Old Fashioned Donut Muffins are those famous dense, rich doughnuts but in muffin form. The glaze over the top makes them perfectly sweet and an easy breakfast muffin recipe. If you are looking for an amazing weekend or holiday breakfast idea, these donut muffins are perfect. Just don’t rush the 3rd step or you will be sorry….
Why I Love This Donut Muffins Recipe
Ever since my Dad became a Papa, Saturdays became Donut Day….aka, a day to use his grandchildren as an excuse to buy donuts. Don’t get me wrong, his grandkids adore Donut Day but he isn’t fooling anyone. My Dad loves donuts and will eat them with or without his grandchildren. He just feels less guilty about it with them around 🙂
One of my favorite types of donuts are old fashioned donuts. They are dense and moist, which is what I prefer. I’ve never been a huge fan of raised donuts because I feel like I am eating nothing but sweet air that still adds inches to my rear end. If I’m going to indulge, I want to feel like I actually ate something.
These donut muffins look and taste just like their namesake, especially with their crinkly tops and thick glaze. With the cinnamon and nutmeg, they make a great fall muffin too. I think next time, I will even try adding a cup of diced apple to them to make them even more fall-themed. However, that would require me to rename them “Apple Fritter Donut Muffins” instead!
What is a Donut Muffin?
A donut muffin uses a sweet cake batter, just like a cake donut, but instead of being fried, it is baked in the oven as a muffin inside a cupcake liner. For an Old Fashioned Donut Muffins, the batter uses sour cream to recreate that signature dense texture of its doughnut counterpart, then gets dipped in a powdered sugar glaze while still warm. That glaze is truly what makes these muffins just like a doughnut.
Besides the old fashion variety, there are also other donut muffin recipes that recreate other classic cake donut flavors. Cinnamon sugar donut muffins are finished off by rolling the warm muffin in cinnamon sugar until it sticks. Or, a chocolate glazed donut muffin takes a dip in chocolate ganache before topping them with sprinkles. Donut muffin varieties are as endless as the types of donuts.
Old Fashion Donut Muffin Ingredients
All-purpose flour
Granulate sugar
Brown sugar
Butter
Canola oil
Baking powder
Baking soda
Large eggs
Milk
Cinnamon
Nutmeg
Vanilla
Kosher salt
Powdered sugar
How to Make Old Fashioned Donut Muffins
Mix the fats and sugars together in a large bowl and whisk them together. The bowl should be large enough to give plenty of room for the other ingredients, and for a large rubber spatula to make large, gentle folds.
Beat in the eggs one at a time, then the seasonings and leaveners.
Whisk the wet ingredients together in a medium bowl. Be sure to incorporate all the eggs completely.
Gently fold in the milk and flour beginning and ending with the flour. Use a large rubber spatula in big scooping motions: down one side of the bowl, scraping along the bottom, coming up the other side, then up and over the top. Don’t use a whisk or wooden spoon. The goal is to still have a few streaks of flour and lumps in the batter when you scoop the batter into the cupcake liners. Over-mixing creates tough and crumbly muffins.
Bake the donut muffins just until the tops spring back when gently touched in the middle. Do not over-bake.
Glaze the donut muffins while still warm so the glaze soaks into the tops. Once that glaze sets, dip them a second time for a thicker coating.
Donut Muffin Recipe Variations
The beauty of being a home baker is the freedom to experiment with recipes and find ones that are perfect for you. Don’t hesitate to try any of the following suggestions on these donut muffins, or come up with a list of your own.
Add diced apple or pear to the dry ingredients and toss to coat them before you add the wet. Peel the fruit before dicing it into small pieces and use 1 cup of diced fruit.
Include toasted nuts such as chopped pecans, almonds, or walnuts into the dry ingredients before you add the the wet. You can also sprinkle the donut muffins on top before the frosting dries. Using toasted nuts will add to both the texture and the flavor compared to using un-toasted. Toast nuts on a sheet pan in the oven at 350 for 5-10 minutes, or until golden brown.
Add toasted coconut to the top of the donut muffins once you have frosted them. Toast the coconut on a sheet pan in the oven at 350 for 5-10 minutes, or until golden brown.
Mix in dried fruit such as raisins, cranberries, cherries, or blueberries,. Add the dried fruit with the dry ingredients and toss to coat them before the wet is added.
Donut Muffins FAQs
Why does the recipe use both butter and oil?
While both are necessary fats in this old fashion donut muffin recipe, each plays a different role in how they turn out. The butter adds to the flavor and the oil keeps the donut muffins very tender. Be sure the butter is at room temperature so it will mix in easily, but do not melt it.
How do I know when the donut muffins are done baking?
