Sourdough discard makes these chocolate sourdough muffins extra flavorful and tender. Bake them at two oven temperatures for tall, fluffy results! Recipe includes a how-to video!
Sourdough Chocolate Muffins
We have a growing number of sourdough fans around here lately (yay)! After sharing sourdough pancakes, sourdough brownies, sourdough cookies, and more, lots of you have asked how to incorporate your sourdough discard into even more recipes, like my double chocolate muffins. After some tweaking, we came up with the most irresistible, moist, and chocolatey chocolate sourdough muffins there ever were!
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
- Decadent chocolate flavor. We’ll use Dutch process cocoa and bloom it with hot water and instant coffee for good flavor here. And of course, we top the muffins with plenty chocolate chips!
- Not too dense or heavy. These muffins stay light and fluffy, so they’re not overly indulgent. They are also incredibly moist, thanks to a few key ingredients like sour cream, oil, and brown sugar.
- Pretty, rounded muffin tops. Nothing is more disappointing than a flat muffin! We’ll use my tried and true technique (borrowed from my chocolate chip muffins and banana muffins) for tall, bakery-style muffin tops.
- Perfect for using up sourdough discard. This is just one of many sourdough recipes in my growing sourdough recipes collection!
What You Need
Before we get started, let’s talk ingredients (and substitutions!).
- Sourdough discard. If you’re a sourdough fan (I’m not sure why you’d be here otherwise!), you’ll have some of this lying around. If you’re new to the sourdough game but want to get started, head over to my how to make a sourdough starter post!
- Sour cream. We’ll add this for the same reason we do in my sourdough blueberry muffins; it adds flavor, tenderness, and moisture. If you’d like, you can substitute full-fat, plain Greek yogurt instead.
- Dutch cocoa. Using Dutch process cocoa provides a smoother flavor and darker color than natural cocoa would. I talk more about this below.
- Hot water + instant coffee. Both of these will intensify the chocolate flavor of our muffins. You can alternatively use very hot coffee instead, if you don’t keep instant coffee on hand. Whichever you choose, make sure it’s nice and hot because we’ll be using it to bloom our cocoa!
- Oil. Avocado, canola, or vegetable oil are all good options here. Melted butter could also work instead, but the muffins will be a bit more dense and they won’t stay as moist for as long.
SAM’S TIP: If you don’t have brown sugar on hand, you might be able to make your own. I have a tutorial on how to make brown sugar that uses just two pantry staples (sugar and molasses)!
This is just an overview of the ingredients I used and why. For the full recipe please scroll down to the bottom of the post!
How to Make Chocolate Sourdough Muffins
- Whisk the dry ingredients and sugar together until combined, then set aside.
- Bloom the cocoa: combine the hot water, cocoa, and instant coffee in a large measuring cup.
- Add the remaining wet ingredients and whisk until everything is smooth and well incorporated.
- Fold the wet and dry ingredients together until 50% combined, then add the chocolate chips. Keep folding until the batter is just combined.
- Divide the batter into a lined muffin tin, filling each mostly full. You will have excess batter if you use a 12-count muffin tin (this recipe makes 17-18 muffins). You can let the extra batter sit on your counter while your first batch of muffins bakes.
- Bake until a toothpick comes out clean or with moist/fudgy crumbs and let cool before enjoying.
SAM’S TIP: Don’t let your muffins cool completely in the muffin tin, or they could end up over-baked or with soggy/greasy muffin liners. I recommend letting them cool in the tin for 5 minutes before (carefully!) removing to a cooling rack.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes! Feel free to substitute an equal amount of active sourdough starter (bubbly, at least 2-3 weeks old if you follow my recipe) for the sourdough discard.
I personally preferred these chocolate sourdough muffins with Dutch process cocoa, as natural cocoa gave a flatter flavor. Since we are using both baking soda and baking powder, you’d technically be fine to substitute natural cocoa if that’s all you have on hand though.
Starting at the higher oven temperature encourages our chocolate sourdough muffins to rise nice and tall. We then drop the oven temperature (without opening the door, this is important!) to let the muffins cook through without over-baking.
If we were to keep the oven at the high temperature the whole time, the muffins would turn out dry. If you were to use the lower temperature, you wouldn’t get the nice rise. Baking is truly a science 😊
If you don’t have any muffin liners on hand, you can always make your own! I have a tutorial on how to make muffin liners out of parchment paper that’s easy peasy.
Enjoy!
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Chocolate Sourdough Muffins
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Servings: 17 muffins
Calories: 240kcal
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Instructions
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Preheat oven to 425F (220C) and line a muffin tin with paper liners. Set aside.
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In a large mixing bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, baking soda, baking powder, and salt until well-combined.
1 ⅓ cups (165 g) all-purpose flour, 1 cup (200 g) light brown sugar, 1 teaspoon baking soda, ½ teaspoon baking powder, ¾ teaspoon table salt
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In a large measuring cup (or a separate mixing bowl), combine the hot water, cocoa, and instant coffee (if using). Whisk until smooth.
½ cup (118 ml) steaming hot or boiling water, ½ cup (50 g) Dutch process cocoa, 1 teaspoon instant coffee
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Add sour cream, avocado oil, egg, and vanilla extract and whisk well.
¾ cup (180 g) sour cream, ½ cup (118 ml) avocado oil, 1 teaspoon vanilla extract, 1 large egg
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Add sourdough discard to the measuring cup and whisk until ingredients are well incorporated.
½ cup (105 g) sourdough discard
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Add wet ingredients to the flour mixture and use a spatula to gently fold together until about halfway combined. Add chocolate chips and continue to fold until ingredients are just combined.
1 cup (170 g) semisweet chocolate chips
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Divide batter into prepared muffin tin, filling each liner nearly to the rim. Note that this recipe makes 18 muffins, if you only have a single 12-count liner it is fine for the batter to sit, covered, on the counter, while the first batch bakes.
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Sprinkle muffins with additional chocolate chips, if desired, and transfer to center rack of 425F (220C) oven. Bake for 8 minutes, then, without opening the oven door, reduce oven temperature to 350F (175C) and continue to bake for 9-10 minutes longer or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean or with moist/fudgy crumbs (not wet batter).
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Allow muffins to cool for 5-10 minutes in the muffin tin before gently removing from the tin (careful, the tin is hot! I use a butter knife to gently pry up each muffin) and transferring to a cooling rack to cool completely.
Notes
Storing
Store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days. Muffins may also be wrapped in plastic wrap and frozen for up to 3 months.
Nutrition
Serving: 1muffin | Calories: 240kcal | Carbohydrates: 29g | Protein: 3g | Fat: 13g | Saturated Fat: 4g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 6g | Trans Fat: 0.01g | Cholesterol: 16mg | Sodium: 189mg | Potassium: 145mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 17g | Vitamin A: 82IU | Vitamin C: 0.1mg | Calcium: 43mg | Iron: 2mg
Nutritional information is based on third-party calculations and should be considered an estimate only. Actual nutritional content will vary based upon brands used, measuring methods, cooking method, portion sizes, and more.
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