Friday, January 11, 2013

Bran Muffins

My family has few formal traditions.  How we celebrate birthdays and holidays varies a lot.  There is one weird Grinde Family Tradition that has been a constant in my life: Bran muffins on Christmas morning.  I have no idea how this started, probably by happenstance one year and it just stuck.  You see every December my mother spends most of her evenings in the kitchen making chex mix, cookies, fudge, whiskey caramels, and Irish Cream to distribute to our neighbors, friends, and her co-workers.  The other thing she makes is bran muffing batter and puts it in quart mason jars, attaches a label with baking directions and puts them in the fridge until she delivers them.  She always keeps one jar for us, and opens it on Christmas morning, spoons in into muffin tins and bakes in while we open gifts: a homemade breakfast while avoiding having to get up extra early to prepare something.

Everyone's seen those muffin mix dry ingredients layered in jars, where you have to add an egg, some oil and water.  Those are great, they are beautiful and a very practical gift but my mom likes to give away muffin batter so people don't have to add anything, just bake it.  She got this idea from the Colo United Methodist 1983's Cookbook, my maternal grandmother's sister's church (we all know that church cookbooks are the best cookbooks).  The recipe for Bran Muffins states that the muffin batter can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 6 weeks.  My mom has stored the muffins for up to a month before that batter starts to get weird, so I wouldn't recommend keeping it for more than 4 weeks. 

This has perplexed me (as well as Melissa : I sent her this recipe and she wondered the same thing) because the recipe's leavening comes only from baking soda, which would react immediately with the acidic buttermilk to create carbon dioxide.  So if I was just reading this recipe (and not have seen it create beautifully raised muffins after a month in the fridge a hundred times)  I would think you would need to put it in the oven right away to not lose the carbon dioxide. The recipe does specify that after removing the batter from the fridge you should NOT STIR it, just spoon it from the jar into the pans and bake.  This must be the secret to not dislodging too many pockets of carbon dioxide and getting perfect muffins every time.

No matter why the tradition was started or the magic of how the muffins work: they are delicious.  The muffins are always tender and moist, perfect right out of the oven with butter and jam.  On Christmas morning or any day these muffins never disappoint.



Bran Muffins
from Colo United Methodist 1983 Cookbook, p.57

2 cups boiling water
2 cups Kellog's All Bran (Bran Buds)
1 cup shortening
3 cups sugar
4 eggs
1 quart buttermilk
1 teaspoon salt
1 Tablespoon + 2 teaspoons baking soda
5 cups flour
4 cups Kellogg's All Bran (Original)

Pour hot water over Bran Buds and let sit for 5 minutes.  In a large mixing bowl (use the biggest one you have; this makes a lot of muffins) cream together shortening and sugar; mix in eggs, milk, and the soaked bran buds.  Stir in salt, baking soda, flour, and All Bran until the dry ingredients are all moistened.   Spoon batter into quart mason jars or large tupperware containers (this recipe will fill 4 quart mason jars + plus about 1 cup of leftover batter) and refrigerate for up to 1 month.

When ready to bake do not stir the batter, just spoon into greased muffin tins and bake on 400 degrees for 12-14 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center of the muffin comes out clean.

Just for clarification (there are so many bran cereals out there) these are the cereals you are looking for to make this recipe:




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