For any muffin recipe, start checking the doneness about 5-8 minutes before the listed bake time is over. Do this by gently pressing on the center of the muffin. If it springs right back, it is done, no matter the color of the muffin. Pull them out and remove them from the pan so they will stop baking. Leaving them in the pan will lead to dry muffins because they will continue to bake. Use this same technique with all muffin, cake, and quick bread recipes.
Help! My donut muffins turned out dry and tough.
Usually, when this happens to muffins or any quick bread, there are two main culprits. First, you mixed the batter for too long and not gently enough. Don’t use a whisk or wooden spoon to mix the flour and milk into the batter. Instead, grab a large rubber spatula and gently fold them together. Stop mixing the muffins when there are still a few streaks of flour and lumps in the batter. It will be hard, but put down the spatula and step away!
Second, you baked the donut muffins for too long or at too high a temperature. Your oven might be running hotter than it actually says on the display, so grab an oven thermometer to be sure 350 on the control is creating 350 inside the oven. Also, start checking the doneness of the donut muffins about 5-8 minutes before the listed bake time says. Do this by gently pushing on the center of a muffin. If it bounces back, it is done…no matter the color of the muffin. Also, don’t let the donut muffins cool in the pan. Remove them as soon as they finish baking.
Do I have to use cupcake liners with donut muffins?
Feel free to skip the cupcake liners. They are not required for this recipe. They do help with the easy removal of the donut muffins from muffin tins and the liners provide something to hold onto while dipping the warm muffins in the glaze. If you don’t use cupcake liners, be sure to grease the muffin pan well and know that the muffins might finish baking a few minutes earlier than stated in the recipe since the batter will have direct contact with the metal pan.
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If you love an Old Fashioned Donut, you will adore these muffins. This recipe turns out perfectly dense and rich every time and is an easy breakfast muffin recipe
Total Time:32 minutes
Yield:12 muffins 1x
Ingredients
Scale
1/4 C butter, room temperature
1/3 C vegetable oil
1/2 C white sugar
1/3 C brown sugar
2 eggs
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp baking soda
3/4 tsp nutmeg
1 tsp cinnamon
3/4 tsp salt
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 2/3 C flour
1 C milk
Glaze
2 Tb butter, melted
1 C powdered sugar
3/4 tsp vanilla
2 Tb hot water
Instructions
Preheat oven to 375 degrees and line 12 muffin cups with liners.
Mix with a wooden spoon the butter, oil and both sugars until smooth.
Beat in eggs, one at a time.
Add the baking powder, baking soda, nutmeg, cinnamon, salt and vanilla.
Fold in about 1/3 of the flour using a rubber spatula and stir just until combined. Add about 1/2 of the milk and stir just until combined. Add another 1/3 of the flour and stir just until combined. Add the remaining 1/2 of the milk and stir just until combined. Add remaining flour and stir just until combined. Do NOT over mix any of these steps. Under mixing is better than over mixing!!! If you over mix, your muffins will not dome well and will be tough.
Divide the batter evenly between the 12 muffin cups. They will be quite full. Bake for 17-19 minutes until the tops are springy to the touch. Allow them to cool for a few minutes before removing them from the pan. Cool for 10 minutes on a rack before glazing.
Beat together all the ingredients for the glaze.
Dip the top of each muffin in the glaze, allowing the excess to drip back into the bowl. Allow the first glaze layer to harden, then dip them once more.
Carole Jones is an Arizona-based cookbook author & food blogger. She's authored The 30 Minute Cooking From Frozen Cookbook and the self-published Take 5: Chicken e-cookbook. For the past 15 years, Carole has shared her culinary adventures cooking and baking for her six brutally honest children here on My Kitchen Escapades. Hot, crusty bread is Carole's love language, but her two adorable grandchildren are a close second. Yes, second. Don't judge.
83 comments
stitchinsweetsue
8 years ago
Used 2 1/2 teasp almond extract instead of vanilla, filled muffin liner nearly to top and they rose to a nice high dome, got 12 total from single batch. Glazed and sprinkled sliced almonds over top. Yes, dense like a donut, I liked that they didn’t crumble all apart like some muffins, but also tender, just as you promised. Delish, def make again. TY for recipe:)
Carole
8 years ago
I like your variations Sue!
Emma P
8 years ago
Would these still hold up the same with almond milk? It’s usually all I have in my fridge. Thanks!
Carole
8 years ago
Hi Emma! Since I’ve never made them with almond milk, I can’t guarantee anything but I believe it would work fine.
Talia
7 years ago
Tried the recipe tonight and they turned out amazing The flavors work well together. Just like mama use to make. The only issue was that they didnt rise like a dome. Any idea what went wrong?
