Gluten-Free Pumpkin Muffins With Crumble Topping Recipe (2024)

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Cooking Notes

LEC

Hi Laurie I,
Just wanted to respectfully let you know that "the whole 'gluten' thing" you refer to is NOT a "farce" for people with celiac disease and other problems with gluten. For us, "regular" flour functions as a poison to our systems/makes us ill. To learn more, see the Celiac Disease Foundation's site: www.celiac.org. As a former professional baker now diagnosed with celiac disease, I'm grateful that GF flours enable me to bake again.

Randi

This recipe should specify that the gluten free flour blend should contain Xanthan gum. Not every store- bought blend contains it.

Gayle

Seemed like a lot of sugar. Only used half the sugar in topping and the muffin, also only used butter (and half as much) in the topping. Skipped the confectioners's sugar. Doubt that mine were as tasty as the original but still pretty good.

Jennifer Ward

As always, Silvana Nardone does not disappoint. This recipe is truly perfect. Five stars. Rarely, as in 1/1,000, even with specialty baking, do I follow a recipe exactly, but with Silvana, I do, because they’re that good as they are! This one knocks it’s out of the park. I used a custom GF blend without gums or fillers and it worked perfectly. Keep on being outstanding, Silvana! Thank you for sharing.

Tina G

My body doesn't process rice, bread, Gluten, or pasta since having my galbladder removed 4 years ago so it's hard to bake even with rice flours, but I've discovered Oat Flour & I it's tasty in muffins, cookies, pancakes, waffles, & such! I used 1 & 1/2 cups of Oat flour, 1/4 cup of Teff Flour, and a couple tablespoons of ground flax seed in this. very good! Tastes better than rice four blends too!

Maggie

For those of us who don't keep pumpkin pie spice on hand, I did the math: 1/4 tsp each: cloves, allspice, nutmeg, and ginger plus 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon adds up to the 2 1/2 tsp of pumpkin pie spice in the recipe.

Ellen B.

I've made many GF recipes including many with pumpkin. This one is average or a bit above average. Next time I'll add a little xanthan gum in the crumb mixture to prevent it from falling apart all over the place! Overall very good although not the most outstanding or different thing I've ever made.

Kelly S.

These are FANTASTIC. I am used to GF baked goods never quite being as good as the regular ones -- but that is not that case with these, they are utterly delicious and come out of the oven with a great texture, crumb and height. I used King Arthur Flour's measure-for-measure GF/DF flour. I also appreciate that these are dairy-free as well as gluten-free!

Lisa

Did this take a very long time to bake? They are very mushy inside.

elaine

Anyone have issues with the "crumble" topping just sort of spreading out on top (and sides) of the muffins? Ideas to solve this?

Chitown Girl

I made these muffins today, and they were terrific! As others have said, there is way too much crumble topping. Added oatmeal to the left-over topping and used it on a mini-apple crisp for two. I used melted butter instead of shortening, and I might try browning the butter next time. These are super sweet but go perfectly with a good, strong cup of coffee. I will double the muffin mixture next time and toss in some leftover squash. Then, I won't have excess topping.

elaine

Did anyone else experience the topping melting vs being crumbly when cooked?

Laura

As others mentioned (but I failed to heed) the topping amount as written is too much. Falls off or bakes onto the pan. Put it's tasty, so there's that little snack while you're storing the muffins. Good flavor even with sugar nudged down by quarter cup.

Katy

I used Bob’s 1:1 Flour (blue bag) and had to bake about five extra minutes, but the muffins turned out great! I used vegetable oil instead of shortening for the topping. It worked well enough, but next time I’ll be sure to have shortening on hand. This is definitely a fall treat worth trying!

ABJ

I love that this recipe uses the full cam of pumpkin and they freeze well I added pecans and pumpkin seeds to the streusel and used almond flour for the topping when I ran out of GF. Also cut back on sugar in both batter and streusel. Keeper.

mm. Mary James

I did not have a GF blend so used 1 c. Ground oats; and about 1/4 c corn, coconut, almond, and rice flour. Otherwise followed recipe except traded out half the granulated sugar for brown sugar. Result was moist and fluffy. Skipped the powdered sugar as the topping was sweet enough alone.

marjorie

Just baked these, added blueberries - about 3/4 cup fresh to the batter, skipped the confectionery sugar. Followed all other directions as written. I used Bobs all purpose flour (red packaging) and added the xantham gum as directed on label for batter and a 1:1 GF flour for topping. Fully enjoyed by all,

Miacomet

These were totally delish! We all loved them. I was a little dubious about the shortening in the crumb topping but it worked! The only thing I'd do differently next time is add some pumpkin pie spice to the batter too.

Jane W.

I added some chopped pecans to both muffin batter and topping. I also eliminated the granulated and confectioners sugar from the topping. I liked the taste

Ann

Excellent muffin base. Skipped the topping but added chocolate chips and toasted pecans to the batter. A keeper.

Maggie

For those of us who don't keep pumpkin pie spice on hand, I did the math: 1/4 tsp each: cloves, allspice, nutmeg, and ginger plus 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon adds up to the 2 1/2 tsp of pumpkin pie spice in the recipe.

