (like they haven't "exploded" and the skin is unbroken). I'm really at a loss here on what to do or why this randomly started happening; I assumed it was related to the honey, but the latest batches have no honey in them.

Would really appreciate some help if anyone has a clue! :(

EDIT: I bought a huge bag of the frozen blueberries at Costco so I have had the same bag of frozen blueberries for all my muffins. I appreciate all of the responses, but considering I'm already using frozen I'm still confused. I'll try some more blueberry muffins tomorrow; maybe it was just a fluke.



Best Answer

Honey versus sugar has nothing to do with your berries bursting or not.

Assuming you are in the northern hemisphere you are getting out of season fruit as it is winter. Your blueberries are either greenhouse grown or have travelled halfway around the world from somewhere warm enough to grown them. Out of season blueberries tend to have less flavor and have thicker skins because they are not ripe. They cannot be ripe when picked because they will rot before they make the trip from wherever they are grown, so they are picked while still underripe.

I would suggest buying frozen instead. Frozen berries are picked when ripe and then frozen right away, so usually taste better than fresh ones you get in the middle of winter. Freezing also weakens the skins, so they burst more reliably. Frozen are also much cheaper. In fact that's what I would suggest doing to fresh ones to make their skins burst when baked - freeze then thaw them, so you may as well save some cash and get a better tasting result by buying them frozen in the first place.




Pictures about "Why are the blueberries in my blueberry muffins not melting?"

Why are the blueberries in my blueberry muffins not melting? - Blueberry Muffins Near a Glass Teapot
Why are the blueberries in my blueberry muffins not melting? - Blueberry Muffins on Black Mesh Steel
Why are the blueberries in my blueberry muffins not melting? - Muffins on a Tray



Why did the blueberries sink in my muffins?

Compared to the rest of the batter, blueberries are dense and heavy. By the laws of nature, this means that they commonly sink down into the batter and in the muffin tin, this means that all of your delicious blueberries are going to be at the bottom.

What is the secret to making moist muffins?

use butter AND oil -butter makes things tasty but oil makes things moist. So use both! don't mix the batter more than 12 times ; and. don't bake for longer than 20 minutes.

Should I use fresh or frozen blueberries in muffins?

Frozen blueberries are best when added to the batter completely frozen. They will cook up perfectly during the baking process. On the flip side, if the berries thaw before being added to the batter, they will release a lot of juice and bleed blue into the entire batter (see the section about the batter turning colors).



Blueberry Muffins




Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Ruslan Khmelevsky, alleksana, eat kubba, eat kubba