Carole
7 years ago
Hi Talia! It sounds like you over-mixed them. You want to gently mix the wet and dry together just until it is about 75% combined.
James
7 years ago
I heard about a bakery that made cake donut madeleines. I’m thinking of trying this recipe with recipe with a madeleines pan. Wish me luck!
Carole
7 years ago
Good luck James!
Sunny
7 years ago
Just made these this morning, they are wonderful thanks for sharing , definitely a save.
Carole
7 years ago
So glad you loved them Sunny!
ChrisS
7 years ago
I’d like to add apples to the muffins. Would I have to make any adjustments to the recipe?
Carole
7 years ago
Hi Chris! I would try adding some very small diced apples without changing anything first. Don’t go crazy because they do hold quite a bit of water and you could end up with heavy hockey pucks instead 🙂
Celeste Barta
7 years ago
Thank you for the recipe, but when I clicked on print, at the bottom of the ingredients list flour as 5 1/2 cups and 2 cups of milk. I’m glad I went back to the recipe itself which gave the correct amounts. Thanks again Celeste b
Carole
7 years ago
Thanks Celeste for letting me know about the glitch. I”ll look into it!
E.T. in Texas
7 years ago
We love the deep fried, old fashioned buttermilk donut dunking sticks/bars. I’d like to try these to avoid frying, and was wondering if you thought replacing the milk with buttermilk would work okay?
Carole
7 years ago
It would work ok but the buttermilk really does amazing things for both the flavor and the texture of the muffins.
Judy
6 years ago
These were delicious! I needed to use up some buttermilk I has so used that. It required another 1/4 cup of buttermilk as it was too thick.
Carole
6 years ago
Thanks Judy for coming back and sharing!
Kelly
6 years ago
Hi, could I add cocoa powder to the recipe and how much if so?
Carole
6 years ago
Hi Kelly! If you are looking to make a chocolate version, I would use a dutch processed cocoa powder. Having never tried it, I really can’t give you an exact amount.
Leslie
6 years ago
Replace the 2/3 cup of flour with cocoa powder. It will work very well.
Carole
6 years ago
Love this idea Leslie! Glad it worked well for you!
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83 comments
Used 2 1/2 teasp almond extract instead of vanilla, filled muffin liner nearly to top and they rose to a nice high dome, got 12 total from single batch. Glazed and sprinkled sliced almonds over top. Yes, dense like a donut, I liked that they didn’t crumble all apart like some muffins, but also tender, just as you promised. Delish, def make again. TY for recipe:)
I like your variations Sue!
Would these still hold up the same with almond milk? It’s usually all I have in my fridge. Thanks!
Hi Emma! Since I’ve never made them with almond milk, I can’t guarantee anything but I believe it would work fine.
Tried the recipe tonight and they turned out amazing The flavors work well together. Just like mama use to make. The only issue was that they didnt rise like a dome. Any idea what went wrong?
Hi Talia! It sounds like you over-mixed them. You want to gently mix the wet and dry together just until it is about 75% combined.
I heard about a bakery that made cake donut madeleines. I’m thinking of trying this recipe with recipe with a madeleines pan. Wish me luck!
Good luck James!
Just made these this morning, they are wonderful thanks for sharing , definitely a save.
So glad you loved them Sunny!
I’d like to add apples to the muffins. Would I have to make any adjustments to the recipe?
Hi Chris! I would try adding some very small diced apples without changing anything first. Don’t go crazy because they do hold quite a bit of water and you could end up with heavy hockey pucks instead 🙂
Thank you for the recipe, but when I clicked on print, at the bottom of the ingredients list flour as 5 1/2 cups and 2 cups of milk. I’m glad I went back to the recipe itself which gave the correct amounts. Thanks again Celeste b
Thanks Celeste for letting me know about the glitch. I”ll look into it!
We love the deep fried, old fashioned buttermilk donut dunking sticks/bars. I’d like to try these to avoid frying, and was wondering if you thought replacing the milk with buttermilk would work okay?
It would work ok but the buttermilk really does amazing things for both the flavor and the texture of the muffins.
These were delicious! I needed to use up some buttermilk I has so used that. It required another 1/4 cup of buttermilk as it was too thick.
Thanks Judy for coming back and sharing!
Hi, could I add cocoa powder to the recipe and how much if so?
Hi Kelly! If you are looking to make a chocolate version, I would use a dutch processed cocoa powder. Having never tried it, I really can’t give you an exact amount.
Replace the 2/3 cup of flour with cocoa powder. It will work very well.
Love this idea Leslie! Glad it worked well for you!