Leslie

Use butter

GrandmaJ

For Gluten Free:1) Used both gfJules GF flour and Bob's Red Mill All Purpose flour (with chickpeas). The spices cover the chickpea flavor, so I opted for more protein.2) Topping cracked and fell off when I made these substitutions:- gluten free flour for AP flour- butter for shortening (don't eat trans fat)Glaze from NYT "Pumpkin Bundt Cake with Maple Brown-Butter Glaze" (BTW the Bundt cake is a family favorite, but not good for muffins)3) Texture is great 1st day or with low humidity

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Gluten-Free Pumpkin Muffins With Crumble Topping Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why are my gluten free muffins so dry? ›

Dry or Crumbly Muffins:

If you have dry or crumbly gluten free muffins, you need more liquid wet ingredients in your muffin batter. Every gluten free flour blend will have a slightly different amount of liquid needed. Blends with dried milk powder will need less liquid, but a starchy blend may need more.

Why did my gluten free muffins not rise? ›

Make sure all ingredients are at room temperature.

If your ingredients are cold, that will reduce the warmth and your dough may not achieve the rise it needs. Conversely, make sure that your mix isn't too warm/hot either. Yeast likes it to be warm and cozy.

Why are my muffins crumbly? ›

Oven temperature directly affects a muffin's texture and how well it rises. Muffins baked at too high of a temperature will produce an overly cooked outer crust and an undercooked filling. Muffins cooked at low temperatures for too long may dry out, creating an unpleasant texture and taste.

Why are my almond flour muffins crumbly? ›

When almond flour is overmixed, its absorbent nature can become a pitfall. The more you mix, the more the fat in the almond flour is released and absorbed, resulting in a dry, crumbly texture in your baked goods.

What is the secret to moist gluten-free baking? ›

Add extra liquid: Gluten-free flours tend to absorb more liquid than regular flour, so you may need to add more liquid to your recipes to compensate. This can help to keep your baked goods moist and prevent them from becoming dry and crumbly.

What is the best gluten free flour for muffins? ›

Brown rice flour contains one single ingredient—brown rice. And while all brown rice flours are naturally gluten free, it's essential to check that the one you're using was made in a gluten free facility. In recipes, brown rice flour works best in bread, muffins and cookies.

How to stop gluten free cakes from crumbling? ›

One of the most common gluten-free baking tips is “let your batter rest”. Letting the batter rest gives the gluten-free flours and starches more time to absorb the moisture. In theory, it will turn your dry, crumbly cakes into delicious, moist masterpieces.

How to make gluten free dough less crumbly? ›

7- How do I fix crumbly gluten free cookie dough? If your cookie dough is too dry and crumbly, just add back to the mixing bowl and stir in a couple tablespoons of your favorite milk or an egg. Add more if needed – the dough needs to hold together, but most cookie doughs shouldn't be sticky.

How do you adjust for gluten-free baking? ›

Gluten-free flours often contain fine starches, so they absorb more liquid than conventional flour. To address this, gluten-free recipes usually call for more liquid and produce looser batters. They may also call for a larger quantity of leavening, like baking powder, to help add volume and lighten the texture.

Why are Bakery muffins so much better? ›

The best bakery-style crumb muffins start with cake flour

Cake flour is more finely ground and has less protein, which leaves the muffins with a fine, light crumb and soft texture. Using cake flour is an easy way to avoid heavy, dense muffins even if you end up stirring just a bit too much.

How to prevent muffins from crumbling? ›

By chilling the batter, the starch in the flour is able to absorb more moisture, resulting in a more tender muffin. It also thickens the batter without drying it out, which helps encourage beautiful tall muffin tops without a crumbly or cakey texture.

What ingredient keeps muffins from falling apart? ›

How do you keep muffins from falling apart? It's gluten. See, to a baker, gluten holds the whole world together.

Why can't you use baking powder with almond flour? ›

Since baking powder contains baking soda, baking powder cannot be used in almond flour baking. Instead, eggs (or applesauce or bananas) can be used as the leavening agent to help baked goods rise and achieve a light and fluffy texture.

Does almond flour need a binder? ›

Almond flour also works best in baked goods with a high egg white content, because the egg white is a binding agent. If your recipe does not have a high egg content, you might need to add a binding agent, like xanthan gum or flax seed.

How to make gluten free baking less dry? ›

Gluten free flours absorb more moisture. You can compensate by removing some flour (~1-2 Tbsp/cup, or 8-16 g) or by adding moisture. Depending on the recipe, this could be more water, milk, or an extra egg.

Why is gluten free baking so dry? ›

Some gluten free flours will produce a cake which is on the dry side. This might be due to the lack of gluten but can be for many other reasons. Lots of gluten free flour is rice based and this can result in a dry and slightly gritty texture.

How do I prevent my muffins from being dry? ›

Stop cooling your muffins in the pan

If you allow your muffins to cool down while they're still in the pan, they aren't actually cooling at all. Because the muffin tin just got out of the oven, it of course is still hot. This heat causes the muffins to continue baking, leaving you with a hard, dry breakfast.

How can I make my muffins more moist? ›

By chilling the batter, the starch in the flour is able to absorb more moisture, resulting in a more tender muffin. It also thickens the batter without drying it out, which helps encourage beautiful tall muffin tops without a crumbly or cakey texture. The flavors intensify and improve as well!

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